1301 Timeline Project DCUSH

  • Period: 30,000 BCE to

    BEGINNINGS OF EXPLORATION

  • 2500 BCE

    Igloos (Arctic)

    Igloos (Arctic)
    the primary individuals to populate the Arctic areas of North America and Greenland were a gathering who moved into the zone from Siberia around 3,000 B.C. They lived in disengagement for right around 4,000 years, previously disappearing.he first people are thought to have traversed the Bering Strait over 15,000 years before this new rush of Paleo-Eskimos, which conveyed the principal individuals to spread over the northern spans of Alaska
  • 1500 BCE

    Caste system (Maya)

    Caste system (Maya)
    Occupations for Maya men was constrained to their dad's occupation.if your dad was a farmer, you were a farmer or if your dad had a particular sort of occupation or way of life that is the thing that you were going to inherit, an extremely rigid social system in which you are born to a social position and can't leave that position.The upper standing was made out of rulers, nobles and ministers The center station were ,merchants and troopers The lower station was comprised of ranchers and slaves
  • 200

    Adobe Houses (Pueblo/Anasazi)

    Adobe Houses (Pueblo/Anasazi)
    The Adobe House was a commonplace structure utilized as a house style that was worked by the Pueblo, clans had social gathering who occupied the desert atmospheres of New Mexico, Arizona, and Texas. The Adobe Houses changed in size, were frequently terraced and multi-story with access by means of an entryway or section passage through the rooftop by stepping stool. Old Pueblo houses were made of stone and were later worked with sun-dried Adobe blocks made of earth, soil, sand and straw.
  • 1095

    Crusades (indulgences)

    Crusades (indulgences)
    is giving something like money for the forgiveness. It may also lessen the worldly discipline for sin after death instead of the interminable discipline justified by mortal sin. which the faithful Christian who is properly arranged increases under certain recommended conditions through the activity of the Church which, as the pastor of reclamation, administers and applies with power the treasury of the fulfillment of Christ and the majority of the holy people
  • 1300

    The renaissance (Michelangelo)

    The renaissance (Michelangelo)
    was a sculptor,painter and designer generally viewed as one of the best specialists of the Italian Renaissance time frame,His work exhibited a mix of mental understanding,physical authenticity and force that was very unique to many.Michelangelo got money from most influential men of his day, popes and others partnered with the Catholic Church David models and SistineChapel roof painting, has been deliberately protected, so that the future could see and value Michelangelo'samazing artistic skills
  • 1347

    The black death (death)

    The black death (death)
    The awful human sickness known as the Black Death spread crosswise over Europe in the years 1346-53 The Black Death was a nasty sickness, that circles among wild rodents where they live in incredible numbers and thickness. ordinarily dark rodents, end up tainted. The ship rat as they call it, likes to live near individuals. many say that the rat bit someone on the ship and then they brought it over and started spreading the plague all over, the persons that spread it were those who were on ships
  • Jan 1, 1518

    Columbian exchange (diseases)

    Columbian exchange (diseases)
    There were numerous sicknesses that crossed from the Old World to the New World. These ailments affected a large number of the Native individuals of the New World since they were not resistant to these remote illnesses. Smallpox is an example of a infection conveyed from the Old World to the New World. Smallpox wiped out a gigantic bit of the Native American populace, because of their sudden prologue to the illness and powerless resistant frameworks.
  • Triangular trade

    Triangular trade
    term indicating trade among three ports or regions. A triangle formed exchanging course that comprised of The Colonies, Europe, Africa, and The Indies. there were three passages or voyages and in these three Colonies sent rum,sugar,cotton,rice, explosive, and weapons to Africa, Africa sent Slaves to The Indies and The Indies sent Sugar, Molasses and Slaves to the Colonies this trade worked because it sent stuff other parts of the colonies needed.
  • Chesapeake Colonies

    Chesapeake Colonies
    The two colonies Maryland and Virginia. Settlements of the Chesapeake area became gradually because of infections. The greater part of these pilgrims were male foreigners from England who died of diseases not long after their entry. The locals became immune to the Chesapeake illnesses and these states could proceed through every one of the hardships Chesapeake had a one great crop economy,tobacco. This added to the interest for slave work in the Southern provinces.
  • Period: to

    ENGLISH COLONIAL SOCIETY

  • Plymouth Colony (Mayflower compact)

    Plymouth Colony (Mayflower compact)
    the mayflower compact is an arrangement of standards for self-administration set up by the English pilgrims who headed out to the New World on the Mayflower. Whenever Pilgrims and different pioneers set out on the ship for America in 1620, they proposed to lay grapple in northern Virginia. Knowing existence without laws could demonstrate calamitous, homesteader pioneers made the Mayflower Compact to guarantee a working social structure would win.
  • Slave Codes

    Slave Codes
    some consistent things in slave codes was, slaves were not permitted to claim property of their own. They were not permitted to amass without the nearness of a white individual. Slaves that lived off the estate were liable to extraordinary curfews. In the courts, a slave blamed for any wrongdoing against a white individual was damned. No declaration could be made by a slave against a white individual. In this manner, the slave's side of the story would never be told in an official courtroom.
  • Caribbean Colonies (sugar)

