Oregon boundary dispute

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The phrase "Fifty-Four Forty or Fight" was a campaign slogan of United States President-to-be James K. Polk.

In the Anglo-American Convention of 1818, the Americans and the British chose a joint sovereignty of the Oregon Country, which consisted of what is now the Pacific Northwest of the United States and southern British Columbia. The northern boundary of the jointly controlled area was the parallel 54° 40′ north, with Russian claims on Alaska to the north. By the election of 1844, this Anglo-American agreement was growing shaky, with western settlers wanting the land for the United States.

Polk was ready to go to war to claim all the land, and used the slogan "Fifty-four Forty or Fight!" to help win the election. The Democrat Polk beat the Whig Henry Clay 1,337,243 to 1,299,068; the electoral college results were Polk 170 votes versus 105 for Clay. Following the election, fortifications like Fort Wayne (in present-day Detroit) were built along the U.S.-Canadian border in anticipation of combat. However, the dispute was settled diplomatically, with the Oregon Treaty of 1846. The border was set the 49th parallel, which still marks much of the border between the contiguous 48 states United States and Canada. 54° 40′ remains the southern-most latitude of the state of Alaska.

The Canadian rock band 54-40 takes their name from this slogan.