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Foreign News November 27, 1846

The Ottawa Free Trader

Ottawa, La Salle County County, Illinois

What is this article about?

An English perspective on the Mexican War urges intervention to prevent US annexation of Mexico, highlighting threats to British investments and proposing colonization of regions like Tehuantepec with Anglo-Saxon settlers to strengthen Mexico against invasion.

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Full Text

English View of the Mexican War.

What can be done for Mexico?—It is high time that we in England should take into serious consideration the question—What can be done to save the miserable and impotent Republic of Mexico from extinction as an independent nation? Apart from all the problematical evil consequences of its absorption into the United States—and they are momentous—the fate of Mexico has an immediate practical importance for all classes of men in this country, being inseparably identified with that of a vast amount of British capital. Expunge Mexico from the list of nations, and at the same blow you put out the fires on thousands of English hearths.—Already we have suffered enough by the waste and decay of the wealth we have invested in that country; the annihilation of what remains would scatter bankruptcy among our merchants, paralyze our industry, disorder all the functions of our national life, and spread starvation among our working classes. And this is the conclusion to which events are tending in a rapid and accumulating flood, that must inevitably bear down all such flimsy barriers as Santa Anna's countrymen can set up against it.

That the United States are bent on seizing the whole Mexican territory, is a fact they scarcely condescend to deny. The manner in which they intend to effect their purpose is also apparent; it is the same as that by which they have already secured Texas; the same piratical system as that by which they had begun to possess themselves of Louisiana, before they had the opportunity of acquiring it in the more legitimate way of purchase. The present petty warfare they are waging on the frontier is but an episode in the great plot. Gen. Taylor's force is but the precursor of the real army of invasion—the squatter and back-woodsman, men in whom it is a hereditary and invincible instinct always to depart from before the approach of civilization, to avoid every spot where law has become established, and never to feel themselves thoroughly at home except on debatable ground. By men like these, coming by twos and threes, then by scores and hundreds, and finally in multitudes, like carrion birds to the quarry, the Northern provinces of the Republic will be overrun; and thence the process will be continued until the whole territory is filled and mastered by the unprincipled and desperately energetic immigrants. Already many of the provinces have shown a willing alacrity to meet the destiny they foresee: not from any affection they bear to their encroaching neighbors, but because they are weary of anarchy, hopeless of relief from their own wretched nominal Governments, and eager to accede to the blessings of Law and order from any power strong enough to secure them.

Mexico must be tranquilized, and her strength consolidated by good and stable government or she is lost. This has long been felt by her allies; and they have even suggested and indirectly urged the adoption of the means that seemed to them most likely to bring about the desired result. The proposed panacea was the conversion of the Republic into a Monarchy, the sceptre of which should be swayed by some European Royal cadet. It is needless to discuss the abstract merits of this plan, since it is a mere figment of political speculation, at present beyond the scope of any practical discussion.

There is but one sure way to save Mexico, and that is to transfer fresh, healthy blood into her languid veins: to colonize a portion of her magnificent territory with a people worthy to occupy and able to defend it. If Mexico were to mingle a portion of the Anglo-Saxon element with their population, she might venture to cope with the moiety of that indomitable race that now threatens her existence. In one paper, last week, on the project of cutting a ship-canal through the great American isthmus, we pointed out the admirable opportunity now offered for peopling the isthmus of Tehuantepec, and realizing the incalculable natural advantages of one of the most eligible commercial sites on the face of the globe. That majestic region teeming with boundless wealth, washed by two oceans, traversed by half its breadth by a navigable river, which offers at its mouth the finest harbor in the Gulf of Mexico, may now be secured by Englishmen. Will they refuse to accept a region which was selected by the sagacious mind of the great conqueror Cortez to constitute his own private domain? If so, the French will be delighted to grasp the prize we disdain.

What sub-type of article is it?

War Report Diplomatic Economic

What keywords are associated?

Mexican War Us Annexation British Capital Mexico Colonization Tehuantepec Isthmus Santa Anna Gen Taylor

What entities or persons were involved?

Santa Anna Gen. Taylor Cortez

Where did it happen?

Mexico

Foreign News Details

Primary Location

Mexico

Key Persons

Santa Anna Gen. Taylor Cortez

Outcome

potential absorption of mexico into the united states, loss of british capital investments leading to bankruptcy, paralyzed industry, and starvation among working classes; provinces welcoming us order due to anarchy.

Event Details

English commentary warns of US intent to seize Mexican territory through immigration and invasion, similar to Texas and Louisiana acquisitions; suggests stabilizing Mexico via European monarchy or Anglo-Saxon colonization, especially Tehuantepec isthmus, to counter threats and protect British interests.

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