    Caribbean Colonies (sugar)
    Sugar was the primary yield delivered on estates all through the Caribbean in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth hundreds of years. Most islands were secured with sugar stick fields, and plants for refining it. The primary wellspring of work, until the abrogation of asset subjugation, was oppressed Africans. . These estates delivered 80- -90 percent of the sugar expended in Western Europe. sugar made alot of money and helped many.
  • Nathaniel Bacon

    Nathaniel Bacon
    Nathaniel bacon was a colonist of the Virginia Colony, famous as the instigator of Bacon's Rebellion of 1676. in 1676 Bacon composed his very own undertaking. Dreading an extensive scale war with Native Americans, Berkeley turned his powers against Bacon and his men. Bacon caught Jamestown and William Berkeley was compelled to escape toward the Eastern Shore.he later died from dysentery which is honestly crazy and makes me think.
  • New England colonies (Quakers)

    New England colonies (Quakers)
    New England in 1656 comprised of numerous settlements dissipated along the streams. By 1783 these provinces had developed and converged to end up four of the thirteen establishing settlements of the United States – Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut and Rhode Island – and there were maybe 10,000 Quakers. Almost every one of them were from frontier families – scarcely any Indians progressed toward becoming Quakers, notwithstanding warm relations.
  • Navigation acts

    Navigation acts
    were demonstrations of Parliament expected to advance the independence of the British Empire by confining pioneer exchange to England and diminishing reliance on remote imported merchandise. The Navigation Act of 1651, pointed essentially at the Dutch, required all exchange among England and the states to be conveyed in English or frontier vessels, bringing about the Anglo-Dutch War in 1652. the navigation acts was in 1651 and 1660.
  • Proprietary Colonies

    Proprietary Colonies
    was a sort of British state for the most part in North America and the Caribbean in the seventeenth century. In the British Empire, all land had a place with the ruler, and it was his privilege to separate.all provincial properties were apportioned by illustrious contract into one of four kinds: restrictive, regal, joint stock, or agreement.the rule eventually fell out of favor as the colonies became established and administrative difficulties eased.
  • Slavery(slave rebellions)

    Slavery(slave rebellions)
    Slave uprisings were a persistent wellspring of dread in the American South, particularly since dark slaves represented more than 33% of the locale's populace in the eighteenth century. Laws directing when, where and how slaves could assemble were instituted to avert revolt and subdue white distastefulness. It's assessed there were somewhere around 250 slave uprisings in America before servitude was annulled in 1865. slavery is a hard topic for me to write about but it happened.
  • Salem Witch Trials

    Salem Witch Trials
    salem witch trials is progressionofhearings and indictments of individuals blamed for black magic in provincial Massachusetts . In excess of 200 individuals were blamed, nineteen of whom were discovered blameworthy and executed by hanging (fourteen ladies and five men). It was the deadliest witch chase ever of United States. most of them were women and they died either way they were dragged to the nearest body of water and tossed to the water to see if they sinked or float! they died either way.
  • Period: to

    COLONIAL AMERICA TO 1763

  • The enlightenment

    The enlightenment
    The Enlightenment created various books, articles, developments, logical disclosures, laws, wars and upheavals. The American and French Revolutions were straightforwardly propelled by Enlightenment beliefs and individually denoted the pinnacle of its impact and the start of its decay. The Enlightenment at last offered approach to nineteenth century Romanticism. the enlightenment was knowledge was gained through accumulated experience rather than by accessing some sort of outside truth.
  • The 1st Great Awakening

    The 1st Great Awakening
    changed the manner in which individuals pondered their association with the heavenly, with themselves and with other individuals. The Enlightenment connected with the psyche, yet the Great Awakening drew in the heart.The First Great Awakening influenced British North America. Consistent with the estimations of the Enlightenment, the Awakening stressed human choice in issues of religion and profound quality. It regarded every individual's sentiments and feelings.
  • Slavery (Atlantic Slave Trade)

    Slavery (Atlantic Slave Trade)
    the Atlantic slave trade was the greatest expulsion in history and a deciding element on the planet economy of the eighteenth century. A large number of Africans were torn from their homes, ousted to the American mainland and sold as slaves. conveyed for the most part to the Americas. The slave exchange routinely utilized the triangular exchange course and its Middle Passage, and existed from the sixteenth to the nineteenth hundreds of years.
  • French And Indian War

    French And Indian War
    in my opinion this war was the bloodiest American war in the eighteenth century. It took a larger number of lives than the American Revolution, included individuals on three mainlands, including the Caribbean. The war was the result of a supreme battle, a conflict between the French and English over provincial region and riches. Inside these worldwide powers, the war can likewise be viewed as a result of the confined competition among British and French homesteaders.
  • No taxation without representation

    No taxation without representation
    is a slogan that outlined an essential complaint of the American homesteaders in the Thirteen Colonies, which was one of the real reasons for the American Revolution. To put it plainly, numerous in those states trusted that, as they were not specifically spoken to in the far off British Parliament, any laws it passed influencing the pioneers, for example, the Sugar Act and the Stamp Act were illicit under the Bill of Rights 1689, and were a forswearing of their rights as Englishmen.
  • Britain's financial situation after the french and Indian war

