US History simple timeline: Difference between revisions
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'''Timeline of major events and periods''' | '''Timeline of major events and periods''' | ||
== Major wars & events general timeline == | == Major wars & events general timeline == | ||
* Causes and effects of wars helps us to understand broader US History | |||
* Wars are also useful for a timeline reference | |||
** i.e., if you know that the Civil War occurred 1861-1865 | |||
*** then if you see an event or person associated with a date, for example, of 1858 | |||
*** then you will know that that event or person may be understood in terms of the coming Civil War | |||
=== US Wars timeline === | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible" | |||
!Dates | |||
!Major Wars | |||
|- | |||
|'''1754-1763''' | |||
|'''French-Indian War''' | |||
|- style="background-color:#efefef;" | |||
| | |||
'''1775-1781''' | |||
|'''Revolutionary War''' | |||
|- | |||
|'''1812-1815''' | |||
|'''War of 1812''' | |||
|- style="background-color:#efefef;" | |||
|'''1846-48''' | |||
|'''Mexican-American War''' | |||
|- | |||
| | |||
'''1861-65''' | |||
| | |||
'''U.S. Civil War''' | |||
|- style="background-color:#efefef;" | |||
|'''1898''' | |||
|'''Spanish-American war''' | |||
|- | |||
| | |||
'''1917-18''' | |||
|'''WWI''' (Europe) | |||
|- style="background-color:#efefef;" | |||
| | |||
'''1941-45''' | |||
| '''WWII''' (Europe & Asia) | |||
|- | |||
| | |||
'''1946-1989''' | |||
|'''Cold War (US v. USSR)''' | |||
|- style="background-color:#efefef;" | |||
|'''1950-1953''' | |||
|'''Korean War''' | |||
|- | |||
| | |||
'''1959-1965''' | |||
|'''Vietnam: U.S. intervention''' | |||
|- style="background-color:#efefef;" | |||
|'''1965-1972''' | |||
|'''Vietnam: U.S. ground & aerial (airplanes) war''' | |||
|- | |||
|'''1990-91''' | |||
|'''Gulf War''' | |||
|- style="background-color:#efefef;" | |||
|'''2002-2021''' | |||
|'''Afghanistan War''' | |||
|- | |||
| | |||
'''2002-2021''' | |||
|'''Iraq War''' | |||
|- | |||
|} | |||
=== Major wars timeline with associate events & minor wars === | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible" | {| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible" | ||
!Dates | !Dates | ||
!Major | !Major Wars | ||
!Dates | !Dates | ||
! | !Other Events & Minor Wars | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''1754-1763''' | | colspan="4" |<center>'''18th Century (1700s)'''</center> | ||
| '''French-Indian War''' | |- | ||
|'''1754-1763''' | |||
|'''French-Indian War''' | |||
|1763-1783 | |1763-1783 | ||
|American Revolution | |American Revolution | ||
|- style=" | |- style="background-color:#efefef;" | ||
| | | | ||
'''1775-1781''' | '''1775-1781''' | ||
| '''Revolutionary War''' | |'''Revolutionary War''' | ||
|1789 | |1789 | ||
|US Constitution adopted | |US Constitution adopted | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="4" |<center>'''19th Century (1800s)'''</center> | |||
|- | |||
|'''1846-48''' | |'''1846-48''' | ||
|'''Mexican-American War''' | |'''Mexican-American War''' | ||
|1812- | |1812-1815 | ||
|War of 1812 | |War of 1812 | ||
|- style=" | expansion of Slavery | ||
|- style="background-color:#efefef;" | |||
| rowspan="2" | | | rowspan="2" | | ||
'''1861-65''' | '''1861-65''' | ||
Line 31: | Line 104: | ||
'''U.S. Civil War''' | '''U.S. Civil War''' | ||
|1850 | |1850 | ||
|"Compromise of 1850" | |"Compromise of 1850" | ||
|- style=" | |- style="background-color:#efefef;" | ||
|1865-1877 | |1865-1877 | ||
|Reconstruction period | |Reconstruction period | ||
|- | |- | ||
|'''1898''' | |||
|'''Spanish-American War''' | |||
|1867-1890s | |||
|"Indian" or "Frontier" wars | |||
"Battle of Little Bighorn," 1876 | |||
|- | |||
| colspan="4" |<center>'''20th Century (1900s)'''</center> | |||
|- | |||
| | | | ||
'''1917-18''' | '''1917-18''' | ||
|'''WWI''' | |'''WWI''' (Europe) | ||
| | | | ||
| | | | ||
|- style=" | |- style="background-color:#efefef;" | ||
| rowspan="2" | | | rowspan="2" | | ||
'''1941-45''' | '''1941-45''' | ||
| rowspan="2" |'''WWII''' | | rowspan="2" |'''WWII''' (Europe & Asia) | ||
|1930s | |1930s | ||
