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The American continent
ranges from the Pacific to the Atlantic Ocean and includes outlying
areas as well. The first inhabitants of the area now claimed by the
United States arrived at least 12,000 years ago, probably by crossing
the Bering land bridge into Alaska. Relatively little is known of these
early settlers compared to the Europeans who colonized the area after
the first voyage of Christopher Columbus in 1492.
Columbus' men were
also the first known Old Worlders to land in the territory of the United
States when they arrived in Puerto Rico the next year on their second
voyage; the first European known to set foot in the continental U.S. was
Juan Ponce de León, who arrived in Florida in 1513, though he may have
been preceded by John Cabot in 1497.
Pre-Colonial
America
History: Pre-Colonial
America
Archeologists believe the present-day
United States was first populated by people migrating from Asia via the
Bering land bridge sometime between 50,000 and 11,000 years ago. These
people became the indigenous people who inhabited the Americas prior to
the arrival of European explorers in the 1400s and who are now called
Native Americans.
Many cultures thrived in the Americas
before Europeans came, including the Puebloans (Anasazi) in the
southwest and the Adena Culture in the east. Several such societies and
communities, over time, intensified this practice of established
settlements, and grew to support sizeable and concentrated populations.
Agriculture was independently developed in what is now the eastern
United States as early as 2500 BC, based on the domestication of
indigenous sunflower, squash and goosefoot. Eventually, Mexican maize
and legumes were adapted to the shorter summers of eastern North America
and replaced the indigenous crops.
The first European contact with the
Americas was with the Vikings in the year 1000. Leif Erikson established
a short-lived settlement called Vinland in present day Newfoundland. It
would be another 500 years before European contact would be made again.
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Early
European Exploration and Settlements
History: Early European
Exploration and Settlements
One recorded European exploration of
the Americas was by Christopher Columbus in 1492, sailing on behalf of
the King and Queen of Spain. He did not reach mainland America until his
fourth voyage, almost 20 years after his first voyage. He first landed
on Haiti, where the Arawaks, whom he mistook for people of the Indies
(thus, "Indians") greeted him and his fleet by swimming out to
their ships with gifts and food. Columbus, after island-hopping for
several months, heard nothing of gold, his main drive for the voyage.
However, he realized that a great market of slavery could be made with
these populations. By 1550, there were only 500 Arawaks left; about
250,000 Indians on Haiti had died from murder or suicide.
After a period of exploration by
various European countries, Dutch, Spanish, English, French, Swedish,
and Portuguese settlements were established. Columbus was the first
European to set foot on what would one day become U.S. territory when he
came to Puerto Rico in 1493; the oldest continuously occupied European
settlements in the U.S. are San Juan, Puerto Rico, founded 1521, and on
the mainland, St. Augustine in what is now the state of Florida, founded
in 1565.
In the 15th century, Spaniards and
other Europeans brought horses and ponies to the Americas. The
introduction of the horse had a profound impact on Native American
culture in the Great Plains of North America. The horse offered
revolutionary speed and efficiency, both while hunting and in battle.
The horse also became a sort of currency for native tribes and nations.
Horses became a pivotal part in solidifying social hierarchy, expanding
trade areas with neighboring tribes, and creating a stereotype both to
their advantage and against it.
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Spanish
Exploration and Settlement
History: Spanish
Exploration and Settlement
Although most Americans associate the
early Spanish in this hemisphere with Hernán Cortés in Mexico and
Francisco Pizarro in Peru, Spaniards pioneered the present-day United
States, too. The first confirmed landing in the continental US was by a
Spaniard, Juan Ponce de León, who landed in 1513 at a lush shore he
christened La Florida.
Within three decades of Ponce de
León's landing, the Spanish became the first Europeans to reach the
Appalachian Mountains, the Mississippi River, the Grand Canyon and the
Great Plains. Spanish ships sailed along the East Coast, penetrating to
present-day Bangor, Maine, and up the Pacific Coast as far as Oregon.
