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A History of English Language

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The english language in america<br />

335<br />

Northwest Territory and the upper Mississippi valley received large numbers <strong>of</strong> German<br />

and Scandinavian immigrants whose coming has been mentioned above.<br />

241. The Far West.<br />

The Louisiana Purchase in 1803 opened up the first <strong>of</strong> the vast territories beyond the<br />

Mississippi. From here fur traders, missionaries, and settlers followed the Oregon trail<br />

into the Pacific Northwest, and the Santa Fe trail into the sparsely populated Spanish<br />

territory in the Southwest. After the Mexican War and the treaty with Great Britain<br />

(1846) establishing the forty-ninth parallel as the northern boundary <strong>of</strong> the United States<br />

to the Pacific, when the territory <strong>of</strong> this country extended to the ocean, it was only a<br />

question <strong>of</strong> time before the Far West would be more fully occupied. Oregon in 1860 had<br />

a population <strong>of</strong> 30,000 pioneers. About half <strong>of</strong> them had come up from Missouri and<br />

farther south, from Kentucky and Tennessee; the other half were largely <strong>of</strong> New England<br />

stock. The discovery <strong>of</strong> gold in California in 1848 resulted in such a rush to the gold<br />

fields that in 1849 the 2,000 Americans that constituted the population in February had<br />

become 53,000 by<br />

3<br />

“A good illustration <strong>of</strong> this migration is Daniel Boone, himself <strong>of</strong> <strong>English</strong> stock, who was born on<br />

the Delaware only a few miles above Philadelphia. The Boone family soon moved to Reading.<br />

Thence drifting southwestward with his compatriots, Daniel Boone settled in the North Carolina<br />

uplands, along the valley <strong>of</strong> the Yadkin, then passed beyond into Kentucky, and, after that location<br />

began to be civilized, went on as a pioneer to Missouri. His son appears a little later as one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

early settlers <strong>of</strong> Kansas, his grandson as a pioneer in Colorado.” (Madison Grant, The Conquest <strong>of</strong><br />

a Continent [New York, 1933], pp. 122–23.)

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