This video is part of a series of 20 animated maps.

View series: The United States: a territorial history

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The Northern Frontier and the Oregon Territory

This map is part of a series of 20 animated maps showing the history of The United States: a territorial history.


In 1783, when the British and the Americans negotiated the United States' independence, they did not fix a clear border west of the Great Lakes.

This ambiguity as well as the Louisiana Purchase led both nations to ratify a new treaty in 1818.

 The new border followed the 49th parallel from the Lake of the Woods to the Continental Divide in the Rocky Mountains.

For the area west of the Rockies, the two parties agreed to establish joint control over the Oregon territory, and fixed its southern frontier with Spain at the 42nd parallel.  

 The region’s rich natural resources, and in particular the vast number of animals that could be hunted for fur, led to strong competition for control of the territory between the Canadian Hudson Bay Company and the American settlers who, in 1811, had founded the trading post of Astoria at the mouth of the Columbia River.

 In the 1840s, the American settlers set up trading posts mainly along the coast of Puget Sound and in the Willamette Valley. As the majority group in the colony, they called for Oregon to become part of the United States.

The negotiations were blocked for a while over claims for Vancouver Island and Puget Sound, because of their strategic importance for each party. The treaty signed on June 15, 1846 compromised by giving Puget Sound to the United States and Vancouver Island to the British.

 The Oregon territory holds great cultural importance because the promise of land and wealth  encouraged the first pioneers to migrate to the West Coast through the Oregon trail

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