|Great Depression | |Great Depression | ||
|- style="background-color:#efefef;" | |||
|1940s-1960s | |||
|Civil Rights Movement | |||
|- | |- | ||
| | | rowspan="2" | | ||
| | |||
'''1946-1989''' | '''1946-1989''' | ||
|'''Cold War''' | | rowspan="2" |'''Cold War (US v. USSR)''' | ||
|1950-1953 | |1950-1953 | ||
|Korean War | |Korean War | ||
|- style=" | |- | ||
|1962 | |||
|Cuban Missile Crisis | |||
|- style="background-color:#efefef;" | |||
| | | | ||
'''1965-1972''' | '''1965-1972''' | ||
|'''Vietnam: U.S. ground & aeriel war''' | |'''Vietnam: U.S. ground & aeriel war''' | ||
|1959- | |1959-1965 | ||
|Vietnam War: US intervention | |Vietnam War: US intervention | ||
|- | |- | ||
|'''1990-1991''' | |||
|'''Gulf War''' | |||
|1991 | |||
|Soviet Union dissolved | |||
|- | |||
| colspan="4" |<center>'''21st Century (2000s)'''</center> | |||
|- | |||
| | | | ||
'''2002-2021''' | '''2002-2021''' | ||
|'''Afghanistan War''' | |'''Afghanistan War''' | ||
|2003- | |2003-2011 | ||
|Iraq War/ "War on Terror" | |Iraq War/ "War on Terror" | ||
|- | |- | ||
|} | |} | ||
== Major wars & | == Major periods of US History == | ||
* "periods" are eras (or times) that have a some commonality | |||
* that we can look upon to understand and define an era | |||
** no single period is completely distinct from any other | |||
** but organizing US History into "periods" makes it more understandable | |||
=== Major events timeline by century === | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
|+ | |||
!Century | |||
!Period/s | |||
!Major Events | |||
|- | |||
|'''17th Century (1600s)''' | |||
|'''Colonial''' | |||
| | |||
* early English colonies in Virginia & Massachusetts | |||
* colonial population growth via immigration and high birth rate | |||
* expansion of religious tolerance | |||
|- | |||
|'''18th Century (1700s)''' | |||
|'''Late Colonia/ (1700s-1760s)''' | |||
'''Revolutionary (1760s-1780s | |||
Early Republic (1790s)''' | |||
| | |||
* westward expansion of English settlements, into and across Appalachian Mts | |||
* French-Indian War (1754-1763) | |||
* expansion of slavery in South, esp. for tobacco planting | |||
* Revolutionary period & war | |||
* new Republic under the US Constitution & introduction of Bill of RIghts | |||
|- | |||
|'''19th Century (1800s)''' | |||
|'''Antebellum''' | |||
'''Civil War & Reconstruction''' | |||
'''Industrialization''' | |||
| | |||
* western expansion, esp. Louisiana Purchase, Mexican-American War | |||
* slave-based cotton economy & North-South division over slavery | |||
* Civil War & Reconstruction | |||
* European and East Asian immigration | |||
* Industrialization and railroads | |||
|- | |||
|'''20th Century (1900s)''' | |||
|'''American ImperialismWorld Wars & Cold Ear''' | |||
'''American Century''' | |||
| | |||
* U.S. involvement in overseas Wars | |||
* WWII & subsequent Cold War w/ the USSR | |||
* Collapse of USSR & American gobal dominance | |||
|- | |||
|'''21st Century (2000s)''' | |||
|'''Sept. 11 & War on TerrorGlobalism''' | |||
| | |||
* American cultural and economic dominance | |||
* Wars on Terror / Patriot Act | |||
* Rise of global economy and China | |||
|} | |||
=== Major economic crises timeline - overview === | |||
for specific events and their details see [[AP US History vocabulary list#Economic crises|AP US History vocabulary list/Econonic crises]] | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
|+Economic Crises | |||
!Period/s | |||
!Event | |||
!Causes/ Notes | |||
|- | |||
| colspan="3" |'''19th Century''' | |||
|- | |||
|Antebellum | |||
Jacksonian Period | |||
| | |||
| | |||
* the Early Republic offered many opportunities for "getting rich" | |||
** land speculation | |||
** shipping (ocean trade, river ferries, canals, etc.) | |||
** railroad and telegraph (starting 1830s, most growth in the 1850s) | |||
* consequently, U.S. and European banks and investors looked to profit from the incredible geographic and demographic expansion of the young nation | |||
* thus causing "bubbles" that would "burst" when investors failed to receive expected profits or loans went unpaid | |||
|- | |||
|Gilded Age | |||
| | |||
| | |||
