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How We Robbed Mexico in 1848

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About This Book

The author contends that the Mexican–American War was an unjust, expansionist campaign driven by pro-slavery and financial interests, describing how a disputed border was used to provoke invasion and extract vast territorial concessions. He cites contemporary testimony, including Ulysses S. Grant's memoirs, to criticize the war's motives and consequences, and traces a pattern of later interventions in Central America and the Caribbean—financial control, customs-house occupations, and maneuvers around the Panama Canal—as continuations of economic coercion and imperial aggrandizement.

About the Author

Howe, Robert Harrison portrait

Robert Harrison Howe

Robert Harrison Howe was an American author known for his work "How We Robbed Mexico in 1848," which provides a unique perspective on the events surrounding the Mexican-American War. His writing reflects the complexities of American expansionism and the socio-political dynamics of the time. Howe's narrative style combines personal anecdotes with historical commentary, offering readers insight into the motivations and consequences of the era's conflicts. Through his work, he contributes to the understanding of 19th-century American history and its literary heritage.

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