An Overview of American History Visual Timeline

By AriJP
  • Jamestown Settlement

    The Jamestown colony was the first successful English settlement in mainland North America.
  • Mayflower Compact

    Mayflower Compact
    The Mayflower Compact, signed by 41 English colonists on the ship Mayflower on November 11, 1620, was the first written framework of government established in what is now the United States. The compact was drafted to prevent opposition amongst Puritans and non-separatist Pilgrims who had landed at Plymouth just a few days prior.
  • French and Indian Wars - 1754-63

    French and Indian Wars - 1754-63
    The French and Indian War was the North American conflict in a larger imperial war between Great Britain and France known as the Seven Years’ War. The French and Indian War began in 1754 and ended with the Treaty of Paris in 1763. The war provided Great Britain enormous territorial gains in North America, but disputes over subsequent frontier policy and paying the war’s expenses led to colonial discontent, and ultimately to the American Revolution.
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    Revolutionary War

    The American Revolution (1775-83) is also known as the American Revolutionary War and the U.S. War of Independence. The conflict arose from growing tensions between residents of Great Britain’s 13 North American colonies and the colonial government, which represented the British crown.
  • Louisiana Purchase

    During the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, the United States purchased approximately 828,000,000 square miles of territory from France.
  • Indian Removal Act

    Indian Removal Act
    The Indian Removal Act was signed into law by President Andrew Jackson on May 28, 1830, authorizing the president to grant unsettled lands west of the Mississippi in exchange for Indian lands within existing state borders. A few tribes went peacefully, but many resisted.
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    Civil War

    The war resolved two fundamental questions left unresolved by the revolution: whether the United States was to be a dissolvable confederation of sovereign states or an indivisible nation with a sovereign national government; and whether this nation, born of a declaration that all men were created with an equal right to liberty, would continue to exist as the largest slaveholding country in the world.
  • Assassination of Lincoln

    Assassination of Lincoln
    On April 14, 1865, John Wilkes Booth, a famous actor and Confederate sympathizer, fatally shot President Abraham Lincoln at a play at Ford’s Theatre in Washington, D.C. The attack came only five days after Confederate General Robert E. Lee surrendered his massive army at Appomattox Court House, Virginia. Lincoln was the very first president to be assassinated.
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    Korean War

    The Korean War began as a civil war between North and South Korea, but the conflict soon became international when, under U.S. leadership, the United Nations joined to support South Korea and the People’s Republic of China (PRC) entered to aid North Korea. The war left Korea divided and brought the Cold War to Asia.
  • Peak of Civil Rights Movement

    Peak of Civil Rights Movement
    This was a series of political movements for equality that peaked in the 1960s. In most situations, protestors aimed at achieving change through nonviolent forms of resistance, where one example of these is sit-ins. The main idea of Civil Rights movements included ensuring that the law equally protects the rights of all people.
  • Fall of Berlin Wall

    Fall of Berlin Wall
    On November 9, 1989, as the Cold War began to thaw across Eastern Europe, the spokesman for East Berlin’s Communist Party announced a change in his city’s relations with the West. Starting at midnight that day, he said, citizens of the GDR were free to cross the country’s borders.