    Britain's financial situation after the french and Indian war
    the war had cost the British a lot and the British wanted the colonist to give money. but the colonist saw no reason for paying England to fight a war to keep them in the British empire. they had never paid direct takes to England and had no intention of paying for a war they claimed hasn't started and didn't need, especially since they had no say in the government. so they increased taxes on people and having colonist pay some shares.
  • Period: to

    THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR

  • Acts of parliament, American Revenue Act (sugar act)

    Acts of parliament, American Revenue Act (sugar act)
    English enactment went for completion the carrying exchange sugar and molasses from the French and Dutch West Indies and at giving expanded incomes to support augmented British Empire duties following the French and Indian War. the Sugar Act accommodated solid traditions requirement of the obligations on refined sugar and molasses imported into the states from non-British Caribbean sources.many went against this and disliked it and rebelled most.
  • Acts of parliament (Stamp act)

    Acts of parliament (Stamp act)
    The stamp act was clearly an act of parliament and it was bad. they shouldn't have done that, it caused may to rebel against and cause worse days for people with taxation.it was the first internal tax to be levied immediately by the British Government on American colonists. which imposed a tax on all paper documents in the colonies, because of how much they were in dept because of the seven years war. they imposed taxation to pay off debt.
  • Steamboats

    Steamboats
    steamboats were really important, they were large boats that propelled primarily by steam power, typically driving propellers or paddle wheels sailed across the water and carried supplies. It could and would also carry passengers across the water as well.the steamboats influence was huge, and it would not been possible to be able to trade and efficiently transport goods across the water. they have made a big impact towards the future and it is very important.
  • Boston Massacre

    Boston Massacre
    a disagreement between British Private Hugh White and a couple of homesteaders outside the Custom House in Boston on King Street. Before long there were more than 50 pioneers at the scene. The nearby British officer of the watch, Captain Thomas Preston, sent various warriors over to the Custom House to keep up order.They started to yell at the fighters, challenging them to flame one of them opened fire and of course all hell breaks loose.
  • Acts of Parliament (Coercive Acts)

    Acts of Parliament (Coercive Acts)
    The coercive acts is also most known to be named the intolerable acts, this act was mainly to control and re make order because of the Boston tea party rebellion. (the tea rebellion) the coercive acts included, the Boston port act, the Massachusetts government act, the quartering act and the administration of justice act. these were all included in the coercive acts because of the negative impact the Boston tea party caused on the British.
  • The Declaration Of Independence

    The Declaration Of Independence
    the declaration of independence contains congressional productions from 1774 to 1875, including discusses, bills, laws, and journals.the Declaration of Independence expresses the standards on which our administration, and our way of life as Americans, are based.but the Declaration of Independence isn't lawfully authoritative, however it is powerful.It keeps on moving individuals around the globe to battle for opportunity and uniformity.
  • Articles of Confederation

    Articles of Confederation
    the first constitution of the US, approved in 1781, which was supplanted by the US Constitution in 1789. The Articles of Confederation came into power on March 1, 1781, in the wake of being confirmed by every one of the 13 states. A core value of the Articles was to save the autonomy and power of the states. The focal government built up by the Articles got just those forces which the previous settlements had perceived as having a place with ruler and parliament.
  • Period: to

    THE CONSTITUTION ERA

  • Massachusetts Constitution

    Massachusetts Constitution
    the constitutional convention by John Adams. It filled in as a model for the United States Constitution, which was written in 1787 and ended up viable in 1789. Thus, the United States Constitution has, especially in years since World War II, filled in as a model for the constitutions of numerous countries, including Germany, Japan, India and South Africa. the constitution has impacted our future greatly and the mass, constitution was a replacement for the us constitution.
  • Jays Treaty

    Jays Treaty
    The Treaty of commerce usually known as the Jay Treaty, was a 1795 arrangement between the United States and Great Britain that turned away war, settled issues staying since the Treaty of Paris of 1783 which finished the American Revolutionary War, and encouraged ten years of serene exchange between the United States and Britain amidst the French Revolutionary Wars, which started in 1792. The Treaty was planned by Alexander Hamilton and bolstered by President George Washington.
  • Shay's Rebellion

    Shay's Rebellion
    shays rebellion was an uprising in Massachusetts during 1786. War veteran Daniel Shays drove four thousand rebels in a challenge against apparent monetary and social liberties treacheries. Shays was a farmhand from Massachusetts toward the start of the Revolutionary War; he joined the Continental Army, saw activity at the Battles of Lexington and Concord, Battle of Bunker Hill, and Battles of Saratoga, and was in the end injured in real life.
  • U.S Constitutional Convention

    U.S Constitutional Convention
    the main idea for the us constitutional convention was to address the issues of the frail focal government that existed under the Articles of Confederation. The United States Constitution that rose up out of the tradition set up a national government with progressively explicit forces, including those identified with leading relations with remote governments.the constitutional made in effort in 1789 and played a big role and served as a bade for the government up until now.
  • Virginia Plan

    Virginia Plan
    The Virginia Plan (otherwise called the Randolph Plan, was a proposition by Virginia delegates for a bicameral authoritative branch.the arrangement was drafted by James Madison while he trusted that a majority will amass at the Constitutional Convention of 1787.The Virginia Plan was eminent for its job in setting the general motivation for discussion in the tradition and, specifically, for putting forward the possibility of populace weighted portrayal in the proposed national lawmaking body.
  • Three Branches (Three-Tier System)

