(in light yellow); the full extent of the Texan claim (light yellow and green); and modern-day borders of the
State of Texas Later in the 19th century, there was one more case of a state ceding some of its land to the federal government. Before the
Republic of Texas joined the United States in 1845, it
claimed a good deal of land that had never been under the
de facto control of the Texan government – Texan attempts to exercise control of these territories as a sovereign state (most famously, the
Santa Fe expedition) had ended in disaster. Thus, there was a border dispute between Texas, Mexico, and
Native American tribes that the U.S. government inherited upon the annexation of Texas. This was one of the causes of the
Mexican–American War of 1846–47 (another being the western land aspirations of the U.S. coupled with the refusal by the
United Mexican States to sell its territory to the U.S.). After the American victory in that war, the Mexican government recognized American sovereignty over the disputed Texan lands and also ceded/sold the land extending west to the Pacific Ocean. The Mexican government was paid $25,000,000 under the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo of 1848. In addition, the maximalist land claims of the Republic of Texas did not set the northern and western borders of the
State of Texas. Most, but not all, of its northern boundary had been set by a treaty between the United States and the
Spanish Empire – along the
Red River. In an act of Congress, the
Compromise of 1850, Texas ceded its conflicting northern and western territorial claims to the U.S. in return for debt relief, removing its conflicting claims from the U.S. territorial gains of the Mexican–American War. This ceded land eventually became portions of the states of
Kansas (1861),
Colorado (1876),
Wyoming (1890),
Oklahoma (1907), and
New Mexico (1912). ==See also==