US History time line

By 45623
  • John D. Rockefeller

    John D. Rockefeller

    He was an empire builder and a philanthropist (a person who seeks to promote the welfare of others, especially by the generous donation of money to good causes.), a consummate hero (was very skilled ) and a ruthless businessman.
  • Dawes Severalty Act

    Dawes Severalty Act

    The Dawes Severalty Act of 1887 was devised to destroy tribal life and reservations as part of the social policy of Americanization.
  • Wounded Knee

    Wounded Knee

    Wounded Knee is a book about someone who finds his ancestral European attachments fading as his native American attachments grows.
  • Populist Party

    Populist Party

    The Populist Party emerged in the early 1890s as an important force in the Southern and Western United States, but collapsed after it nominated Democrat William Jennings Bryan in the 1896 United States presidential election.
  • Yellow Journalism

    Yellow Journalism

    The UK's Sunday Times proved its lack of professionalism when it ran a story alleging that former Labor Party leader Michael Foot was a KGB agent. Sources were not credible and Foot was not given the chance to defend himself.
  • Plessy vs. Ferguson

    Plessy vs. Ferguson

    Keith Plessy and Phoebe Ferguson were both born in New Orleans in 1957. Sixty-five years earlier, in 1892, a member of each of their families met in a Louisiana courtroom when Judge John Howard Ferguson found Homer Plessy guilty of breaking the law by sitting in a train car for white passengers. The case of Plessy v. Ferguson went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which ruled that "separate-but-equal" was constitutional, sparking decades of unjust laws and discriminatory attitudes.
  • Grandfather Clause

    Grandfather Clause

    A Grandfather Clause is a provision in which an old rule continues to apply to some existing situations while a new rule will apply to all future cases. Those exempt from the new rule are said to have Grandfather rights or acquired rights, or to have been Grandfathered in.
  • Open Door Policy

    Open Door Policy

    The Open Door Policy is a term in foreign affairs initially used to refer to the policy established in the late 19th century and the early 20th century that would allow for a system of trade in China open to all countries equally.
  • Roosevelt Corollary to Monroe Doctrine

    Roosevelt Corollary to Monroe Doctrine

    The corollary stated that not only were the nations of the Western Hemisphere not open to colonization by European powers, but that the United States had the responsibility to preserve order and protect life and property in those countries.
  • Muckraker

    Muckraker

    The Muckrakers were reform-minded journalists in the Progressive Era in the United States who exposed established institutions and leaders as corrupt. They typically had large audiences in popular magazines.
  • Henry Ford introduces the Model T car

    Henry Ford introduces the Model T car

    On October 1, 1908, the first production Model T Ford is completed at the company's Piquette Avenue plant in Detroit. Between 1908 and 1927, Ford would build some 15 million Model T cars. It was the longest production run of any automobile model in history until the Volkswagen Beetle surpassed it in 1972.
  • 16th Amendment

    16th Amendment

    The Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution allows Congress to levy an income tax without apportioning it among the states on the basis of population. It was passed by Congress in 1909 in response to the 1895 Supreme Court case of Pollock
  • World War I begins in Europe

    World War I begins in Europe

    World War I, also known as the Great War, began in 1914 after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria. His murder catapulted into a war across Europe that lasted until 1918.
  • German U-Boat sinks British passenger liner Lusitania, Americans killed on board

    German U-Boat sinks British passenger liner Lusitania, Americans killed on board

    The disaster set off a chain of events that led to the U.S. entering World War I. A German U-boat torpedoed the British-owned steamship Lusitania, killing 1,195 people including 128 Americans, on May 7, 1915. The disaster set off a chain of events that led to the U.S. entering World War I
  • Germany continues unrestricted submarine warfare-gets warning from U.S.

    Germany continues unrestricted submarine warfare-gets warning from U.S.

    Unrestricted submarine warfare was first introduced in World War I in early 1915, when Germany declared. The incident prompted U.S. President Woodrow Wilson to send a strongly worded note to the hungry and frustrated German public, which was angered by the continuing Allied naval blockade.
  • Fourteen Points

    Fourteen Points

    The Fourteen Points was a statement of principles for peace that was to be used for peace negotiations in order to end World War I. The principles were outlined in a January 8, 1918, speech on war aims and peace terms to the United States Congress by President Woodrow Wilson.
  • Treaty of Versailles

    Treaty of Versailles

    The Treaty of Versailles was the most important of the peace treaties that brought World War I to an end. The Treaty ended the state of war between Germany and the Allied Powers.
  • 19th Amendment

    19th Amendment

    The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.
  • Teapot Dome Scandal

    Teapot Dome Scandal

    The Teapot Dome scandal was a bribery scandal involving the administration of United States President Warren G. Harding from 1921 to 1923.
  • Scopes Monkey Trial

    Scopes Monkey Trial

    The Scopes Trial, formally known as The State of Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes and commonly referred to as the Scopes Monkey Trial, was an American legal case in July 1925 in which a high school
  • Charles Lindbergh

    Charles Lindbergh

    Charles Augustus Lindbergh was an American aviator, military officer, author, inventor, and activist. At the age of 25 in 1927, he went from obscurity as a U.S. Air Mail pilot to instantaneous world fame by winning the Orteig Prize for making a nonstop flight from New York City to Paris on May 20–21.
  • Sacco and Vanzetti

    Sacco and Vanzetti

    Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were Italian immigrant anarchists found guilty of first-degree murder and were convicted of murdering a guard and a paymaster during the April 15, 1920, armed robbery of the Slater and Morrill Shoe Company in Braintree, Massachusetts, United States.
  • Stock Market Crash

