The
Gadsden Purchase is a 30,000
mi2 (77,700
km2) region of what is today southern
Arizona and
New Mexico that was purchased by the
United States from
Mexico in
1853. The purpose of the purchase was to allow for the construction of a southern route for a transcontinental railroad. Another rationale for the purchase is to give Mexico more money in compensation for the small amount paid for the lands taken by the United States after the
Mexican-American War.
James Gadsden[?] (U.S. Minister to Mexico) and
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna (President of Mexico) agreed on the price of $10,000,000 USD on
December 30, 1853.
All Wikipedia text
is available under the
terms of the GNU Free Documentation License