2.7 Timeline

  • Missouri Compromise

    • an effort by Congress to solve the political rivalries from the request of Missouri as a slave state in 1819
    • important because it held the union together for more than thirty years until it was later deemed unconstitutional
  • Monroe Doctrine

    -a policy issued by James Monroe warning European powers that they should expect a strong resistance from America should they interfere with any affairs
    -important because it became a cornerstone of American foreign policy
  • Battle of the Alamo

    -was when a Mexican force began a siege of the Alamo- a mission. The Mexican invaders won. -important because it was a pivotal event in the Texas Revolution and the cruelty of Santa Anna inspired many Texans
  • Panic of 1837

    -a financial crisis that started a recession where wages went down and unemployment went up
    -important because it led to an increase in prices of land, cotton, and slaves
  • Trail of Tears

    -when the government forced Native Americans off their homeland by walking them thousands of miles in terrible conditions
    -important because it was a dark time in America's history and it impacted the lives of many Native Americans
  • Sutter's Fort

    • an agricultural and trade colony which was the first non-Indigenous community in the California Central Valley -important because gold was discovered there and the mill was overrun with gold seekers
  • Pre-Emption Act

    -in response to the request of Western states that "squatters" be allowed to purchase land for a low price
    -important because it helped to establish the doctrine of Manifest Destiny in America
  • Bear Flag Revolt

    -when a small group of Californian settlers rebelled against the Mexican government therefore proclaiming California independent.
    -important because the bear flag became the official state flag in 1911
  • Beginning of U.S. - Mexican War

    -militarily unprepared Mexico fighting against the United States which started on the Rio Grande
    -important because Mexico lost nearly 1/3 of its territory including present-day California, Nevada, Arizona, and New Mexico
  • End of the U.S. - Mexican War

    -militarily unprepared Mexico fighting against the United States which started on the Rio Grande
    -important because Mexico lost nearly 1/3 of its territory including present-day California, Nevada, Arizona, and New Mexico
  • Fugitive Slave Law

    -part of the Compromise of 1850 between Southern states and Northern states, allowed for the capture and return of escaped slaves
    -important because these acts were among the most controversial laws of that time
  • Compromise of 1850

    • five separate bills which eased a political confrontation between slave and free states over territory gained in the Mexican- American War. -important because it admitted California as a free state, and created new territories, and ended the slave trade
  • Gadsden Purchase

    -land that the U.S. purchased from Mexico from a treaty
    -important because it determined the main boundaries of the United States
  • Bleeding Kansas

    -a period of violence during the settling of Kansas territory between pro-slavery and anti-slavery settlers
    -important because Kansas suffered the highest rate of casualties in the civil war mainly because of this time period and the great divisions between pro-slavery and anti-slavery people
  • Dred Scott Decision

    -the supreme court ruled that Scott, a slave, was not free based on his residence even though his owner had spent time in free state during his residence
    -important because it contradicted the doctrine of popular sovereignty that was created as a part of the Compromise of 1850
  • Harper's Ferry

    -an effort by an abolitionist to start an armed slave revolt by taking over an arsenal at Harper's Ferry, Virginia
    -important because it inflamed white Southern fears of slave revolts and greatly increased tension between Northern and Southern states
  • South Carolina secedes

    -stated Lincoln had exceeded his constitutional powers by not waiting for Congress to approve a war with the South
    -important because it was the first state to ever secede from the union
  • Mississippi secedes

    • seceded because they felt the U.S. was on a path to abolishing slavery which they strongly disagreed with -important because it shows how incredibly different the priorities of the South were to the Northern states
  • Florida secedes

    • third state to secede, seceded because of the different views on slavery, and the economy -important because every state that continued to secede contributed to the tension between the Union and the later created Confederacy
  • Alabama secedes

    • Alabama states in their Ordinance of Secession that they feel the election of Abraham Lincoln was a hostile act aimed at the Southern states -important because Alabama's Ordinance was seemingly a lot more aggressive than some of the other states that seceded
  • Georgia secedes

    -stated that their main cause for dissolving the Union was slavery
    -important because Georgia was a crucial state to the success of the secessionist movement due to its location
  • Louisiana secedes

    -seceded due to the results of the 1860 elections and the failed abolitionist raid on Harper's Ferry which heightened sensitivity toward the threats to slavery
    -important because before the war Louisiana repeatedly rejected Southern radicals who proposed secession but after the election in 1860 they were pushed towards secession
  • Texas secedes

    • was swayed to secede by the raid on the federal arsenal at Harper's Ferry and the rising Republican party -important because their governor, Sam Houston, was strongly against seceding and did not take an oath of allegiance to the Confederacy
  • Beginning of Civil War

    • a war between pro-slavery Southern states and anti-slavery states Southern states which essentially determined the future of this country -important because the Northern victory preserved the U.S. as one nation and ended slavery, which had divided the country from the beginning.
  • Virginia secedes

    -seceded because they refused to take up arms or rebel against their other Southern states
    -important because they feared that the Northern states would fail to return fugitive slaves and violate their obligations under the fourth article of the Constitution
  • Arkansas secedes

    -seceded because they refused to take up arms or rebel against their other Southern states
    -important because they feared that the Republican Party was planning a war against slavery
  • Tennessee secedes

    • stated that it is the right of a free and independent people to reform or abolish their form of government -important because Tennessee was the last state to secede
  • North Carolina secedes

    • seceded because of factors like social structure, and industrial organization, as well as slavery and states' rights. -important because they were the last state to join the Confederacy and ended up having one of the largest amounts of casualties
  • Emancipation Proclamation

    • a preliminary statement declaring that as of 1863, all slaves would forever be free -important because it transformed the fight to keep the nation united into a fight for human rights
  • Gettysburg

    -when the Confederates clashed with the Union's Army in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
    -important because it is considered the most important engagement of the civil war due to the large amount of casualties and outcome
  • Gettysburg Address

    -a speech given by Lincoln at the Soldier's National Cemetery reminding the listeners of their want for equality, freedom, and national unity.
    -important because it is considered one of Lincoln's greatest speeches and one of the most famous in U.S. history.
  • 13th Amendment

    -abolished slavery and involuntary servitude except as punishment for a crime
    -important because this was the first step in a long journey to abolishing inequality
  • End of Civil War

    • a war between pro-slavery Southern states and anti-slavery states Southern states which essentially determined the future of this country -important because the Northern victory preserved the U.S. as one nation and ended slavery, which had divided the country from the beginning.
  • 14th Amendment

    -talks about citizenship rights and equal protection of the laws
    -important because this was created in response to issues faced by former slaves, this was also contested by many states of the defeated Confederacy
  • 15th Amendment

    -prevents the federal and state governments from denying a citizen the right to vote based on race
    -important because the intent of this amendment finally came to have an effect when the Voting Rights of 1965 was passed; before many Southern states used various things to deny African Americans the right to vote