    Three Branches (Three-Tier System)
    okay so, the constitutional convention created 3 branches also known as (three-tier system) the first one created was the Legislative Branch: which is to make the laws Congress is made up of two houses, the Senate and the House of Representatives.The next branch is the Executive Branch and this branch is to enforce the laws in the system. lastly The Judicial Branch to interpret the laws, the leaders that came up with this said that this is how the new nation would be governed.
  • Northwest Ordinance

    Northwest Ordinance
    a few laws established by the U.S. Congress to establish organized and evenhanded strategies for the settlement and political joining of the Northwest Territory. that piece of the American wilderness lying west of Pennsylvania, north of the Ohio River, east of the Mississippi River, and south of the Great Lakes; this is commonly the zone referred to today as the American Midwest. the northwest ordinance differed dates that were 1784.1785,1787
  • Election of 1788

    Election of 1788
    The Election of 1788 was the first and main decisions/election for the United States Senate, which agreed with the race of President George Washington. As of this race, formal sorted out political gatherings still couldn't seem to shape the United States, however two political groups were available: The alliance of congresspersons who supported George Washington's organization were known as "pro Administration," and the representatives against him as " anti Administration."
  • Period: to

    New Republic

  • Bill of rights

    Bill of rights
    The Bill of Rights in the United States is the initial ten amendments that help control the United States Constitution. Bill of Rights corrections add to the Constitution explicit certifications of individual flexibilities and rights, clear limitations on the government's power in judicial and other proceedings, and explicit declarations and express announcements that all forces not explicitly assigned to Congress by the Constitution are saved for the states or the general population.
  • Second great awakening

    Second great awakening
    The Second Great Awakening was a Protestant religious restoration amid the mid nineteenth century in the United States. it started in 1790. The Second Great Awakening reflected Romanticism portrayed by energy, feeling, and an intrigue to the powerful.The Second Great Awakening many thought change developments intended to cure the shades of malice of society before the foreseen Second Coming of Jesus Christ. it was a very religious movement.
  • Cotton Gin

    Cotton Gin
    The cotton gin was used and produced and very popular in the midst of 1793. the cotton gin was a tool to help get cotton from plantations faster and better and more efficiently it separated cotton from its seeds. a man named Eli Whitney created the cotton gin and invented it. the cotton gin became a very profitable business and created many fortunes for cities in the south and for the plantations of the owners who owned plantations.
  • Whiskey Rebellion

    Whiskey Rebellion
    In 1794, pioneers in Pennsylvania rebelled against Hamilton's duty on bourbon, and numerous officers were executed in the mobs caused by their endeavors to help capture warrants for the guilty parties. The armed force, put down the insubordination. The occurrence demonstrated that the new government under the Constitution could respond quickly totally to such an issue, as opposed to the powerlessness of the legislature under the Articles of Confederation to manage Shay's Rebellion.
  • Pickneys treaty

    Pickneys treaty
    pickenteys treaty is the limit between the United States and Spanish Florida as set by, and Spain surrendered its case on all region north from that line to the United States. known as the Treaty of "San Lorenzo" or the "Treaty of Madrid", was marked in San Lorenzo de El Escorial. Set up expectations of companionship between the United States and Spain. this treaty was really significant to many was ratified on March 7, 1796. this treaty was significant to me specially.
  • Washingtons farewell address

    Washingtons farewell address
    is a letter composed by first President of the United States George Washington to "companions and individual citizens".[1] He composed the letter close as far as possible of his second term of administration before resigning to his home at Mount Vernon in Virginia. To The People of The United States on his declining of the Presidency of the United States", and it was very quickly reproduced in papers all through the nation and later in handout form. The work was later named the "Goodbye Address"
  • Election of 1796

    Election of 1796
    The United States presidential decision of 1796 was the third quadrennial presidential race. date from Friday, November 4 to Wednesday, December 7, 1796. It was the principal challenged American presidential decision, also the main presidential race in which a president and VP were chosen from restricting tickets. Occupant Vice President John Adams of the Federalist Party crushed previous Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson of the Democratic-Republican Party.
  • Period: to

    The age of jefferson

  • Railroads

    Railroads
    The first railways truly rail-streets were worked by secretly, by organizations, towns and states. Any one having steeds and wagons with flared (rimmed) wheels could utilize the railroad on the installment of a little entirety of cash. The Horse vehicle, and the primary railways they kept running on, were produced about indistinguishable time from the steam train was imagined in the late 1820s. railroads were really important and provided great space for stuff to be sent and shipped or traded.
  • Louisiana purchase

    Louisiana purchase
    The United States under Jefferson's position, acquired the Louisiana domain from France, under the control of Napoleon, in 1803. The United States burned through $15 million for the Louisiana Purchase, and Napoleon surrendered his country in North America. The U.S. gained power of Mississippi exchange course and multiplied its size.US region multiplied, avoided France from Western outskirts of US. Agriculturists couldn't send products down Mississippi River to New Orleans.
  • Lewis and clark Expedition