From 1528 to 1536, four castaways from a Spanish expedition, including a
black Moor, journeyed all the way from Florida to the Gulf of
California.
In 1540, De Soto undertook an extensive
exploration of the present US and, in the same year, Francisco Vázquez
de Coronado led 2,000 Spaniards and Mexican Indians across today's
Arizona-Mexico border and traveled as far as central Kansas, close to
the exact geographic center of what is now the continental United
States.
Other Spanish explorers of the US make
up a long list that includes Lucas Vásquez de Ayllón, Pánfilo de
Narváez, Sebastián Vizcaíno, Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, Gaspar de
Portolà, Pedro Menéndez de Avilés, Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca,
Tristán de Luna y Arellano and Juan de Oñate. In all, Spaniards probed
half of today's lower 48 states before the first English tried to
colonize, at Roanoke Island.
The Spanish did not just explore; they
settled, creating the first permanent European settlement in the
continental United States at St. Augustine, Florida, in 1565. Santa Fe,
New Mexico also predates Jamestown, Virginia and Plymouth Colony (of Mayflower
and Pilgrims fame). Later came Spanish settlements in San Antonio,
Tucson, San Diego, Los Angeles and San Francisco, to name just a few.
The Spanish even established a Jesuit mission in Virginia's Chesapeake
Bay 37 years before the founding of Jamestown in 1607.
Two iconic American stories have
Spanish antecedents, too. Almost 80 years before John Smith's alleged
rescue by Pocahontas, a man by the name of Juan Ortiz told of his
remarkably similar rescue from execution by an Indian girl [citation
needed]. Spaniards also held a thanksgiving, 56 years before the
Pilgrims, when they feasted near St. Augustine with Florida Indians,
probably on stewed pork and garbanzo beans [citation needed]. As
late as 1783, at the end of the American Revolutionary War, Spain held
claim to roughly half of today's continental United States, including
the East and West Florida which were returned to Spain by Great Britain
at the war's end. (In 1775, Spanish ships even reached Alaska).
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Colonial
America (1493-1776)
History: Colonial American (1493
to 1776)
Colonial America was defined
by ongoing battles between mainly English-speaking colonists and Natives,
by a severe labor shortage that gave birth to forms of unfree labor such
as slavery and indentured servitude, and by a British policy of benign
neglect (salutary neglect) that permitted the development of an American
spirit distinct from that of its European founders.
The first truly successful
English colony was established in 1607, on the James River near the
Chesapeake Bay. The Virginia Company of London financed the purchase of
three ships to transport settlers to the Virginia colony.
The names of the three ships were The Susan Constant, Godspeed
and the Discovery. The leader of the group was Captain Christopher
Newport. Also on board was John Smith, an explorer, soldier, and writer.
King James decided to give the Virginia Company a charter
for the settlement. The settlers sought a location which had fresh water,
deep water to dock their ships, and was easy to defend. The settlement was
named Jamestown after the king. England also wanted to find gold, silver
and other riches in North America.
As increasing numbers of
settlers arrived in Virginia, many conflicts arose between the Native
Americans and the colonists. The colonists increasingly appropriated land
to farm and grow tobacco. This was the beginning of a general trend
towards displacing Native Americans westward to make room for settlers.
One example of conflict
between Native Americans and English settlers was the 1622 Powhatan
uprising in Virginia, in which Indians had killed hundreds of English
settlers. The largest conflict between Native Americans and English
settlers in the 17th century was King Philip's War in New England.
Differences of language,
religion and culture also contributed to the friction between the two
groups. At the base of the friction was an assumption by the English
colonists of racial, cultural and moral superiority.
New England was founded by
two separate groups of religious dissenters. A second group of colonists
called the Puritans established the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1629. The
Middle Colonies, consisting of the present-day states of New York, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware, were characterized by a large degree
of diversity. The first attempted English settlement south of Virginia was
the Province of Carolina, with Georgia Colony the last of the Thirteen
Colonies established in 1733.
