US History timeline & concept chart: 1789-1860 Early Republic to Antebellum
US History timeline & concept chart: U.S. History Decade-by-decade timeline, 1890s-1900
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Objective:
Main page
Concepts & themes overview
Previous timelines:
- US History timeline & concept chart: American colonies 17th & mid-18th centuries
- US History timeline & concept chart: French-Indian War to the American Revolution
Next timelines:
See also:
- << to do
1790s Washington & Adams administrations[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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BIG IDEAS
National Debt
Whiskey Rebellion 1794
Hamilton "Report on Manufactures"
European wars & domestic U.S. politics
Washington Farewell Address
Adams presidency
Alien & Sedition Acts 1798
Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions
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Washington presidency, 1789-1797[edit | edit source]
click EXPAND for excerpt from Washington expressing his reluctance to become president in 1788, Washington wrote: I should unfeignedly rejoice, in case the Electors, by giving their votes to another person would save me from the dreaded dilemma of being forced to accept or refuse... If that may not be–I am, in the next place, earnestly desirous of searching out the truth, and knowing whether there does not exist a probability that the government would be just as happily and effectually carried into execution without my aid."(First President’s Election Was the Last Thing He Wanted (washingtonpapers.org) Upon election in 1791, Washington wrote that he had give up "all expectations of private happiness in this world." (https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/george-washington-the-reluctant-president-49492/ George Washington: The Reluctant President (Smithsonian Magazine)]
** establish precedents for the office of the President, esp. regarding
election of 1789
Bill of Rights adopted 1791 (BOR)
Hamilton-Jefferson split
Residence Act of 1790[edit | edit source]
Hamilton's 1791 "Report on Manufactures"[edit | edit source]
=== rise of Political parties ===\
Constitutional interpretations[edit | edit source]
European conflicts[edit | edit source]click EXPAND for list of French Revolution & Napoleonic era wars
European wars & domestic U.S. politics[edit | edit source]
Citizen Genet affair, 1793[edit | edit source]
Jay's Treaty (or "Jay Treaty")[edit | edit source]
"Pinckney's Treaty"[edit | edit source]
Washington declines to run for a 3rd term[edit | edit source]
Washington's "Farewell Address"
click EXPAND for excerpt from Washington's Farewell Address: The unity of government which constitutes you one people is also now dear to you. It is justly so; for it is a main pillar in the edifice of your real independence, the support of your tranquility at home, your peace abroad, of your safety, of your prosperity, of that very liberty which you so highly prize. But as it is easy to foresee that, from different causes and from different quarters, much pains will be taken, many artifices employed, to weaken in your minds the conviction of this truth; as this is the point in your political fortress against which the batteries of internal and external enemies will be most constantly and actively (though often covertly and insidiously) directed, it is of infinite moment that you should properly estimate the immense value of your national Union to your collective and individual happiness; that you should cherish a cordial, habitual, and immovable attachment to it; accustoming yourselves to think and speak of it as of the palladium of your political safety and prosperity; watching for its preservation with jealous anxiety; discountenancing whatever may suggest even a suspicion that it can in any event be abandoned; and indignantly frowning upon the first dawning of every attempt to alienate any portion of our country from the rest, or to enfeeble the sacred ties which now link together the various parts(for full text see Washington's Farewell Address (wikisource) John Adams presidency[edit | edit source]
Quasi-War 1798[edit | edit source]
XYZ Affair. 1797-98[edit | edit source]
Alien & Sedition Acts, 1798[edit | edit source]
Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions 1798-99[edit | edit source]
Taxation and Fries's Rebellion, 1799[edit | edit source]
Washington DC opened as national capital, 1800[edit | edit source]
Midnight appointments[edit | edit source]
Leads to the "landmark" case, Marbury v. Madison that established judicial review (see below)
new States in 1790s[edit | edit source]
Northwest Territories and Northwest Ordinance of 1787[edit | edit source]
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1800-1810 Jefferson & Madison administrations[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
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BIG IDEAS
Revolution of 1800
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Revolution of 1800[edit | edit source]
Jefferson Inaugural Address, 1801[edit | edit source]
roll-back of Federalist policies[edit | edit source]
Louisiana Purchase, 1802[edit | edit source]
Essex Junto[edit | edit source]
12th Amendment to the Constitution, 1804[edit | edit source]
European blockades of US ports[edit | edit source]
Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves, 1807[edit | edit source]
Madison presidency, 1809-1817[edit | edit source] |
1810s Madison & Monroe administrations[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
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BIG IDEAS French/ British blockades British impressment of U.S. sailors Indian Wars in Northwest Territories border dispute w/ Canada War of 1812 Monroe & the ""Era of Good Feelings"
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=== subheading
- Napoleonic Wars impact on U.S.: > trade/ blockades > both French and British trying to isolate U.S. trade from the other > British impressment of U.S. sailors/ merchant ships - War of 1812 - economic expansion following War - “American System” adopted, including > 2nd National Bank > federal roads > tariffs - demise of Federalists, rise of Whig party by election of 1824
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1820s: Monroe & Jackson administrations[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE | Major Events, Concepts & Themes | Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events |
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BIG IDEAS Era of Good Feelings
<br
<br
<br 2nd Great Awakening, 1820s-1830s/40s
<br Moralism / reform movements
<br Alexis de Tocqueville & "Democracy in America
<br Henry Clay & the "American System"
National Bank
<br Rise of the Whig Party
<br
subsection
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Monroe presidency 1st term[edit | edit source]
Era of Good Feelings[edit | edit source]
Monroe Doctrine, 1823[edit | edit source]
rise of Whig party[edit | edit source]
Democratic party[edit | edit source]
Sectionalism[edit | edit source]Election of 1826[edit | edit source]
Rise of Jackson and "Jacksonian democracy"[edit | edit source]
Second Great Awakening[edit | edit source]Second Great Awakening - religious revival, esp, Methodist & Baptists - Charles Finney ran religious revivals and promoted reform movements - new religions arose, including Mormons and Shakers, utopians > some preached apocalyptic visions, end of the world, etc. (“repent the end is near!”) - women involved, reform societies, esp against drinking (temperance), gambling & prostitution (vice) and slavery (abolition) - reformers built orphanages, asylums Alexis de Tocqueville * “Democracy in America”[edit | edit source]> if these people consider themselves each other’s equal, what will they do? - observed how democracies created >> culture of equality >> culture of civic engagement << everyone in a democracy wants to talk politics >> a fluid sociopolitical-economic society Henry Clay's "American system"[edit | edit source]Promoted by Henry Clay (from Kentucky) roads and canal building new technologies: railroads, telegraph = unifying effect, promotes commerce > allows for more western expansion and integration into national economy - internal improvements = main Whig policy (the American System)
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= xx administrations[edit | edit source]
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