* industrialism led to enormous economic growth and opportunity for investment | |||
* railroads and telegraphs were especially important to this expansion | |||
** as the country expanded westward, railroads connected markets | |||
** a more connected nation and ability to transmit information quickly via telegraphs and distribute materials via railroads drove media empries in newspapers and magazines | |||
** | |||
|- | |||
|Progressive Era | |||
|Panic of 1907 | |||
| | |||
* in late 1906, the stock market reacted poorly to the 1906 Hepburn Act, which | |||
* Stock market crash (down 50%) during a recession due to a failed Trust company (investment firm) and a subsequent bank failure due to bad loans based upon a coal/iron company stock | |||
* JP Morgan Co. intervened and led other investors to back the banks with credit and cash | |||
* When the coal/iron company stock crashed, US Steel (owned in part by JP Morgan) took over the company, which covered the bad loans and market price loss | |||
** it was significant because the T. Roosevelt administration gave tacit approval (by not objecting to it) of the takeover, even though it extended the U.S. Steel monopoly | |||
** marks the distinction for T.R. between "good trusts" (US Steel) and "bad trusts" (Standard Oil) | |||
* the Panic of 1907 led to calls to reform that nation's money supply, leading to the 1913 establishment of the Federal Reserve | |||
|- | |||
|post-WWI | |||
|Depression of 1920 | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
|1930s | |||
|Great Depression | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
|Post-Vietnam | |||
|1970s Stagflation | |||
|Period of economic and political decline | |||
|- | |||
|Mortgage bubble | |||
|2008 Great Recession | |||
| | |||
|} | |||
=== Major periods timeline (by date range) === | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable" | |||
!Dates | |||
!Period | |||
|- | |||
|1609-1763 | |||
|Early Colonial | |||
|- | |||
|1763-1775 | |||
|American Revolution | |||
|- | |||
|1775-1783 | |||
|Revolutionary War & American Independence | |||
|- | |||
|1783-1789 | |||
|Articles of Confederation | |||
|- | |||
|1789-1820 | |||
|Early Republic | |||
|- | |||
|1820s-1861 | |||
|"Antebellum" ("before the war") | |||
|- | |||
|1861-1877 | |||
|Civil War & Reconstruction | |||
|- | |||
|1877-1917 | |||
|Industrialization, Segregation, Immigration, Imperialism & Progressive Era | |||
|- | |||
|1917-1945 | |||
|WWI, 1920s, Great Depression & WWII | |||
|- | |||
|1945-1991 | |||
|Cold War period & "American Century" | |||
|- | |||
|1991-today | |||
|Modern Globalism | |||
|} | |||
=== Major periods timeline w/ notes & details === | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible" | |||
!Dates | |||
!Period | |||
!BIG IDEAS | |||
|- | |||
|1609-1763 | |||
|Early Colonial | |||
| | |||
* earliest colonization = | |||
** Jamestown, Virginia | |||
** Plymouth, Massachusetts | |||
* 13 colonies are established under British rule | |||
|- | |||
|1763-1775 | |||
|American Revolution | |||
| | |||
* British government cracks down on colonies with | |||
** taxes & regulations | |||
** British army & British-appointed judges and governors | |||
* American colonists protest and agitate for rights and self-government | |||
|- | |||
|1775-1783 | |||
|Revolutionary War | |||
Independence | |||
| | |||
* in the 1776 Declaration of Independence, the 13 colonies declare themselves independent of British rule | |||
* 13 colonies organize loose "confederation" to fight British | |||
* Americans win the war and become fully independent of Britain | |||
* each colony now becomes an independent state | |||
|- | |||
|1783-1789 | |||
|Articles of Confederation | |||
| | |||
* the 13 states form the United States of America under the "Articles of Confederation" | |||
** "confederation = a loose union of independent states | |||
* start to organize the new territories & lands taken from the British | |||
** between the Appalachian Mountains and the Mississippi River | |||
* each state largely governs itself and as a consequence, there are | |||