Spain claimed or controlled
a large part of what is now the central and western United States as part
of New Spain which included Spanish Florida, California and Texas. In
1682, French explorer Sieur de La Salle explored the Ohio and Mississippi
valleys, and claimed the entire territory as far south as the Gulf of
Mexico, which became New France. The Louisiana Territory, under Spanish
control since the end of the Seven Years' War (1756-1763), remained
off-limits to settlement from the 13 American colonies. The colonies of
East Florida, West Florida, Grenada, and Quebec, added to Great Britain by
the Treaty of Paris (1763), were part of British North America open to
travel, and during the revolutionary war many Loyalists fled to them.
These are historic regions
of the United States, meaning regions that were legal entities in the
past, or which the average modern American would no longer immediately
recognize as a regional description.
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Formation
of the United States (1776-1789)
During this period the
United States won its independence from Great Britain with help from
France in the American Revolutionary War, and the thirteen former colonies
established themselves as the United States of America under the Articles
of Confederation.
On July 4, 1776, the Second
Continental Congress, still meeting in Philadelphia, declared the
independence of the United States in a remarkable document, the
Declaration of Independence, primarily authored by Thomas Jefferson.
Although it is said that Morocco was the first country in the world to
officially recognize the newly sovereign United States in 1777, it was
Dutch Governor Johannes de Graaff who fired an 11-gun salute when a U.S.
war ship called Andrew Doria sailed into Gallows Bay of St.
Eustatius flying the flag of the new United States on November 16, 1776.
The Netherlands became the first foreign country (de facto) to
recognize the United States. The Moroccan-American Treaty of Friendship
stands as the U.S.'s oldest non-broken friendship treaty. Signed by John
Adams and Thomas Jefferson, it has been in continuous effect since 1783.
The United States celebrates
its founding date as July 4, 1776, when the Second Continental Congress—representing
thirteen British colonies—adopted the Declaration of Independence that
rejected British authority in favor of self-determination. The structure
of the government was profoundly changed on March 4, 1789, when the states
replaced the Articles of Confederation with the United States
Constitution. The new government reflected a radical break from the
normative governmental structures of the time, favoring representative,
elective government with a weak executive, rather than the existing
monarchial structures common within the western traditions of the time.
The system borrowed heavily from Enlightenment Age ideas and classical
western philosophy in that a primacy was placed upon individual liberty
and upon constraining the power of government through division of powers
and a system of checks and balances.
The colonists' victory at
Saratoga led the French into an open alliance with the United States. In
1781, a combined American and French Army, acting with the support of a
French fleet, captured a large British army, led by General Charles
Cornwallis, at Yorktown, Virginia. The surrender of General Cornwallis
ended serious British efforts to find a military solution to their
American problem.
A series of attempts to
organize a movement to outline and press reforms culminated in the
Congress calling the Constitutional Convention of 1787, which met in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
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Westward
expansion (1789–1849)
George Washington—a
renowned hero of the American Revolutionary War, commander and chief of
the Continental Army, and president of the Constitutional Convention—became
the first President of the United States under the new U.S. Constitution.
The Whiskey Rebellion in 1794, when settlers in the Monongahela River
valley of western Pennsylvania protested against a federal tax on liquor
and distilled drinks, was the first serious test of the federal
government.
The Louisiana Purchase, in
1803, gave Western farmers use of the important Mississippi River
waterway, removed the French presence from the western border of the
United States, and provided U.S. settlers with vast potential for
expansion. In response to continued British impressments of American
sailors into the British Navy, Madison had the Twelfth United States
Congress— led by Southern and Western Jeffersonians — declare war on
Britain in 1812. The United States and Britain came to a draw in the War
of 1812 after bitter fighting that lasted until January 8, 1815. The
Treaty of Ghent, officially ending the war, essentially resulted in the
maintenance of the 'status quo ante bellum'; crucially for the U.S., the
British ended their alliance with the Native Americans.
