APUSH Timeline (copy)
APUSH is all about timeline!! You don’t need to memorise the actual date just know where it falls in the timeline and what is it. If you need more notes on any of these, here’s the full study guide, the 16 required figures to know and the supreme court cases.
1492 – Columbus’ arrives in the New World
Flows of trade between the old world (Europe, Asia, Africa) & new world help increase food production and stimulate growth
Spain became the colonial power in the Americas.
1587 - England’s first attempt to settle in North America
Sir Walter Raleigh sponsors Roanoke Island, which ended up disappearing (aka Lost Colony)
1588 - English defeat Spanish Armada
1607 - Jamestown
marked the beginning of permanent English settlement in North America.
funded by the Virginia Company
leader of the settlement - Captain John Smith
1609 - 1610 - Desperation of English Settlers
Powhatan Confederacy aides Jamestown
tobacco as a cash crop
1620 - Mayflower Arrival in Plymouth
1649 – Toleration Act
Granted religious freedom to Christians in Maryland, a significant step towards religious tolerance in the American colonies.
1688 – Glorious Revolution
Overthrow James II, establishment of William and Mary as joint monarchs
1692 – Salem Witch Trials
unrest in religion, politics and gender led to the witch hysteria
many executions
1754–1763 – Seven Years’ War
fought between the British and the French
causes : competition between British & France for control of colonial territories & territorial disputes such as Ohio Valley
William Pitt, the English Prime Minister during the war
Ended by Treaty of Paris in 1763, which gave England control of Canada and almost everything east of the Mississippi Valley. leads to anti-British sentiment
led to lots of debt, which led to heavy taxing post-war
1763 – Proclamation of 1763
forbids colonial settlement past Appalachian Mountains
made the colonists angry
1765 – Stamp Act
taxed goods produced within the colonies, led to boycotts
“no taxation without representation"“
act was repealed
Declaratory Act passed
parliament can tax and legislate in all cases anywhere in the colonies
1770 – Boston Massacre
Propaganda campaign that followed suggested that the soldiers had shot into a crowd of innocent bystanders
1773 – Boston Tea Party
tea tax protest
results in British response with “Intolerable Acts” (closes Boston Harbor, tightens control over Massachusetts government, Quartering Act)
1775 – Lexington & Concord
BEGINNING of American Revolutionary War
1776 – Declaration of Independence
Articulated the principle of individual liberty and government's responsibility to serve the people
1777 – Battle of Saratoga
1777 - Articles of Confederation
The first national constitution of the United States
limitations : gave the federal government no power to raise an army, no executive or judicial branch, gave each state one vote regardless of the state's population
1778 - Franco American Alliance
negotiated by Ben Franklin
brings French into war on the colonists side
1781 – Battle of Yorktown
END of American Revolutionary War
Major British general, Cornwallis, was surrounded by the French navy and George Washington’s troops, and surrendered
Began a long period of negotiations between the American colonies and Great Britain, which would finally end the war in October of 1783
1783 – Treaty of Paris
gave US land and independence
1787 – Constitutional Convention
Great Compromise : HOR (representation according to population) & Senate (2 per state)
3/5ths Compromise : count 3/5 of slave population toward representation, empower Southern states
1788 – Washington’s Election
National Bank created
Hamilton’s financial plan to reduce debt
Neutrality Proclamation
Pinckney’s treaty 1796
no third term
1791 - Bill of Rights Added
1798 – XYZ Affair
1798 – Alien & Sedition Acts
1800 – Jefferson’s Election
1803 – Louisiana Purchase
Lewis & Clark
1812–1815 – War of 1812
Hartford Convention - end of Federalist Party
American system - tariff, roads, re-chartered National Bank (protective)
lobbied by Henry Clay
1815 – Battle of New Orleans
Jackson wins
1816–1824 – Era of Good Feelings
Only one political party, briefly leaves United States with unity
Panic of 1819 - people could not pay loans
1820 – Missouri Compromise
Missouri : slave state ; Missouri : free state
slavery is decided to be below 36º 30’ parallel
1823 – Monroe Doctrine
Policy of mutual non-interference and America's right to intervene in its own hemisphere
first of several doctrines that will become foreign policy
1820s – Sectionalism
1828 – Jackson’s Election
“Era of Common Man”
universal white male suffrage
1830 – Indian Removal Act
Jackson's treatment of the Cherokees with this act is one of the most criticized policies by modern scholars.
