TIMELINE

WORK, EXCHANGE, & TECHNOLOGYPEOPLINGPOLITICS & POWERIDEAS, BELIEFS, & CULTUREIDENTITY
1763
  • Merchants defy Sugar and Stamp Acts

  • Patriots mount three boycotts of British goods, in 1765, 1767, and 1774

  • Boycotts spur Patriot women to make textiles

  • Migration into the Ohio Valley after Pontiac’s Rebellion

  • Quebec Act (1774) allows Catholicism

  • Stamp Act Congress (1765)

  • First Continental Congress (1774)

  • Second Continental Congress (1775)

  • Patriots call for American unity

  • The idea of natural rights poses a challenge to the institution of chattel slavery

  • Concept of popular sovereignty gains force in the colonies

  • Colonists lay claim to rights of Englishmen

1776
  • Manufacturing expands during the war

  • Cutoff of trade and severe inflation threaten economy

  • War debt grows

  • Declining immigration from Europe (1775–1820) enhances American identity

  • African American slaves seek freedom through military service

  • The Declaration of Independence (1776)

  • States adopt republican constitutions (1776 on)

  • Articles of Confederation ratified (1781)

  • Treaty of Paris (1783)

  • Judith Sargent Murray publishes “On the Equality of the Sexes” (1779)

  • Emancipation of slaves begins in the North

  • Virginia enacts religious freedom (1786)

  • Thomas Paine’s Common Sense (1776) causes colonists to rethink political loyalties

  • States rely on property qualifications to define citizenship rights in their new constitutions

1787
  • Bank of North America founded (1781)

  • Land speculation increases in the West

  • State cessions, land ordinances, and Indian wars create national domain in the West

  • The Alien Act makes it harder for immigrants to become citizens and allow for deporting aliens (1798)

  • U.S. Constitution drafted (1787)

  • Conflict over Alexander Hamilton’s economic policies

  • First national parties: Federalists and Republicans

  • Politicians and ministers deny vote to women; praise republican motherhood

  • Bill of Rights ratified (1791)

  • Sedition Act limits freedom of the press (1798)

  • Indians form Western Confederacy (1790)

  • Second Great Awakening (1790–1860)

  • Emerging political divide between South and North

1800
  • Cotton output and demand for African labor expands

  • Farm productivity improves

  • Embargo encourages U.S. manufacturing

  • Second Bank of the United States chartered (1816–1836)

  • Supreme Court guards property

  • Suffrage for white men expands; New Jersey retracts suffrage for propertied women (1807)

  • Atlantic slave trade ends (1808)

  • American Colonization Society founded (1817)

  • Jefferson reduces activism of national government

  • Chief Justice Marshall asserts federal judicial powers

  • Triumph of Republican Party and end of Federalist Party

  • Free blacks enhance sense of African American identity

  • Religious benevolence engenders social reform movements

  • Tenskwatawa and Tecumseh revive Western Indian Confederacy

  • War of 1812 tests national unity

  • State constitutions democratized