** conflicting laws | |||
** conflicting currencies | |||
** no organization or war debts | |||
** generally ineffective national government | |||
* in 1787 representatives of the 13 states gather in Philadelphia to create a new government | |||
** called the "Constitutional Convention | |||
** it is sent to the states for "adoption" (agreement of each state to join) | |||
|- | |||
|1789-1820 | |||
|Early Republic | |||
| | |||
* 1789 the new government is established under the U.S. Constitution | |||
* the Constitution establishes many powers for the new "federal" government | |||
* George Washington becomes the 1st President | |||
** he establishes its legitimacy (accepted by the people) and authority (power) | |||
* political parties (political affiliations) arise as different states and "factions" (like-minded people) arise | |||
* there is great animosity (hatred) and division between the parties | |||
* 1800 election is contentious (disputed) and divisive | |||
** still, the outcome is accepted and Thomas Jefferson becomes President | |||
** the election is called the "Revolution of 1800" because | |||
*** despite bitterness and division, power was peacefully transferred from presidents Adams to Jefferson | |||
* subsequently. the American people develop a sense of national unity and pride | |||
|- | |||
|1820s-1861 | |||
|Antebellum ("before the war") | |||
| | |||
* the early- to mid- 1800s mark periods of economic, population & territorial growth | |||
* it is also a period of extensive expansion of slavery across the South ("cotton economy") | |||
* the U.S. expands its territory across the entire continent following the 1846 Mexican-American War | |||
** the U.S. seizes from Mexico western territories (modern New Mexico, Arizona, California and parts of other states) | |||
* the expansion of the U.S. leads to division and political conflict over the spread of slavery | |||
* deals in Congress to manage the issues of slavery and other economic and tax issues | |||
** leads to "sectional" division between "the North" and "the South" | |||
|- | |||
|1861-1877 | |||
|Civil War | |||
Reconstruction | |||
| | |||
* with election of the northerner, Abe Lincoln, southern states "secede" (separate themselves from) the Union of states | |||
** "Union" = the joining of states under the United States Constitution | |||
** southern states create a new government, "The Confederate States of America" | |||
* 1861-65, "Civil War" between "the Union" (North) and "the Confederacy" (South) | |||
* the Union wins and commences a program of "Reconstruction" of the Union = | |||
** re-uniting the southern states with the Union | |||
** abolishing slavery and protecting the rights of the freed slaves | |||
* "Reconstruction" in the South required occupation of southern states by northern "Union" armies | |||
** the disputed presidential election of 1876 leads to a deal to decide the election in favor of a Republican | |||
** in exchange for removal of U.S. troops from the South | |||
** with removal of those troops, Reconstruction ends | |||
|- | |||
|1877-1917 | |||
|Industrialization | |||
Segregation | |||
Immigration | |||
Imperialism | |||
Progressive Era | |||
| | |||
* following the Civil War, northern states "industrialize" | |||
** railroads are built across the country, connecting trade and markets across the continent | |||
** steel and other factories grow in size and create huge demand for labor (workers) | |||
* after 1877, southern states enact "segregation" laws to limit the rights of blacks (former slaves) | |||
* millions of immigrants come to the US from Europe and Asia (Japan and China) | |||
** looking for jobs in the factories, railroads and for cheap land | |||
** with the immigration populations of major cities explode | |||
** which causes problems with sanitation, living & working conditions, health care, etc. | |||
* in 1898, the U.S. engages in its first truly "imperialistic" war | |||
** by attacking Spanish colonies of Cuba, Puerto Rico and Philippines | |||
** the U.S. for the first time goes to war outside of the continental United States | |||
** thus, it is called "imperialism" for trying to impose rule of one country on another country that is somewhere else | |||
* from the 1890s-1917, many "reform" (looking for change) movements arise, especially | |||