1832 – Nat Turner’s Rebellion
Nat Turner rallied a gang that killed and mutilated 60 whites.
1830–1850 – Manifest Destiny
Americans believed in God-given right to western territories
1836 – Battle of the Alamo
1845 – Annexation of Texas
1845–1848 – Mexican-American War
the Wilmot Proviso defeated quickly
1848 – Seneca Falls Convention
first women's rights convention
1850 – Fugitive Slave Law
1852 – Uncle Tom’s Cabin published
1854 – Bleeding Kansas
1857 – Dred Scott Decision
1860 – Lincoln’s Election
1861–1865 – Civil War
1862 – Homestead Act'
1863 - Emancipation Proclamation
1863 – Gettysburg
1865 - Lincoln Assassinated
1867 –Military Reconstruction Act of 1867
1867 – Purchase of Alaska
1877 – Compromise of 1877
military reconstruction ends in South
1876 – Little Bighorn
1886 – Haymarket Square Riot
1887 – Dawes Act
1887 – Interstate Commerce
1890 – Wounded Knee
1890 – McKinley Tariff ; Sherman Antitrust Act
1894 – Pullman Strike
1896 – “Cross of Gold” speech
1896 – Plessy v. Ferguson
1898 – Annexation of Hawaii
1898 – Spanish American War
Americans drive Spanish out of Cuba & Philippines
Treaty of Maris ends war in 1900
1902 - Platt Amendment
1903 – Wright Brothers
1904 - Roosevelt Corollary
The Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, also known as the Big Stick Policy, was used to justify repeated military intervention in Latin America due to the assertion of a threat to American security.
1917 – US enters WWI
Congress passed the Espionage Act in 1917 and the Sedition Act in 1918 in response to opposition to U.S. involvement in the war
1918 - Fourteen Points
League of Nations made it not pass in Congress because Wilson was unwilling to compromise
1919 - Schenck v. United States
1920 – Women’s Suffrage
1920s – Red Scare
1920s – Prohibition
1929 – Stock Market Crash
Great Depression begins
1932 – FDR
100 Days
New Deal implemented
1935 – Social Security Act
1939 – WWII starts in Europe
1941 – Attack on Pearl Harbor
1944 – D-Day
1945 - Hiroshima & Nagasaki
1947 – Truman Doctrine
financial support of anti-Communist nations for containment of Communism Marshall Plan
1950–1953 – Korean War ; Civil Rights Movement begins
Dwight Eisenhower = President
North Korea invaded South Korea in June 1950, which started the war
U.S. troops attacked North Korea under the umbrella of the United Nations, which led to China's entry into the war
Truman’s decision against MacArthur’s recommendations & MacArthur’s firing
1950s – McCarthyism
1954 – Brown v. Board of Ed.
1955 – Montgomery Bus Boycott
led to Martin Luther King Jr's national prominence and the integration of city buses
1957 – Sputnik
leads to NASA being established
1961 - JFK becomes President
Kennedy inherited the Cuban issue and attempted to solve it with the ill-fated Bay of Pigs invasion
1961 - Vietnam Conflict Begins
1962 – Cuban Missile Crisis
brought US and Soviet Union closest to military confrontation
1963 – March on Washington
1963 – JFK assassinated; LBJ becomes President
1964 – Civil Rights Act
Outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion, or gender
Most comprehensive piece of civil rights legislation in U.S. history
Prohibited discrimination in employment and public facilities
1965 - “Great Society” legislation
sweeping change to U.S. government since the New Dea
1968 – MLK killed, RFK killed
1968 – Tet Offensive
major turning point in the war, North Vietnamese and Vietcong nearly captured American embassy in Saigon
made the American public believe they were being lied to and the war was not winnable
1968 – Chicago Convention
1969 – Moon landing
1972 – Watergate break-in
Pentagon Papers
Senate hearing began in early 1973 and lasted for 1.5 years
Nixon resigned in August 1974 instead of facing impeachment proceedings
Vice President Gerald Ford took office and granted Nixon a presidential pardon
1973 – Roe v. Wade
1979 – Iranian hostage crisis
1980 – Reagan elected
1989 – Cold War ends
1991 – Persian Gulf War
1994 – NAFTA = North American Free Trade Agreement established
1995 – Oklahoma City Bombing
2000 – Bush v. Gore
2001 – 9/11 Attacks
2008 – Great Recession
2008 – Obama elected
2011 – Affordable Care Act
APUSH is all about timeline!! You don’t need to memorise the actual date just know where it falls in the timeline and what is it. If you need more notes on any of these, here’s the full study guide, the 16 required figures to know and the supreme court cases.