The Monroe Doctrine,
expressed in 1823, proclaimed the United States' opinion that European
powers should no longer colonize or interfere in the Americas. This was a
defining moment in the foreign policy of the United States.
In 1830, Congress passed the
Indian Removal Act, which authorized the president to negotiate treaties
that exchanged Indian tribal lands in the eastern states for lands west of
the Mississippi River. This established Andrew Jackson, a military hero
and President, as a cunning tyrant in regards to native populations. The
act resulted in the Chickasaw and Choctaw tribes dying en route to the
West, the Creek's violent opposition and eventual defeat, and the Cherokee
Nation taking up farming and "civilized behavior." The
Cherokees, under Jackson's presidency, were eventually pushed from their
land—even after success with agriculture, trade, and the creation of the
first North American Indian written language. The Indian Removal Act also
directly caused the ceding of Spanish Florida and subsequently led to the
many Seminole Wars.
Mexico refused to accept the
annexation of Texas in 1845, and war broke out in 1846. The U.S., using
regulars and large numbers of volunteers, defeated Mexico which was badly
led, short on resources, and plagued by a divided command. Public
sentiment in the U.S. was divided as Whigs and anti-slavery forces opposed
the war. The 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ceded California, New
Mexico, and adjacent areas to the United States. In 1850, the issue of
slavery in the new territories was settled by the Compromise of 1850
brokered by Whig Henry Clay and Democrat Stephen Douglas.
[Top]
The
Civil
War Era (1849-1865)
In the middle of the 19th
century, white Americans of the North and South were unable to reconcile
fundamental differences in their approach to government, economics,
society and African American slavery. Abraham Lincoln was elected
President, the South seceded to form the Confederate States of America,
and the Civil War followed, with the ultimate defeat of the South.
In 1854, the proposed
Kansas-Nebraska Act abrogated the Missouri Compromise by providing that
each new state of the Union would decide its stance on slavery. After the
election of Lincoln, eleven Southern states seceded from the union between
late 1860 and 1861, establishing a rebel government, the Confederate
States of America on February 9, 1861.
The Civil War began when
Confederate General Pierre Beauregard opened fire upon Fort Sumter. They
fired because Fort Sumter was in a confederate state. Along with the
northwestern portion of Virginia, four of the five northernmost
"slave states" did not secede and became known as the Border
States. Emboldened by Second Bull Run, the Confederacy made its first
invasion of the North when General Robert E. Lee led 55,000 men of the
Army of Northern Virginia across the Potomac River into Maryland. The
Battle of Antietam near Sharpsburg, Maryland, on September 17, 1862, was
the bloodiest single day in American history.
At the beginning of 1864,
Lincoln made General Ulysses S. Grant commander of all Union armies.
General William Tecumseh Sherman marched from Chattanooga, Tennessee, to
Atlanta, Georgia, defeating Confederate Generals Joseph E. Johnston and
John Bell Hood. Sherman's army laid waste to about 20% of the farms in
Georgia in his celebrated "March to the Sea", and reached the
Atlantic Ocean at Savannah in December 1864. Lee surrendered his Army of
Northern Virginia on April 9, 1865, at Appomattox Court House.
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Reconstruction
and the rise of industrialization (1865-1918)
After the Civil War, America experienced
an accelerated rate of industrialization, mainly in the northern states.
However, Reconstruction and its failure left the Southern whites in a
position of firm control over its black population, denying them their
Civil Rights and keeping them in a state of economic, social and political
servitude. U.S. Federal government policy, since the James Monroe
Administration, had been to move the indigenous population beyond the
reach of the white frontier into a series of Indian reservations. Tribes
were generally forced onto small reservations as white farmers and
ranchers took over their lands. In 1876, the last major Sioux war erupted
when the Black Hills Gold Rush penetrated their territory.