** to "clean" the cities and provide better living and working conditions for the poor | |||
** to "clean" politics from corruption and entrenched (deeply situated) powers | |||
** to regulate and control big companies and their economic power | |||
|- | |||
|1917-1945 | |||
|WWI | |||
1920s | |||
Great Depression | |||
WWII | |||
| | |||
* in 1917, the US enters a major war in Europe, which is now calle "World War I" | |||
** it is the first American military involvement in Europe | |||
* into the 1920s, the US economy grew tremendously | |||
** called the "Roaring Twenties" | |||
** new consumer products (autos, telephones, radios) and business investments | |||
** in Oct, 1929, the New York stock exchange collapsed ("Crash of '29") | |||
** an economic depression followed | |||
* Great Depression, 1929-1941 | |||
** period of economic decline and disruption (bank failures, job loss, etc.) | |||
** the 1933-35 "New Deal" attempted to fix the Depression | |||
*** it provided "relief" (help) to people with jobs and pay | |||
*** but it did not resolve the economic decline | |||
* during the 1930s Japan and Germany invaded other countries | |||
* Dec 7, 1941, Japan bombed a U.S. Naval base, Pearl Harbor, in Hawaii (middle of Pacific Ocean) | |||
** subsequently the U.S. went to war against Japan in Asia and Germany in North Africa and Europe | |||
* the U.S. "mobilized" (put to common effort) the entire population, including | |||
** millions of soldiers sent to the War | |||
** women working in factories and other jobs in place of the men | |||
** Americans of all races joined the war effort | |||
* the U.S. and its allies defeated German and Japan in 1945 | |||
|- | |||
|1945-1991 | |||
|Cold War | |||
"American Century" | |||
| | |||
* following WWII, the United States dominated the world economically and politically | |||
** thus the 20th Century is called the "American Century" | |||
* however, the Soviet Union (communist Russia), which fought the Germans in conjunction with the Americans | |||
** occupied eastern Europe and placed those countries under communist rule | |||
* the US and its "Western" (non-communist) allies opposed Soviet expansion | |||
** politically, by helping non-communist countries and opposing communist ideas ("ideology") | |||
** militarily by supplying countries with arms, direct American military presence, and direct military wars | |||
*** 1950-1954: Korean War | |||
*** 1959-1975: Vietnam War | |||
*** the U.S. did not directly fight against the Soviets in these wars | |||
*** instead the U.S. fought the Soviet communist allies in those countries | |||
* the US and Soviets both built extensive nuclear weapons | |||
** so each side had the power to blow up the other | |||
** this kept peace between them because if one attacked the other it would get blown up by nuclear reprisal (fighting back) | |||
* in 1989, the Soviet Union broke apart due to its poor economy, political corruption | |||
** which were the result of the communist system | |||
|- | |||
|1991-today | |||
|Modern globalism | |||
| | |||
* after the collapse of the Soviet Union, all nations were more free to trade and invest in each other | |||
* China, especially, embraced the new conditions and opened itself as a manufacturing base | |||
** other countries also experienced rapid economic growth | |||
* however, wars, disease, famines, persist into the world of today, including | |||
** US involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq wars | |||
** civil wars in Africa, Myanmar, eastern Europe | |||
** political instability across the Mideast | |||
|} | |||
== Revolution Period == | |||
=== American Revolution Period general timeline === | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible" | |||
! | |||
! | |||
|- style="vertical-align:top;" | |||
|1754-1763 | |||
|French-Indian War | |||
|- style="vertical-align:top;" | |||
|1763-83 | |||
|American Revolution | |||
|- | |||
|1774-1789 | |||
|Continental Congress & the Articles of Confederation | |||
|- style="vertical-align:top;" | |||