    Stock Market Crash

    A stock market crash is a sudden dramatic decline of stock prices across a major cross-section of a stock market, resulting in a significant loss of paper wealth. Crashes are driven by panic selling and underlying economic factors. They often follow speculation and economic bubbles.
  • Franklin Delano Roosevelt elected President

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt elected President

    In the 1932 presidential election, Roosevelt defeated Republican incumbent Herbert Hoover in a landslide. Roosevelt took office in the midst of the Great Depression, the worst economic crisis in U.S. history.
  • Bonus Army (wwi vets) march on Washington demanding compensation

    Bonus Army (wwi vets) march on Washington demanding compensation

    The principal demand of the Bonus Army was the immediate cash payment of their certificates. On July 28, 1932, U.S. Attorney General William D. Mitchell ordered the veterans removed from all government property. Washington police met with resistance, shot at the protestors, and two veterans were wounded and later died.
  • Fireside Chats

    Fireside Chats

    The fireside chats were a series of evening radio addresses given by Franklin D. Roosevelt, the 32nd President of the United States, between 1933 and 1944.
  • 1st 100 Days

    1st 100 Days

    The 100-days concept is believed to have its roots in France, where the concept of “Cent Jours” (Hundred Days) refers to the period of 1815 between Napoleon Bonaparte’s return to Paris from exile on the island of Elba and his final defeat at the Battle of Waterloo, after which King Louis XVIII regained the French throne.
  • Huey Long

    Huey Long

    Huey Pierce Long Jr., byname "The Kingfish", was an American politician who served as the 40th governor of Louisiana from 1928 to 1932 and as a member of the United States Senate from 1932 until his assassination in 1935.
  • Wagner Act

    Wagner Act

    The Wagner Act of 1935, also known as the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), guarantees the right of workers to organize and outlines the legal framework for labor unions and management relations. In addition to protecting workers, the act provides a framework for collective bargaining.
  • Social Security Act

    Social Security Act

    The Social Security Act was signed into law by President Roosevelt on August 14, 1935. In addition to several provisions for general welfare, the new Act created a social insurance program designed to pay retired workers age 65 or older a continuing income after retirement.
  • FDR elected for unprecedented 3rd Term

    FDR elected for unprecedented 3rd Term

    Roosevelt won a third term by defeating Republican nominee Wendell Willkie in the 1940 United States presidential election. He remains the only president to serve for more than two terms.
  • Lend-Lease Act

    Lend-Lease Act

    The Lend-Lease Act, approved by Congress in March 1941, had given President Roosevelt virtually unlimited authority to direct material aid such as ammunition, tanks, airplanes, trucks, and food to the war effort in Europe without violating the nation's official position of neutrality.
  • Atlantic Charter

    Atlantic Charter

    The Atlantic Charter was a joint declaration issued during World War II (1939-45) by the United States and Great Britain that set out a vision for the postwar world. First announced on August 14, 1941, a group of 26 Allied nations eventually pledged their support by January 1942.
  • Propaganda

    Propaganda

    Information, especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote or publicize a particular political cause or point of view.
  • Battle of Midway

    Battle of Midway

    The Battle of Midway was a major naval battle in the Pacific Theater of World War II that took place on 4–7 June 1942, six months after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor and one month after the Battle of the Coral Sea.
  • Internment of Japanese Americans

    Internment of Japanese Americans

    The internment of Japanese Americans in the United States during World War II was the forced relocation and incarceration in concentration camps in the western interior of the country of about 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry, most of whom lived on the Pacific Coast.
  • "Iron Curtain"

    "Iron Curtain"

    a notional barrier separating the former Soviet bloc and the West prior to the decline of communism that followed the political events in eastern Europe in 1989.
  • Jimmy Carter elected President

    Jimmy Carter elected President

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K1Jwr80CnWY
    The video is about his speech.
  • Three Mile Island

    Three Mile Island

    The Three Mile Island accident was a partial meltdown of reactor number 2 of Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, near Harrisburg, and subsequent radiation leak that occurred on March 28, 1979. It is the most significant accident in U.S. commercial nuclear power plant history.
  • Iran releases U.S. embassy hostages released after 444 days in captivity.

    Iran releases U.S. embassy hostages released after 444 days in captivity.

    The 52 American hostages were officially handed over to the US authorities by the Algerians in Algiers this morning, at the end of 444 days in captivity. The hostages were flown out of Mehrabad airport in Iran, last night a few moments after President Reagan had completed his swearing in.
  • Strategic Defense Initiative

    Strategic Defense Initiative

    The Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), nicknamed the "Star Wars program", was a proposed missile defense system intended to protect the United States from attack by ballistic strategic nuclear weapons (intercontinental ballistic missiles and submarine-launched ballistic missiles).
  • 9/11 attacks

    9/11 attacks

    The 9/11 attacks, often referred to as 9/11, were a series of four coordinated terrorist attacks by the Wahhabi terrorist group Al-Qaeda against the United States on the morning of Tuesday, September
  • Election of Barack Obama

    Election of Barack Obama

    On November 4, 2008, Obama defeated the Republican nominee, Senator John McCain of Arizona, making him the President-elect and the first African American elected President. He was the third sitting U.S. Senator, after Warren G. Harding and John F. Kennedy, to be elected president.
  • Election of Donald Trump

    Election of Donald Trump

    The 2016 United States presidential election was the 58th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 8, 2016.
  • COVID 19

    COVID 19

    It was initially reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) on December 31, 2019. On January 30, 2020, the WHO declared the COVID-19 outbreak a global health emergency. On March 11, 2020, the WHO declared COVID-19 a global pandemic, its first such designation since declaring H1N1 influenza a pandemic in 2009.
  • Election of Joe Biden

    Election of Joe Biden

    This is the electoral history of Joe Biden, the 46th and current President of the United States. Biden served as the 47th Vice President of the United States

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