    Lewis and clark Expedition
    The Lewis and Clark Expedition centered around May 1804 to September 1806, aka Corps of Discovery Expedition, was the principal American undertaking to cross the western segment of the United States. It started close St. Louis, advanced westbound, and went through the Continental Divide of the Americas to achieve the Pacific drift. this was a chosen gathering of US Army volunteers under the direction of Captain Meriwether Lewis and his dear companion Second Lieutenant William Clark.
  • Problems with the British (Trade)

    Problems with the British (Trade)
    Between the 17 and 19th centuries hundreds of years, a great many Africans were transported over the Atlantic to death or debasement as slaves in the Americas. but in 1807, because of the energetic endeavors of the Anti-Slavery Society, the British Parliament made the incredible stride of making the slave exchange illegal! . At that point, in 1834, Parliament finished subjugation in British states. Many see 1807 and 1834 as the primary incredible triumphs in the battle for human rights.
  • Embargo act of 1807

    Embargo act of 1807
    Thomas Jefferson's serene insurance from British and French assault of U.S. seller ships passing on, or related with passing on, war materials and distinctive cargoes to European belligerents in the midst of the Napoleonic Wars. .The ban was forced in light of the infringement of the United States in which American commercial vessels and their freight were seized as booty of war by the combative European naval forces. a embargo is a prohibition of trade of some sort.
  • Oregon trail

    Oregon trail
    The Oregon Trail was an around 2,000-mile course from Independence, Missouri, Oregon, which was utilized by a huge number of American pioneers in the mid 1800s to emigrate west. The trail was laborious and wound through Missouri and present-day Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming. Without the Oregon Trail and the death of the Oregon Donation Land Act in 1850, which energized settlement in the Oregon Territory, American pioneers would have been slower to settle the American West in the nineteenth century
  • War of 1812

    War of 1812
    was caused by British U.S. confines. The United States confronted the best maritime power on the planet, Great Britain, with exchange and America's desire to expand its domain. In June 1812, a dispute was fought between the United States, the United Kingdom and their individual partners. in the us and Canada it is viewed as a war in its very own right, however it was independent. the conflict helped establish the credibility of the young United States among other nations, intothe national anthem
  • Star spangled banner

    Star spangled banner
    The star spangled banner was composed and written by Francis Scott key, the star spangled banner was written because of the defense of Fort M Henry. a poem inspired from the victory and of what he saw, the us flag. the star spangled banner although has more versus that seem fishy and say some racist things but not many take it to consideration or have no idea, but many still pledge allegiance and sing the star spangled banner till this day.
  • Period: to

    The American industrial Revolution

  • Battle of new orleans

    Battle of new orleans
    The Battle of New Orleans occurred specifically after the marking of the Treaty of Ghent on December 24th, 1814, preceding news of the settlement could achieve the United States; the Americans protected against a British attack on New Orleans, which resulted in the people of america to provide victory. In a little more than a half hour, the Americans happened to take about around 70 losses and causalties , while the British endured about 2,000 people that died.
  • Temperance movement

    Temperance movement
    The temperance movement was a social movement to prevent and spread awareness against alcohol.Members in the movement ordinarily scrutinize liquor inebriation or promote soberness with pioneers underlining liquor's pessimistic impacts on well being, identity, and family life. Amid the nineteenth and mid twentieth hundreds of years, the Temperance Movement became possible in numerous nations. there was also women who would not want a family alcoholics.
  • Period: to

    Cultural Changes

  • Missouri compromise

    Missouri compromise
    The Missouri Compromise was the enactment that accommodated the confirmation of Maine to the United States as a free state alongside Missouri as a slave state, in this manner keeping up the equalization of intensity among North and South in the United States Senate this law prohibited slavery in the Louisiana Territory north of the 36° 30´ latitude line. The Missouri compromise in 1854 was repealed by the Kansas Nebraska act.
  • Monroe Doctrine

    Monroe Doctrine
    the Monroe doctrine was passed in 1823 my presidents James Monroe (duh) it was part of his annual speech to address the representatives the Monroe doctrine stated that it wouldn't allow any other foreign person to enter the western part hemisphere, so basically this document was to keep away other people that are from other places. (immigrants) you can say.the secretary, john Quincy Adams helped Monroe make this doctrine and fed to his ideas.
  • Election of 1824

    Election of 1824
    This election had no picked successor, there were four candidates, john Quincy Adams,Andrew Jackson,William Crawford and Henry clay. in the end Andrew Jackson won the popular vote. but he dint win the electoral college.john Adams was then chosen.clay dropped out and encouraged his supporters in the House to toss their votes behind Adams. the Jackson supporter and himself were angry and made an alleged cheating allegation of votes towards Adams.
  • Period: to

    Age of Jackson

  • Abolitionist

    Abolitionist
    OK so abolitionist are people who want to end slavery and it later became a movement in the 1830's these people came up with the abolitionist movement. In the United States of America was a push to end slavery in a country that esteemed individual rights and trusted "all men are made equivalent." Over time, abolitionists developed progressively strident in their requests, and slave proprietors dug in accordingly. this led to the civil war. or should i say they?
  • Anti- slavery movement