|1775-83 | |||
|American Revolutionary War | |||
|- | |||
|1776 | |||
|Declaration of Independence | |||
|- | |||
|1781 | |||
|English surrender to American forces under Washington | |||
|- | |||
|1783 | |||
|Treaty of Paris officially ends American Revolutionary War | |||
|- style="vertical-align:top;" | |||
|1787-1789 | |||
|Constitutional Convention and adoption of the US Constitution | |||
|- | |||
|1791 | |||
|Adoption of the US Constitution | |||
|- | |||
| | |||
| | |||
|} | |||
=== American Revolution Period timeline w/ details === | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible" | {| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible" | ||
! | ! | ||
! | ! | ||
|-style="vertical-align:top;" | |- style="vertical-align:top;" | ||
|1754-1763 | |1754-1763 | ||
|French-Indian War | |French-Indian War | ||
Line 82: | Line 549: | ||
* caused by westward expansion of colonists into French territory west of the Appalachian Mts | * caused by westward expansion of colonists into French territory west of the Appalachian Mts | ||
* Britain (England) defeated France and seized all of Canada and lands east of the Mississippi | * Britain (England) defeated France and seized all of Canada and lands east of the Mississippi | ||
|-style="vertical-align:top;" | * | ||
|- style="vertical-align:top;" | |||
|1763-83 | |1763-83 | ||
|American Revolution | |American Revolution | ||
Line 90: | Line 558: | ||
** imposed rules and restrictions on trade | ** imposed rules and restrictions on trade | ||
** prohibited the colonists from settling in the new lands west of the Appalachian Mts ("Indian Territory) | ** prohibited the colonists from settling in the new lands west of the Appalachian Mts ("Indian Territory) | ||
* the colonists begin to protest | * the colonists begin to protest | ||
* key events | * key events of the American Revolution | ||
** 1765: Stamp Act, tax and regulations imposed by Britain | ** 1765: Stamp Act, tax and regulations imposed by Britain | ||
*** a series of other taxes were imposed, such as the "Tea Act" | |||
*** as well as a law to force Americans to house ("Quartering Act") British soldiers | |||
*** and appointments of colonial governors by the King and not from colonial vote | |||
** 1770: Boston Massacre, British soldiers shoot into crowd of protesters | ** 1770: Boston Massacre, British soldiers shoot into crowd of protesters | ||
** 1773: Boston Tea Party, protest against trade restrictions | ** 1773: Boston Tea Party, protest against trade restrictions | ||
** | *** and British response with the "Intolerable Acts" and blockade of Boston harbor | ||
** 1775: "Common Sense" by Thomas Paine, argues against monarchy (king) | |||
** 1776: Declaration of Independence, colonies declare independence from England | ** 1776: Declaration of Independence, colonies declare independence from England | ||
|-style="vertical-align:top;" | |- | ||
|1774-1789 | |||
|Continental Congress & the Articles of Confederation | |||
|BIG IDEAS: | |||
* a "congress" is a meeting of representatives from different places | |||
* the "Continental Congress" is the organization of the 13 Colonies that joined together for common cause to oppose British rule | |||
* the Continental Congress started after the British passed the "Intolerable Acts" and blockaded Boston harbor in response to the Boston Tea Party | |||
* there were three periods: First Continental Congress (1774), Second Continental Congress (1774-1781) and the First and Second Congresses of (1774–1781) and the Congress of the Confederation (1781–1789) | |||
* the Articles of Confederation (1781-1789) were a set of agreements between the 13 states to organize and guide their cooperation | |||
** the Articles were approved in 1777, but only approved by all states in 1781 | |||
** the Articles did not create a strong national government | |||
** they proved incapable of resolving many difficulties and disagreements | |||
|- style="vertical-align:top;" | |||
|1775-83 | |1775-83 | ||
|American | |American Revolutionary War | ||
| BIG IDEAS: | | BIG IDEAS: | ||
* in 1775 fighting started between colonial "militia" (private soldiers) and British soldiers in Massachusetts | |||
