This is a list of United States territorial acquisitions, beginning with American independence. The treaty with the United Kingdom in 1783 defined the original borders of the United States.
Texas Annexation of 1845: In 1836 the Republic of Texas voted to be annexed by the United States. Despite the fact that Mexican leader Antonio López de Santa Anna warned that this would be "equivalent to a declaration of war against the Mexican Republic," President John Tyler signed a treaty of annexation with Texas in April 1844, causing the Mexican-American War. After James Polk, a strong supporter of territorial expansion, won the presidency, but before he took office, Congress approved the annexation of Texas on February 28, 1845. On December 29, 1845, Texas became the twenty-eighth state.
Oregon Country, ceded to the U.S. by the Great Britain in 1846 under the Oregon Treaty, the two countries had jointly controlled the area since 1818
Gadsden Purchase of 1853, United States purchased a strip of land along the Mexican border for $10 million, now in New Mexico and Arizona. This territory was later used for the southern transcontinental railroad.