    Anti- slavery movement
    In mid 1831, Garrison, in Boston, started distributing his celebrated paper, the Liberator, bolstered generally by free African-Americans, who constantly assumed a noteworthy job in the development. In December 1833, sixty other people from different races founded the American Anti-Slavery Society, which denounced slavery as a sin that must be abolished immediately, endorsed nonviolence, and condemned racial prejudice. this event made me proud.
  • Jim Crow

    Jim Crow
    Jim Crow was a character, that a guy named Thomas Dartmouth (an actor) he performed routines as a fictional black slave that was clumsy and dumb. he then started dressing and used black face which is rude and bad to impersonate slaves and African Americans and he also would perform jokes or songs impersonating slaves and black people. the term Jim Crow became a normalized term to describe African Americans. this is rude and its crazy how this was funny to people.
  • Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints

    Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
    The church of Jesus Christ of latter day saints,Joseph Smith established the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in New York in 1830. As participation developed, the fundamental body of the congregation moved into Ohio, Missouri, lastly Illinois, where they set up the city of Nauvoo and Joseph Smith was executed in 1844. Notwithstanding developing abuse, church individuals started leaving Illinois in 1846 for agitated grounds in the American West.
  • Nat turners rebellion

    Nat turners rebellion
    Nat turners rebellion was a slave revolt that made them have enough and so they killed at least 51 white people.The greater the fear of American slave owners became over the idea of a slave insurrection, the harder they fought to defend the institution of slavery. It was into this world that Nat Turner was conceived in 1800. A Virginia slave, Turner would wind up driving one of the biggest slave uprisings in American history. Nat tuners rebellion was really significant and dangerous.
  • Trail of tears

    Trail of tears
    The trail of tears was such a sad and real event that happened in 1838 and 1839 as a major aspect of Andrew Jackson's Indian evacuation approach the Cherokee country was compelled to surrender its territories east of the Mississippi River and to relocate to a zone in present-day Oklahoma. The Cherokee individuals considered this voyage the "Trail of Tears," The Cherokee confronted appetite, infection, and weariness on the walk More than 4,000 out of 15,000 of the Cherokees passed away sadly.
  • Election of 1832

    Election of 1832
    The election of 1832, was Henry clay who was a republican and Jackson who was from the democratic party . they started nomination conventions and party platforms. Jackson hated the bank of united states and clay thought it was an issue for the election. Jackson basically destroys clay in the election because of the bank veto speech which Jackson stated that he will veto the bank, because it is his vision and it appealed to the common man
  • Bank veto speech

    Bank veto speech
    This was the speech that Andrew Jackson had in the election of 1832. he was going against Henry clay, he talked about how he is going to veto the bank, this speech was a huge success and win for him in the election of 1832, some stuff he said was why he voted the bank, the opposition supported him and democracy. this appealed to the common man as well. clearly stating why he won. the courts were not authority on constitution.
  • Whig party

    Whig party
    The bank war gave republicans a new name (anti-elitist) the Whig party was sorted out in 1834, uniting a free alliance of gatherings joined in their resistance to what party individuals saw as the official oppression of "Ruler Andrew" Jackson. They acquired the name Whig from the British party restricted to regal rights. four united state presidents were from the "whig" party. allegedly they borrowed the name whig from the british
  • Anti abolishment

    Anti abolishment
    anti abolitionist are people who are against abolitionist who are trying to get rid of slavery so they are mainly white anti abolitionist there were many Rallies were held to denounce abolitionist, they made a bonfire to burn abolitionist literature. there even was a gag rule: were congress were forced not to speak about abolitionist nor the abolition movement. many whites were mad that blacks are trying to get rid of slavery and they are making a lot of social movements.
  • Battle of San Jacinto

    Battle of San Jacinto
    The Battle of San Jacinto, battled on April 21, 1836, in present-day Harris County, Texas, was the definitive clash of the Texas Revolution. Driven by General Sam Houston, the Texan Army drew in and crushed General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna's Mexican armed force in a battle that endured only 18 minutes Sam Houston surprised Santa Anna and Santa Anna was captured the fight lasted less that 20 mins and Texas became an independent nation
  • Election of 1836

    Election of 1836
    the election of 1836 was Martin Van buren, His nickname was old kinderhook so they called him "OK" he was vice president at the time but Jackson picked him for president. he barely won the election against the Whigs. he inherited a bad economy, the panic of 1837 which many businesses would fail. they started calling him "martin van ruin". he honestly was not great of a president and he even ran for a re election of the election of 1840.
  • Iron plow

    Iron plow
    iron plow was presented in 1837, that Western agriculturists could develop their harvests all the more productively.The first solid metal furrows in America were presented by early European pioneers who settled along the Eastern drift.These iron furrows worked especially well on the grounds that the dirt would in general be sandy in nature. As ranchers started moving westbound towards the Great Plains, they found that the dirt was a lot harder to push through and wound up cleaning the furrows
  • Telegraph

    Telegraph
    Created during the 1840s by Samuel Morse and different innovators, the broadcast upset long-remove correspondence. It worked by transmitting electrical flags over a wire laid between stations. Notwithstanding imagining the transmit, Samuel Morse built up a code that appointed an arrangement of spots and dashes to each letter of the English letter set and took into account the straightforward transmission of complex messages crosswise over broadcast lines
  • Period: to

