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The Making of the Great West, 1512-1883

Chapter 50: ARKANSAS ADMITTED 1836.
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About This Book

A narrative history traces European penetration and American settlement of the trans‑Mississippi West, surveying Spanish, French, and English exploration and colonization, missionary and military efforts, and encounters with indigenous peoples. It follows key expeditions and figures, the Louisiana purchase and overland pathfinders, the Oregon Trail and waves of emigration, the California gold rush, territorial conflicts including the Mexican War and Kansas-Nebraska struggle, and the political and infrastructural developments—railroads, state admissions, and settlement patterns—that forged the continental United States. Chapters combine descriptive vignettes, maps, and illustrations to present themes of conquest, cultural collision, migration, and economic transformation.

ARKANSAS ADMITTED 1836.

Arkansas was admitted into the Union in 1836, as a slave State, retaining the name it had been given as a Territory, when formed from the Louisiana purchase,—a name originating with the once powerful nation Marquette found seated on the banks of the Mississippi. Thus three slave States had been made out of French Louisiana.