* | |||
* | |||
|- | |||
|1776 | |||
|Declaration of Independence | |||
|on July 4, 1776, representatives of the 13 colonies signed the "Declaration of Independence" which "declared" (stated as fact) that the colonies were now independent from Britain | |||
|- | |||
|1781-1783 | |||
|End of Revolutionary War | |||
|BIG IDEAS | |||
* in 1781 British forces surrender to the Americans under Washington at Yorktown, Virginia | |||
* in 1783 the Treaty of Paris officially ends the American Revolutionary War | |||
** in the Treaty, Britian yielded all lands between the 13 colonies and the Mississippi River | |||
** which greatly expands the size of the new nation | |||
|- style="vertical-align:top;" | |||
|1787-1789 | |||
|Constitutional Convention and adoption of the US Constitution | |||
|BIG IDEAS | |||
* at the end of the Revolutionary War in 1781, the Continental Congress reorganized in order to form a new, independent nation | |||
** they called it the "United States of America" | |||
*** it was a loose "confederation" of the states in order to make common decisions, such as the signing of the peace treaty with Great Britain in 1783 that officially ended the Revolutionary War | |||
*** it was called the "Congress of the Confederation | |||
* | * | ||
|- | |- | ||
|1791 | |||
|Adoption of the US Constitution | |||
|BIG IDEAS | |||
* as the new country developed from 1783-1789, many problems arose, such as | |||
** lack of common (or uniform), national currency (money) | |||
** lack of common laws | |||
** lack of ability for the national government to pay its debts due to inability to tax | |||
** lack of general organization and standardization (rules) for relations between the states | |||
* George Washington recognized these deficiencies and called for a convention (gathering) of states at Annapolis, Maryland in 1786 | |||
** the assembly at Annapolis didn't achieve much, but decided upon calling for another convention the next year at Philadelphia | |||
** the 1787 Constitutional Convention met at Philadelphia and proposed a new form of government among the states | |||
*** called the US Constitution | |||
*** it was proposed to the states, which debated it and voted for or against | |||
*** by 1788, enough states had agreed upon adopting the new Constitution, so the government was set to open in 1791 | |||
|- | |||
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[[Category:US History]] | |||
[[Category:AP US History]] | |||
[[Category:Virginia SOL: Virginia & US History test]] |
Latest revision as of 13:46, 16 May 2024
Timeline of major events and periods
Major wars & events general timeline[edit | edit source]
- Causes and effects of wars helps us to understand broader US History
- Wars are also useful for a timeline reference
- i.e., if you know that the Civil War occurred 1861-1865
- then if you see an event or person associated with a date, for example, of 1858
- then you will know that that event or person may be understood in terms of the coming Civil War
- i.e., if you know that the Civil War occurred 1861-1865
US Wars timeline[edit | edit source]
Dates | Major Wars |
---|---|
1754-1763 | French-Indian War |
1775-1781 |
Revolutionary War |
1812-1815 | War of 1812 |
1846-48 | Mexican-American War |
1861-65 |
U.S. Civil War |
1898 | Spanish-American war |
1917-18 |
WWI (Europe) |
1941-45 |
WWII (Europe & Asia) |
1946-1989 |
Cold War (US v. USSR) |
1950-1953 | Korean War |
1959-1965 |
Vietnam: U.S. intervention |
1965-1972 | Vietnam: U.S. ground & aerial (airplanes) war |
1990-91 | Gulf War |
2002-2021 | Afghanistan War |
2002-2021 |
Iraq War |
Major wars timeline with associate events & minor wars[edit | edit source]
Dates | Major Wars | Dates | Other Events & Minor Wars |
---|---|---|---|
1754-1763 | French-Indian War | 1763-1783 | American Revolution |
1775-1781 |
Revolutionary War | 1789 | US Constitution adopted |
1846-48 | Mexican-American War | 1812-1815 | War of 1812
expansion of Slavery |
1861-65 |
U.S. Civil War |
1850 | "Compromise of 1850" |
1865-1877 | Reconstruction period | ||
1898 | Spanish-American War | 1867-1890s | "Indian" or "Frontier" wars