    Westward Expansion

  • Election of 1840

    Election of 1840
    Van bruen ran for re election, against general William Henry Harrison and he is a Whig then the Whigs spread rumors about van Buren. Whigs get women to influence vote of husbands. Harrison will win! Harrison wins and only makes it one month in the presidential placement because he got sick, he was the president with least time in office. John Tyler the vice presidents becomes presidents.democrats vs whigs and the democrats were white men only
  • Manifest destiny

    Manifest destiny
    the manifest destiny was a belief united states should be a united nation from Atlantic to the pacific and the Jacksonian democracy for white future in west. Fur trade (western frontier). American domination by 1820's, huge profits (huge extinction and decline of animals) Beavers- hunted (almost) to extinction. fashion changes, trappers disappeared by 1840's trappers expedition bring info about western land. belief in native Americas extinction
  • Bear flag revolt

    Bear flag revolt
    The bear flag is when California declares independence from mexico. small group of american settlers rebelled against mexico s government and proclaimed California and Independent "republic" it was short lived and the flag has a grizzly bear on Californians state flag. this revolt was started in 1846, even though California was owned by mexico at that certain time the Americans came into California and brought a lot of people to do a strike blow to the Mexicans.
  • Wilmot proviso

    Wilmot proviso
    was a political firestorm, and a proposal to prohibit slavery that the us won from the Mexican war. defeated in congress, democrats and Whigs both split into pro-slavery and free soil fractions. popular sovereignty. allowing states to choose their own path slave or free is slavery decided as a territory or a state? The person that proposed this was David Wilmot a democratic member of the us house of represenatives and he came up with 'wilmot proviso
  • Period: to

    Sectionalism

  • California gold mine

    California gold mine
    The California gold rush was really big, gold was found and thousands migrated. territory was inn 1848, they were rich and making it richer. gold was easy to find, mining began in 1852. supporting industries. the Chinese were there working for a low wage and doing mining or finding gold, they faced racism and they worked in the worst mines and in horrendous conditions. they took their opportunity. a lot of women didn't have husband because of mining accidents.
  • treaty of guadalupe hidalgo

    treaty of guadalupe hidalgo
    the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo settled the border dispute,seized over half of Mexico territory, problems to come over slavery. many foresaw slavery growing in new territories. this treaty ended the us Mexican war and transferred a lot of land from mexico to the united states owner ship. this treaty also brought so much people as close as 300,000 to california from other parts of the united states, the gold that was found in california was massive.
  • Popular Sovereignty

    Popular Sovereignty
    popular sovereignty is allowing states to choose their own path, is the rule that the authority of a state and its legislature are made and continued by the assent of its kin, through their chose agents (Rule by the People), who are the wellspring of all political power. It is nearly connected with social philosophers. famous power covers a large number of institutional potential outcomes. For each situation, in any case, well known power accept the presence of some type of mainstream assent
  • Underground railroad

    Underground railroad
    the underground railroad was a system of individuals, African Americans and whites, offering safe house and help to get away for slaves. slaves from the south. it created as an assembly of a few diverse undercover endeavors. the correct dates of this reality are not known, but rather it worked from the late eighteenth century to the civil war,so all its en devours kept on undermining the confederacy in a less shrouded form. the underground railroad was an opportunity were slaves can be free
  • Fugitive slave act

    Fugitive slave act
    the fugitive slave act is the returning of run away slaves. fugitive slave act of 1850, commissioners for returning slave fugitives had no right by trial and whites jailed or fined for refusing to help. some abolitionist helped slaves escape the south, the fugitive slave act was passed on September eighteenth 1850, as part of the compromise of 1850. in other words this provided for the seizure and return of run away slaves.
  • Election of 1852

    Election of 1852
    In the election of 1852 the democrats won the election and winfield Scott (Whig) lost and Scott allied with anti slavery Whig party started to fall apart. This was the last election in which the Whigs served as the principal opposition to the Democrats. it was winfield scott which was a whig and Franklin pierce who was a democrat. pierce wins the election 254 to 42 to winfield electorally .so winfield scott became the 14th presidents of the united states.
  • Republican party

    Republican party
    The republican party formed in the 1850's to stop the spread of slavery in the west the symbol of the republican party is an elephants. the color of the republican party is red. the republican party likes a small government. the republicans also think people should own guns, they have underwent changed since they first came up in 1854. the republicans now like a strong military government and another term used for the republican party is the GOP.
  • Kansas-Nebraska Act

    Kansas-Nebraska Act
    The Kansas Nebraska act also know as the bleeding Kansas, is where the abolitionist financed settlement. pro slavery interest recruited illegal borders, they won and establish pro slavery government. anti slavery settlers establish anti slavery government. two separate government in Kansas. congress debates issue, senator Charles Sumner "crime against Kansas" speech (1856) pro slavery vigilantes attack Lawrence, Kansas. this act was important
  • Period: to

    The civil war

  • Trent affair

    Trent affair
    The Trent affair was a serious diplomatic incident and crisis in 1861 amid the American Civil War that compromised a war between the United States and the United Kingdom. The U.S. Naval force unlawfully caught two Confederate representatives from a British ship; the UK challenged energetically. including the precept of opportunity of the oceans, which about hastened war between Great Britain and the United States. the Trent affair happened in 1861
  • Frederick Douglass

