The Imaginary Line: A History of the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, 1848-1857

The line dividing the United States and Mexico is invisible, “imaginary,” drawn through shifting sands and changeable rivers. The economic, social, and political issues surrounding this line, however, are all too real, and the line snakes its way through a history of conflict, through questions of definition, maps and claims of ownership, and personal and political gerrymandering.

In The Imaginary Line: A History of the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, 18481857, Joseph Richard Werne sets out to explore this border and the men who drew it. Using a variety of sources, including manuscripts, government documents, contemporary accounts, and memoirs, he creates a map of his own, one that charts the intersection of individual lives, politics, and geography. Werne proposes to revise the common view of the U.S.-Mexican Boundary Survey Commission as directed and funded almost entirely by the United States; the recent release of documents and archived files from the Mexican Boundary Commission allows further study of the Mexican commission’s role and demands recognition of the equal Mexican contribution to the commission’s immense task.

The diverse group of military and civilian surveyors, engineers, and politicians that composed the Joint Commission had to reconcile disparate personal interests and backgrounds, as well as different maps and equipment. Their efforts were of “epic quality” and represent the coinciding cooperation and conflict that describes border relations today. Werne’s study describes their lives and work, their survival of the hostile environment, and their struggles with inadequate funding and government corruption, tying their stories into the approaching civil war in the United States, the rapidly lengthening transcontinental railroad, and political instability in Mexico.

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The Imaginary Line: A History of the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, 1848-1857

The line dividing the United States and Mexico is invisible, “imaginary,” drawn through shifting sands and changeable rivers. The economic, social, and political issues surrounding this line, however, are all too real, and the line snakes its way through a history of conflict, through questions of definition, maps and claims of ownership, and personal and political gerrymandering.

In The Imaginary Line: A History of the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, 18481857, Joseph Richard Werne sets out to explore this border and the men who drew it. Using a variety of sources, including manuscripts, government documents, contemporary accounts, and memoirs, he creates a map of his own, one that charts the intersection of individual lives, politics, and geography. Werne proposes to revise the common view of the U.S.-Mexican Boundary Survey Commission as directed and funded almost entirely by the United States; the recent release of documents and archived files from the Mexican Boundary Commission allows further study of the Mexican commission’s role and demands recognition of the equal Mexican contribution to the commission’s immense task.

The diverse group of military and civilian surveyors, engineers, and politicians that composed the Joint Commission had to reconcile disparate personal interests and backgrounds, as well as different maps and equipment. Their efforts were of “epic quality” and represent the coinciding cooperation and conflict that describes border relations today. Werne’s study describes their lives and work, their survival of the hostile environment, and their struggles with inadequate funding and government corruption, tying their stories into the approaching civil war in the United States, the rapidly lengthening transcontinental railroad, and political instability in Mexico.

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The Imaginary Line: A History of the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, 1848-1857

The Imaginary Line: A History of the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, 1848-1857

The Imaginary Line: A History of the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, 1848-1857

The Imaginary Line: A History of the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, 1848-1857

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Overview

The line dividing the United States and Mexico is invisible, “imaginary,” drawn through shifting sands and changeable rivers. The economic, social, and political issues surrounding this line, however, are all too real, and the line snakes its way through a history of conflict, through questions of definition, maps and claims of ownership, and personal and political gerrymandering.

In The Imaginary Line: A History of the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey, 18481857, Joseph Richard Werne sets out to explore this border and the men who drew it. Using a variety of sources, including manuscripts, government documents, contemporary accounts, and memoirs, he creates a map of his own, one that charts the intersection of individual lives, politics, and geography. Werne proposes to revise the common view of the U.S.-Mexican Boundary Survey Commission as directed and funded almost entirely by the United States; the recent release of documents and archived files from the Mexican Boundary Commission allows further study of the Mexican commission’s role and demands recognition of the equal Mexican contribution to the commission’s immense task.

The diverse group of military and civilian surveyors, engineers, and politicians that composed the Joint Commission had to reconcile disparate personal interests and backgrounds, as well as different maps and equipment. Their efforts were of “epic quality” and represent the coinciding cooperation and conflict that describes border relations today. Werne’s study describes their lives and work, their survival of the hostile environment, and their struggles with inadequate funding and government corruption, tying their stories into the approaching civil war in the United States, the rapidly lengthening transcontinental railroad, and political instability in Mexico.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780875653389
Publisher: Texas Christian University Press
Publication date: 06/28/2007
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Joseph Richard Werne is a professor of history at Southeast Missouri State University, where he has also served as director of the Latin American Studies Program. He has served twice as president of the Midwest Association for Latin American Studies, and his essays have been published in Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Journal of the Southwest, and Historia Mexicana. He received his B.A. from Denison University, and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Kent State University. Werne has traveled numerous times in Mexico, Latin America, and Spain.

Table of Contents


List of Maps     ix
Preface     xi
Introduction     xiii
Guadalupe Hidalgo     1
Alta California     19
El Paso del Norte     45
Santa Rita del Cobre     69
El Rio Gila     91
El Rio Bravo del Norte     113
La Boca del Rio     135
Dona Ana     157
El Valle de La Mesilla     175
Quitovaquita     193
Conclusion     219
Bibliographical Essay     233
Index     245
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