1492 – Columbus’ arrives in the New World
Flows of trade between the old world (Europe, Asia, Africa) & new world help increase food production and stimulate growth
Spain became the colonial power in the Americas.
1587 - England’s first attempt to settle in North America
Sir Walter Raleigh sponsors Roanoke Island, which ended up disappearing (aka Lost Colony)
1588 - English defeat Spanish Armada
1607 - Jamestown
marked the beginning of permanent English settlement in North America.
funded by the Virginia Company
leader of the settlement - Captain John Smith
1609 - 1610 - Desperation of English Settlers
Powhatan Confederacy aides Jamestown
tobacco as a cash crop
1620 - Mayflower Arrival in Plymouth
1649 – Toleration Act
Granted religious freedom to Christians in Maryland, a significant step towards religious tolerance in the American colonies.
1688 – Glorious Revolution
Overthrow James II, establishment of William and Mary as joint monarchs
1692 – Salem Witch Trials
unrest in religion, politics and gender led to the witch hysteria
many executions
1754–1763 – Seven Years’ War
fought between the British and the French
causes : competition between British & France for control of colonial territories & territorial disputes such as Ohio Valley
William Pitt, the English Prime Minister during the war
Ended by Treaty of Paris in 1763, which gave England control of Canada and almost everything east of the Mississippi Valley. leads to anti-British sentiment
led to lots of debt, which led to heavy taxing post-war
1763 – Proclamation of 1763
forbids colonial settlement past Appalachian Mountains
made the colonists angry
1765 – Stamp Act
taxed goods produced within the colonies, led to boycotts
“no taxation without representation"“
act was repealed
Declaratory Act passed
parliament can tax and legislate in all cases anywhere in the colonies
1770 – Boston Massacre
Propaganda campaign that followed suggested that the soldiers had shot into a crowd of innocent bystanders
1773 – Boston Tea Party
tea tax protest
results in British response with “Intolerable Acts” (closes Boston Harbor, tightens control over Massachusetts government, Quartering Act)
1775 – Lexington & Concord
BEGINNING of American Revolutionary War
1776 – Declaration of Independence
Articulated the principle of individual liberty and government's responsibility to serve the people
1777 – Battle of Saratoga
1777 - Articles of Confederation
The first national constitution of the United States
limitations : gave the federal government no power to raise an army, no executive or judicial branch, gave each state one vote regardless of the state's population
1778 - Franco American Alliance
negotiated by Ben Franklin
brings French into war on the colonists side
1781 – Battle of Yorktown
END of American Revolutionary War
Major British general, Cornwallis, was surrounded by the French navy and George Washington’s troops, and surrendered
Began a long period of negotiations between the American colonies and Great Britain, which would finally end the war in October of 1783
1783 – Treaty of Paris
gave US land and independence
1787 – Constitutional Convention
Great Compromise : HOR (representation according to population) & Senate (2 per state)
3/5ths Compromise : count 3/5 of slave population toward representation, empower Southern states
1788 – Washington’s Election
National Bank created
Hamilton’s financial plan to reduce debt
Neutrality Proclamation
Pinckney’s treaty 1796
no third term
1791 - Bill of Rights Added
1798 – XYZ Affair
1798 – Alien & Sedition Acts
1800 – Jefferson’s Election
1803 – Louisiana Purchase
Lewis & Clark
1812–1815 – War of 1812
Hartford Convention - end of Federalist Party
American system - tariff, roads, re-chartered National Bank (protective)
lobbied by Henry Clay
1815 – Battle of New Orleans
Jackson wins
1816–1824 – Era of Good Feelings
Only one political party, briefly leaves United States with unity
Panic of 1819 - people could not pay loans
1820 – Missouri Compromise
Missouri : slave state ; Missouri : free state
slavery is decided to be below 36º 30’ parallel
1823 – Monroe Doctrine
Policy of mutual non-interference and America's right to intervene in its own hemisphere
first of several doctrines that will become foreign policy
1820s – Sectionalism
1828 – Jackson’s Election
“Era of Common Man”
universal white male suffrage
1830 – Indian Removal Act
Jackson's treatment of the Cherokees with this act is one of the most criticized policies by modern scholars.