"Battle of Little Bighorn," 1876 |
1917-18 |
WWI (Europe) | ||
1941-45 |
WWII (Europe & Asia) | 1930s | Great Depression |
1940s-1960s | Civil Rights Movement | ||
1946-1989 |
Cold War (US v. USSR) | 1950-1953 | Korean War |
1962 | Cuban Missile Crisis | ||
1965-1972 |
Vietnam: U.S. ground & aeriel war | 1959-1965 | Vietnam War: US intervention |
1990-1991 | Gulf War | 1991 | Soviet Union dissolved |
2002-2021 |
Afghanistan War | 2003-2011 | Iraq War/ "War on Terror" |
Major periods of US History[edit | edit source]
- "periods" are eras (or times) that have a some commonality
- that we can look upon to understand and define an era
- no single period is completely distinct from any other
- but organizing US History into "periods" makes it more understandable
Major events timeline by century[edit | edit source]
Century | Period/s | Major Events |
---|---|---|
17th Century (1600s) | Colonial |
|
18th Century (1700s) | Late Colonia/ (1700s-1760s)
Revolutionary (1760s-1780s Early Republic (1790s) |
|
19th Century (1800s) | Antebellum
Civil War & Reconstruction Industrialization |
|
20th Century (1900s) | American ImperialismWorld Wars & Cold Ear
American Century |
|
21st Century (2000s) | Sept. 11 & War on TerrorGlobalism |
|
Major economic crises timeline - overview[edit | edit source]
for specific events and their details see AP US History vocabulary list/Econonic crises
Period/s | Event | Causes/ Notes |
---|---|---|
19th Century | ||
Antebellum
Jacksonian Period |
| |
Gilded Age |
| |
Progressive Era | Panic of 1907 |
|
post-WWI | Depression of 1920 | |
1930s | Great Depression | |
Post-Vietnam | 1970s Stagflation | Period of economic and political decline |
Mortgage bubble | 2008 Great Recession |
Major periods timeline (by date range)[edit | edit source]
Dates | Period |
---|---|
1609-1763 | Early Colonial |
1763-1775 | American Revolution |
1775-1783 | Revolutionary War & American Independence |
1783-1789 | Articles of Confederation |
1789-1820 | Early Republic |
1820s-1861 | "Antebellum" ("before the war") |
1861-1877 | Civil War & Reconstruction |
1877-1917 | Industrialization, Segregation, Immigration, Imperialism & Progressive Era |
1917-1945 | WWI, 1920s, Great Depression & WWII |
1945-1991 | Cold War period & "American Century" |
1991-today | Modern Globalism |
Major periods timeline w/ notes & details[edit | edit source]
Dates | Period | BIG IDEAS |
---|---|---|
1609-1763 | Early Colonial |
|
1763-1775 | American Revolution |
|
1775-1783 | Revolutionary War
Independence |
|
1783-1789 | Articles of Confederation |
|
1789-1820 | Early Republic |
|
1820s-1861 | Antebellum ("before the war") |
|
1861-1877 | Civil War
Reconstruction |
|
1877-1917 | Industrialization
Segregation Immigration Imperialism Progressive Era |
|
1917-1945 | WWI
1920s Great Depression WWII |
|
1945-1991 | Cold War
"American Century" |
|
1991-today | Modern globalism |
|
Revolution Period[edit | edit source]
American Revolution Period general timeline[edit | edit source]
1754-1763 | French-Indian War |
1763-83 | American Revolution |
1774-1789 | Continental Congress & the Articles of Confederation |
1775-83 | American Revolutionary War |
1776 | Declaration of Independence |
1781 | English surrender to American forces under Washington |
1783 | Treaty of Paris officially ends American Revolutionary War |
1787-1789 | Constitutional Convention and adoption of the US Constitution |
1791 | Adoption of the US Constitution |
American Revolution Period timeline w/ details[edit | edit source]
1754-1763 | French-Indian War | BIG IDEAS:
|
1763-83 | American Revolution | BIG IDEAS:
|
1774-1789 | Continental Congress & the Articles of Confederation | BIG IDEAS:
|
1775-83 | American Revolutionary War | BIG IDEAS:
|
1776 | Declaration of Independence | on July 4, 1776, representatives of the 13 colonies signed the "Declaration of Independence" which "declared" (stated as fact) that the colonies were now independent from Britain |
1781-1783 | End of Revolutionary War | BIG IDEAS
|
1787-1789 | Constitutional Convention and adoption of the US Constitution | BIG IDEAS
|
1791 | Adoption of the US Constitution | BIG IDEAS
|