1st quarter timeline

  • Andrew Jackson

    Andrew Jackson
    Andrew Jackson was born in 1767 and died in 1845. He was also born in poverty. Andrew had young politician by 1812, when war broke out between the United States and Britain. After losing to John Quincy Adams in the contentious in the 1824 presidential election. Andrew Jackson returned four years later to win. He defeated Adams and became the nations seventh president. (1829-1837) Jackson became the leader of the new Democratic Party. The picture below is a picture of Andrew Jackson.
  • Brigham Young

    Brigham Young
    Mr. Young was born on June 1, 1801 and passed away on August 29, 1877. He started his career as a carpenter and a painter. He was established an apostle in the year of 1835. He had been elected head of a group called the Mormons and advanced as president until his afterlife. Mr. Young conducted the journey of 16,000 Mormons from Illinois to Utah from the year of 1856 to the year of 1852, and developed into the administrator of the nation in the year of 1851.
  • Joseph Smith

    Joseph Smith
    Joseph Smith was the founder and the first president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Joseph and 5 other employees very nicely organized the Church at Fayette,
    New York, on April 6th 1830. Joseph supervised over the Church until June 27th, 1844, when he was martyred. Below his administration, Church membership increased from six to over 26,000. Joseph Smith Jr. i was born on December 23, 1805, in Sharon, Vermont to Joseph and Lucy Mack Smith. The picture below is a
  • Mormons

    Mormons
  • The Alamo

    The Alamo
    The Alamo began on February 23rd, 1836 and ended on March 6th, 1836. In the month of December and in the year of 1835 a crowd of Texan volunteer fighters employed a big group/event called the Alamo. A huge amount of difference between the two groups, the Alamo's 200 fighters--directed by James Bowie and William Travis and counting the noted frontiersman Davy Crockett–controlled boldly for 13 days previously before the Mexican intruders completely defeated them. For the Texans the fighting cause
  • Trail of Tears

    Trail of Tears
    In the early 1830's, Nearly 125,000 Native Americans lived on millions of acres of land in Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, North Carolina, and Florida-land their ancestors had employed and cultivated for generations. Towards the end of the decade, a very short amount of natives remained anywhere in the southeastern United States. The government forced the white settlers to leave their homelands and walk thousands of miles to a special designated "Indian territory" across the Mississipi
  • Manifest Destiny

    Manifest Destiny
    The Manifest Destiny is a name meaning the attitude common during the 19th century period of American development that the United States was designed to stretch from coast to coast. This attitude helped encourage western settlement, Native American removal and war with Mexico. The phrase was first engaged by John L. O'Sullivan. in an article on the annexation of Texas advertised in the July-August 1845 edition of the United States magazine and Democratic Review, which he altered.
  • Mexican War

    Mexican War
    The Mexican War began on April 25th, 1846 and ended of February 2 1848. This war was the first United States armed battle mostly fought on a different kind of soil. A man that was President in this time frame named James K. Polk believed the United States had a “manifest destiny” to advance to the other side of the continent to the Pacific Ocean. A outskirt battle along the Rio Grande began the battle and was pursued by a sequence of United States achievements.
  • Donner Party

    Donner Party
    In early spring in the year of 1846, a crowd of roughly 90 colonists left Springfield Illinois, and headed west. Attended by siblings Jacob and George Donner, the crowd tried to take a new and in which they thought was a shorter route to California. Shortly, they discovered a rugged terrain and plentiful delays, they ended up trapped in abundant snow fall high in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. They had to eat animals and people to survive through the winter. Due to the cannibalism that they caused
  • Gold Rush

    Gold Rush
    The Gold Rush began on January 24th, 1848 and ended in the year of 1845. The month and day the Gold Rush ended was not given. The analysis of gold nuggets in the Sacramento Valley in the beginning of 1848 provoked the Gold Rush, defensibly one of the biggest compelling events to outline the American history during the first half of the 19th century. When the news of the analysis advanced to everyone's hearing thousands of gold miners went by sea or land to San Francisco enclosing field.