1832 – Nat Turner’s Rebellion
Nat Turner rallied a gang that killed and mutilated 60 whites.
1830–1850 – Manifest Destiny
Americans believed in God-given right to western territories
1836 – Battle of the Alamo
1845 – Annexation of Texas
1845–1848 – Mexican-American War
the Wilmot Proviso defeated quickly
1848 – Seneca Falls Convention
first women's rights convention
1850 – Fugitive Slave Law
1852 – Uncle Tom’s Cabin published
1854 – Bleeding Kansas
1857 – Dred Scott Decision
1860 – Lincoln’s Election
1861–1865 – Civil War
1862 – Homestead Act'
1863 - Emancipation Proclamation
1863 – Gettysburg
1865 - Lincoln Assassinated
1867 –Military Reconstruction Act of 1867
1867 – Purchase of Alaska
1877 – Compromise of 1877
military reconstruction ends in South
1876 – Little Bighorn
1886 – Haymarket Square Riot
1887 – Dawes Act
1887 – Interstate Commerce
1890 – Wounded Knee
1890 – McKinley Tariff ; Sherman Antitrust Act
1894 – Pullman Strike
1896 – “Cross of Gold” speech
1896 – Plessy v. Ferguson
1898 – Annexation of Hawaii
1898 – Spanish American War
Americans drive Spanish out of Cuba & Philippines
Treaty of Maris ends war in 1900
1902 - Platt Amendment
1903 – Wright Brothers
1904 - Roosevelt Corollary
The Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, also known as the Big Stick Policy, was used to justify repeated military intervention in Latin America due to the assertion of a threat to American security.
1917 – US enters WWI
Congress passed the Espionage Act in 1917 and the Sedition Act in 1918 in response to opposition to U.S. involvement in the war
1918 - Fourteen Points
League of Nations made it not pass in Congress because Wilson was unwilling to compromise
1919 - Schenck v. United States
1920 – Women’s Suffrage
1920s – Red Scare
1920s – Prohibition
1929 – Stock Market Crash
Great Depression begins
1932 – FDR
100 Days
New Deal implemented
1935 – Social Security Act
1939 – WWII starts in Europe
1941 – Attack on Pearl Harbor
1944 – D-Day
1945 - Hiroshima & Nagasaki
1947 – Truman Doctrine
financial support of anti-Communist nations for containment of Communism Marshall Plan
1950–1953 – Korean War ; Civil Rights Movement begins
Dwight Eisenhower = President
North Korea invaded South Korea in June 1950, which started the war
U.S. troops attacked North Korea under the umbrella of the United Nations, which led to China's entry into the war
Truman’s decision against MacArthur’s recommendations & MacArthur’s firing
1950s – McCarthyism
1954 – Brown v. Board of Ed.
1955 – Montgomery Bus Boycott
led to Martin Luther King Jr's national prominence and the integration of city buses
1957 – Sputnik
leads to NASA being established
1961 - JFK becomes President
Kennedy inherited the Cuban issue and attempted to solve it with the ill-fated Bay of Pigs invasion
1961 - Vietnam Conflict Begins
1962 – Cuban Missile Crisis
brought US and Soviet Union closest to military confrontation
1963 – March on Washington
1963 – JFK assassinated; LBJ becomes President
1964 – Civil Rights Act
Outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion, or gender
Most comprehensive piece of civil rights legislation in U.S. history
Prohibited discrimination in employment and public facilities
1965 - “Great Society” legislation
sweeping change to U.S. government since the New Dea
1968 – MLK killed, RFK killed
1968 – Tet Offensive
major turning point in the war, North Vietnamese and Vietcong nearly captured American embassy in Saigon
made the American public believe they were being lied to and the war was not winnable
1968 – Chicago Convention
1969 – Moon landing
1972 – Watergate break-in
Pentagon Papers
Senate hearing began in early 1973 and lasted for 1.5 years
Nixon resigned in August 1974 instead of facing impeachment proceedings
Vice President Gerald Ford took office and granted Nixon a presidential pardon
1973 – Roe v. Wade
1979 – Iranian hostage crisis
1980 – Reagan elected
1989 – Cold War ends
1991 – Persian Gulf War
1994 – NAFTA = North American Free Trade Agreement established
1995 – Oklahoma City Bombing
2000 – Bush v. Gore
2001 – 9/11 Attacks
2008 – Great Recession
2008 – Obama elected
2011 – Affordable Care Act