    Frederick Douglass
    wrote autobiographies and described his past experiences as a slave in 1845,was an American social reformer, abolitionist, speaker, author, he turned into a national pioneer of the abolitionist development in Massachusetts&ny. In his time, he was portrayed by abolitionists as a living counter-guide to slaveholders' contentions that slaves came up short on the scholarly ability to work Northerners thought that it was difficult to trust that such an incredible speaker had once been a slave.
  • Battle of antietem

    Battle of antietem
    The Battle of Antietam, additionally called the Battle of Sharpsburg, happened September 22, 1862, at Antietam Creek close Sharpsburg, Maryland. It set Confederate General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia against Union General George McClellan's Army of the Potomac and was the zenith of Lee's endeavor to attack the north. The fight's result would be fundamental to forming America's future, and it remains the deadliest one-day fight in all American military history.
  • Emancipation Proclamation

    Emancipation Proclamation
    Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. The presentation peruses, all people held as slaves inside any State or assigned piece of a State, the general population whereof will at that point be in insubordination to the United States, will be at that point, thenceforward, and always free. as such, slaves in the Confederate states were articulated free by the Emancipation Proclamation. this all happened on January first 1863
  • Battle of vicksburg

    Battle of vicksburg
    the battle of Vicksburg is when general grant wins major battle and cuts south in two and controls of the Mississippi river. union captures new Orleans deprived south or largest city and financing the war starts winding down the union begins overwhelming the south.Vicksburg was one of the Union's best crusades of the war. Albeit General Ulysses S. Give's first endeavor to take the city bombed in the winter of 1862-63, he recharged his endeavors in the spring.
  • Gettysburg address

    Gettysburg address
    Lincoln gives his most famous speech. basically this speech was said to urge individuals to make a move in enhancing the country, respect the individuals who does in the Battle of Gettysburg, and rejoining the north and south.The trust that once the fights have been battled, we can live in harmony and concordance together.That we should keep on battling to enhance our country. and that when we battle we should "enjoy in peace and harmony"
  • Election of 1864

    Election of 1864
    in this election Lincoln was afraid that he would lose the election and northerners weary of war and northern democrats attack Lincolns wartime setback and also democrats nominate George McClellan and Sherman capture of Atlanta gave Lincoln a boost and Lincoln will win the election fairly and easily. and as the election happened in the process of the American Civil War, it was contested only by the states that had not seceded from the Union.
  • Period: to

    Reconstruction

  • 40 acres and a mule

    40 acres and a mule
    was general t Sherman special field order #15 this was authorized 400,000 acres of planter land. these acres divided up each slave gets 40 acres of land but this was an broke promise a broken promise made in the United States for agrarian reform for former enslaved black farmers by Union on January 16, 1865.Then, President Johnson gave the land to its original white owner and the black families were required to sign labor contracts.
  • Assassination of Abraham Lincoln

    Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
    Lincoln attends a play at fords theater and 5 days after the Appomattox courthouse john Wilkes booth shoots Lincoln and Lincoln was taken to the hospital and died the next day. while going to the play at Ford's Theater. After a sensational beginning departure, Booth was killed at the peak of a 12-day manhunt. the death was a piece of a bigger scheme expected by Booth to resuscitate the Confederate reason by disposing of the three most vital authorities of the United States government.
  • KKK

    KKK
    gathering of Confederate veterans meets to frame a mystery society that they dedicate the "Ku Klux Klan." The KKK quickly developed from a mystery social brotherhood to a paramilitary power keen on turning around the national government's dynamic Reconstruction Era-exercises in the South, particularly arrangements that hoisted the privileges of the neighborhood African American populace. the kkk did so many hurtful things towards blacks and claimed to be Gods people
  • Election of 1866

    Election of 1866
    The election of 1866, was a reconstruction made through legislation. overrode Johnson reconstructions plan. divides south into 5 military districts all males could vote, impeachment of Andrew Johnson got impeached by congress in 1868 he was the first presidential impeachment ever. he got impeached with less than a year in the office.The U.S. House of Representatives votes 11 articles of impeachment and a violation of the tenure office act
  • Election of 1868

    Election of 1868
    The election of 1868 was with the republic of course Ulysses s grant who was the elected president and this election had a political moderation for peace, democrat that ran against was named Horatio Seymour. this election was important because it showed whites in the north and south WERE racist and black vote became really important. violence and intimidation was occurring a lot during this election because the blacks were allowed to vote
  • Panic of 1873

    Panic of 1873
    The panic of 1873 set the economy back until 1877 and people focused on their own economic affairs, so there was not a lot of people including the white low income people who stood up for African Americans, they were focused on their own and not African Americans at the moment. democrats won big in 1874 and grant reduces efforts in policing south. many were afraid of political issues and many were panicking of their own current states of affairs and their money.
  • Compromise of 1877

    Compromise of 1877
    This compromise Hayes given all the electoral votes, Hayes agreed to end reconstruction. and federal troop removal from south and it was a beginning of total suppression for the southern blacks. Casual, unwritten arrangement that settled the seriously debated 1876 U.S. presidential decision. It brought about the United States government hauling the last troops out of the South, and formally finished the Reconstruction Era. this compromise was important for blacks.