An unprecedented wave of immigration to
the United States served both to provide the labor for American industry
and to create diverse communities in previously undeveloped areas. Abusive
industrial practices led to the often violent rise of the labor movement
in the United States.
The United States began its rise to
international power in this period with substantial population and
industrial growth domestically and numerous military ventures abroad,
including the Spanish-American War, which began when the United States
blamed the sinking of the USS Maine (ACR-1) on Spain without any real
evidence.
This period was capped by the 1917 entry
of the United States into World War I.
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Post-World
War I and the Great Depression (1918–1940)
Following World War I, the U.S. grew
steadily in stature as an economic and military world power. The
after-shock of Russia's October Revolution resulted in real fears of
communism in the United States, leading to a three year Red Scare.
The United States Senate did not ratify
the Treaty of Versailles imposed by its Allies on the defeated Central
Powers; instead, the United States chose to pursue unilateralism, if not
isolationism.
In 1920, the manufacture, sale, import
and export of alcohol was prohibited by the Eighteenth Amendment to the
United States Constitution. Prohibition ended in 1933, a failure.
During most of the 1920s, the United
States enjoyed a period of unbalanced prosperity: farm prices and wages
fell, while industrial profits grew. The boom was fueled by a rise in debt
and an inflated Stock Market. The Stock Market crash in 1929 and the
ensuing Great Depression led to government efforts to re-start the economy
and help its victims, with Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal. The recovery
was rapid in all areas except unemployment, which remained fairly high
until 1940.
[Top]
World
War II (1940-1945)
The United States threw its diplomatic
and economic power into the war beginning in May 1940, when it became the
"Arsenal of Democracy." Militarily, it entered after the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941. The U.S. joined
Britain, Nationalist China, and the Soviet Union to defeat Imperial Japan,
Fascist Italy, and Nazi Germany.
As with many of the countries involved in
the War, World War II became a dividing point in American history, with
post-war America being quite different from what pre-war America had been.
Cold
War beginnings and the Civil Rights Movement (1945–1964)
Following World War II, the United States
emerged as one of the two dominant superpowers. The U.S. Senate, on
December 4, 1945, approved U.S. participation in the United Nations (UN),
which marked a turn away from the traditional isolationism of the U.S. and
toward more international involvement. The post-war era in the United
States was defined internationally by the beginning of the Cold War, in
which the United States and the Soviet Union attempted to expand their
influence at the expense of the other, checked by each side's massive
nuclear arsenal and the doctrine of mutual assured destruction. The result
was a series of conflicts during this period including the Korean War and
the tense nuclear showdown of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Within the United
States, the Cold War prompted concerns about Communist influence, and also
resulted in government efforts to encourage math and science toward
efforts like the space race.
In the decades after the Second World
War, the United States became a dominant global influence in economic,
political, military, cultural and technological affairs. Following the
collapse of the Soviet Union, it stands today as the sole superpower. The
power of the United States is nonetheless limited by international
agreements and the realities of political, military and economic
constraints. At the center of middle-class culture since the 1950s has
been a growing obsession with consumer goods.
John F. Kennedy was elected President in
1960. Known for his charisma, he was the only Catholic to ever be
President. The Kennedys brought a new life and vigor to the atmosphere of
the White House. During his time in office, the Cold War reached its
height with the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962. He was assassinated in
Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963.
Meanwhile, the American people completed
their great migration from the farms into the cities, and experienced a
period of sustained economic expansion. At the same time,
institutionalized racism across the United States, but especially in the
American South, was increasingly challenged by the growing Civil Rights
movement and African American leaders such as Martin Luther King, Jr.
During the 1960s, the Jim Crow laws that legalized racial segregation
between Whites and Blacks came to an end.
