The
U.S. Senate approved the treaty unanimously on February 24, 1819, but Madrid delayed ratification until October 1820, hoping to dissuade the US from supporting anti-Spanish revolutionaries. As a result of the delay, the Senate had to vote a second time, at which point
Henry Clay and others demanded the cession of Texas in addition. This proposal was defeated and the treaty officially made effective on February 22, 1821. In accordance with Article 11, the US government set up a commission to handle claims made by private American citizens against Spain, which distributed around $5 million prior to its dissolution in 1824. For the United States, this Treaty (and the
Treaty of 1818 with Britain agreeing to joint control of the Pacific Northwest) meant that its claimed territory now extended far west from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean. For Spain, it meant that it kept its
colony of Texas and also kept a buffer zone between its colonies in California and New Mexico and the U.S. territories. Many historians consider the Treaty to be a great achievement for the U.S., as time validated Adams's vision that it would allow the U.S. to open trade with the Orient across the Pacific. Informally this new border has been called the "Step Boundary", although the step-like shape of the boundary was not apparent for several decades—the source of the Arkansas, believed to be near the 42nd parallel north, was not known until
John C. Frémont located it in the 1840s, hundreds of miles south of the 42nd parallel. Spain finally recognized the independence of Mexico with the
Treaty of Córdoba signed on August 24, 1821. While Mexico was not initially a party to the Adams–Onís Treaty, in 1831 Mexico ratified the treaty by agreeing to the 1828
Treaty of Limits with the U.S. With the
Russo-American Treaty of 1824, the Russian Empire ceded its claims south of
parallel 54°40′ north to the United States. With the
Treaty of Saint Petersburg in 1825, Russia set the southern border of Alaska on the same parallel in exchange for the Russian right to trade south of that border and the British right to navigate north of that border. This set the absolute limits of the Oregon Country/Columbia District between the 42nd parallel north and the parallel 54°40′ north west of the Continental Divide. By the mid-1830s, a controversy developed regarding the border with Texas, during which the United States demonstrated that the Sabine and
Neches rivers had been switched on maps, moving the frontier in favor of Mexico. As a consequence, the eastern boundary of Texas was not firmly established until the independence of the
Republic of Texas in 1836. It was not agreed upon by the United States and Mexico until the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848, which concluded the
Mexican–American War. That treaty also formalized the cession by Mexico of Alta California and today's
American Southwest, except for the territory of the later
Gadsden Purchase of 1854. Another dispute occurred after Texas joined the Union. The treaty stated that the boundary between the French claims on the north and the Spanish claims on the south was Rio Roxo de Natchitoches (Red River) until it reached the 100th meridian, as noted on the
John Melish map of 1818. But, the 100th meridian on the Melish map was marked some east of the true 100th meridian, and the Red River forked about east of the 100th meridian. Texas claimed the land south of the North Fork, and the United States claimed the land north of the South Fork (later called the
Prairie Dog Town Fork Red River). In 1860, Texas organized the area as
Greer County. The matter was not settled until a
United States Supreme Court ruling in 1896 upheld federal claims to the territory, after which it was added to the
Oklahoma Territory. The treaty gave rise to a later border dispute between the states of Oregon and California, which remains unresolved. Upon statehood in 1850, California established the 42nd parallel as its constitutional de jure border as it had existed since 1819 when the territory was part of Spanish Mexico. In an 1868–1870 border survey following the admission of Oregon as a state, errors were made in demarcating and marking the Oregon-California border, creating a dispute that continues to this day. In 2020, a hoax appeared in Spain according to which, in 2055, the Adams–Onís Treaty would expire and Florida would be returned to Spain by the United States, which is false. The previous
Anglo-American Convention of 1818 meant that both American and British citizens could settle land north of the 42nd parallel and west of the Continental Divide. The United States now had a firm foothold on the Pacific Coast and could commence settlement of the jointly occupied Oregon Country (known as the
Columbia District to the
British government). The Russian Empire also claimed this entire region as part of Russian America. ==Footnotes==