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Cold
War (1964–1980)
The Cold War continued through the 1960s
and 1970s, and the United States entered the Vietnam War, whose growing
unpopularity fed already existing social movements, including those among
women, minorities and young people. President Lyndon Johnson's Great
Society social programs and the judicial activism of the Warren Court
added to the wide range of social reform during the 1960s and 70s. The
period saw the birth of feminism and the environmental movement as
political forces, and continued progress toward Civil Rights.
In the early 1970s, Johnson's successor,
President Richard Nixon brought the Vietnam War to a close, and the
American-backed South Vietnamese government collapsed. The war cost the
lives of 58,000 American troops and millions of Vietnamese. Nixon's own
administration was brought to an ignominious close with the political
scandal of Watergate. The OPEC oil embargo and slowing economic growth led
to a period of stagflation under President Jimmy Carter as the 1970s drew
to a close.
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End
of the Cold War (1980–1988)
Ronald Reagan produced a major
realignment with his 1980 and 1984 landslides. In 1980 the Reagan
coalition was possible because of Democratic losses in most
social-economic groups.
"Reagan Democrats" were
conservative ethnics who usually voted Democratic but were attracted by
Reagan's policies, personality and leadership, notably his social
conservatism and hawkish foreign policy.
In foreign affairs bipartisanship was not
in evidence. The Democrats doggedly opposed the president's efforts to
support the Contras of Nicaragua. He took a hard line against the Soviet
Union, alarming Democrats who wanted a nuclear freeze, but he succeeded in
growing the military budget and launching a very high-tech "Star
Wars" missile defense system that the Soviets could not match. When
Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in Moscow many conservative Republicans
were dubious of the friendship between him and Reagan. Gorbachev tried to
save Communism in Russia first by ending the expensive arms race with
America, then (1989) by shedding the East European empire. Communism
finally collapsed in Russia in 1991.
[Top]
1988 –
present
After the fall of the Soviet Union, the
United States emerged as the world's sole remaining superpower and
continued to involve itself in military action overseas, including the
1991 Gulf War. Following his election in 1992, President Bill Clinton
oversaw the longest economic expansion in American history, a side effect
of the digital revolution and new business opportunities created by the
Internet (see Internet bubble).
At the beginning of the new millennium,
the United States found itself attacked by Islamist terrorism, with the
September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and The Pentagon
orchestrated by Osama bin Laden. Another flight, Flight 93, crashed in
Pennsylvania near a forest. In response, under the administration of
President George W. Bush, the United States (with the military support of
NATO and the political support of most of the international community)
invaded Afghanistan and overthrew the Taliban regime, which had supported
and harbored bin Laden. More controversially, President Bush continued
what he dubbed the War on Terrorism with the invasion of Iraq by
overthrowing and capturing Saddam Hussein in 2003. This second invasion
proved to be unpopular in many parts of the world, even amongst long-time
American allies such as France, and helped fuel a global wave of
anti-American sentiment.
The presidential election in 2000 was one
of the closest in American history, and helped lay the seeds for political
polarization to come. In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina flooded parts of
the city of New Orleans and heavily damaged other areas of the gulf coast,
including major damage to the Mississippi coast. The preparation and the
response of the government were criticized as ineffective and slow. As of
2006, the political climate remains polarized as debates continue over
partial birth abortion, federal funding of stem cell research, same-sex
marriage, immigration reform and the ongoing war in Iraq.
By 2006, rising prices saw Americans
become increasingly conscious of the nation's extreme dependence on steady
supplies of inexpensive petroleum for energy, with President Bush
admitting a U.S. "addiction to oil." The possibility of serious
economic disruption, should conflict overseas or declining production
interrupt the flow, could not be ignored, given the instability in the
Middle East and other oil-producing regions of the world. Many proposals
and pilot projects for replacement energy sources, from ethanol to wind
power and solar power, received more capital funding and were pursued more
seriously in the 2000s than in previous decades.
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