history mozilla
Chronology
1492 Discovery of America
by the Europeans
1607
Settlement of the first English colony
1620
Pilgrim Fathers arrive
1775
-83 War of Independence
1776
Declaration of Independence
[E1]
[ES1] [F1]
[I1]
1787
Constitution of the United States
1791
Bill of Rights [E1]
[E2]
1830
Opening of the first railway line
1846-47
War with Mexico
1861-65
Civil War
1865
Slavery is abolished
1867
Alaska
purchase
1870
All men get the right to vote
1914-18
First World War
1917
America
enters war
1920
All women get the right to vote
1929 Wall
Street Crash:
the great depression begins
1932
F.D. Roosevelt is elected
President
1939-45
Second World War
1941
America
enters war
1945 Founding
of the United Nations
1947 Launching
of the Marshall Plan
1949 NATO
security pact [E1] [ES1] [F1] [I1]
1950-53
Korean
War
1963
President Kennedy is assassinated
1965-73
Vietnam War
1968
Martin Luther King is assassinated
[E1]
[E2]
[ES1]
[F1]
[I1]
1969
Neil Armstrong lands on the moon
1987 USA-USSR
agreement on nuclear weapons
1991
War in the Persian Gulf [E1]
[E2] [ES1] [I1]
1993
Bill Clinton becomes President
2000
George W. Bush becomes
president
on a technicality
2001 War in Afghanistan,
after the blow up of the World
Trade Center
in New York
by Al
Qaeda’s terrorists.
2003
Invasion of Iraq
to depose Saddam Hussein
Discovery of the “New World”
The native Americans
were the Indians [E1] : they had travelled from Asia to America
and had
lived undisturbed until the European discovered it in 1492. It was Christopher Columbus [E1]
[ES1] [I1]
[I2],
an Italian
explorer sailing under the Spanish flag, to first land in the “New World”. He was soon followed by Spanish,
Portuguese,
French and English explorers looking for gold and glory.
Since North America
had
no gold to offer, the explorers did not
stay.
From colonization to Independence
The people who did
settle came later for other reasons: economic opportunity and religious
and
political freedom. The most famous new colonists were the Pilgrim
Fathers. They left England,
landed on the shores of Massachusetts
and
called the place New England.
During the 17th
century thousands of Europeans arrived in the New
World
and the English immigrants formed 13 colonies on the eastern coasts. By
the
middle of the 18th century these colonies had absorbed the
French,
Dutch and Spanish settlements. Important seaport towns were prospering
and
trading with Europe. At first Britain
allowed relative freedom to the colonies, but then it restricted the
colonies’
trade and imposed heavy taxes on imported goods.
But in 1773
a new tax was imposed
by the British: the Americans felt ready for independence and rebellion
broke
up when a cargo of tea that had just arrived
at the Boston
harbour was dumped into the sea. This event is known as the Boston tea Party.
In 1775 George
Washington was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the
American army and in June 1776 a committee presided by Thomas
Jefferson prepared a Declaration of Independence. On 4th July 1776 Congress
officially declared that the colonies were free from Britain.
War broke out. The small
American army, allied with France
managed to win the war. Still today the Declaration remains a source of
inspiration to all those who believe in democracy.
The colonies were now
free, but not yet a united nation: the problems that were occurring
demanded a
central government. In 1787, 55 delegates met in Philadelphia
to draft a constitution, which resulted in the Constitution of the United States.
This document established a central government, a supreme court and
gave
executive power to an elected president. Along with the constitution, a
Bill of Rights was added in 1791.
The 10 amendments guaranteed freedom of religion, a free press, free
speech, fair
treatment of those accused of crimes. Other amendments were added in
the course
of time, such ad the 13th which made slavery illegal; the 15th
gave black people equal voting rights.
Civil war
In the 19th
century the north-eastern states became great industrial powers and
they had
abolished slavery after the war of independence and supported slave
revolts
occurring in the south.
The economy of the
south was based on agriculture: cotton and tobacco mainly, which
required a lot
of workforce. Slaves were then imported from Africa.
The two different
systems of life caused increasing tensions in Congress and between the
states.
When abolitionist Abraham Lincoln was elected President in 1860 eleven
southern
states seceded from the union and formed a Confederacy. Lincoln’s
priority was to keep the United States one country.
It was the beginning of
a civil war. When the civil war ended in 1865 slavery was abolished in
all
parts of the U.S.
with the introduction of the 13th amendment to the
Constitution.
The 20th century
By the early 1900s
the States had become a great world power attracting millions of immigrants in search for a better life. In World
War
I the United States
helped Britain and France
win the war (1918). After
the war the country was affected by a severe economic crisis – the Great Depression –
started with the collapse of the New York stock market in 1929.
President Roosevelt then
launched a programme for the recovery of the economy, the New
Deal. By the forties the
situation got better and better.
World War
II
When World War II broke out, the
conflict involved Europe,
but soon it became worldwide. In 1941 Japan
attacked American naval base at Pearl Harbour [E1]
[ES1]
[F1] [I1] in Hawaii.
Immediately The United States
entered the war. It took six years to make the war end, with the
enormous loss
of thousands of lives after the nuclear bombing on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
At the end of the war representatives from 50 nations created a new
organisation, the United Nations (Onu) [E1] [E2] [ES1] [ES2] [F1] [F2] to help countries find
ways to avoid war and solve conflicts by peaceful means.
But soon after W.W.
II
the Western Allies and the U.S. had to face a tense, but
non-violent
relationship with the Soviet Union –
the Cold War – . The Western allies
reacted forming a defensive military alliance, the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
1950s-1970s
This is the period of the Korean
War: the United Nations condemned the Communist invasion of south Korea.
The bitter conflict ended in 1953 with neither side having won.
The U.S.
then experienced a period of political involution where democracy and
freedom
of thought were threatened. People accused of being communists were
blacklisted
and lost their jobs.
Under Johnson’s presidency the U.S.
made war against Vietnam
(Vietnam War), where a
nationalist-communist government had gained control of the northern
half of the
country. President Nixon put an end to the conflict.
A notable event of his
administration was the lunar landing [E1]
[ES1] [ES2] [F1]
[I1]
in July 1969.
From mid
70s to present time
After the Vietnam War the government of Carter
and Reagan
followed one
another.
The major event of the following republican
president,
George Bush, was
the participation in 1991 of the U.S.
army in the liberation of Kuwait
(War in the Persian Gulf), [E1]
[E2] [ES1] [I1] which had been invaded by Iraq
in 1990. The successful
results of the Operation Desert Storm did not help him to get
re-elected.
The Democratic Bill Clinton was the following
President
of the Unites
States. He was re-elected for a second term of office because of his
popularity
with the voters. The second term, however was dominated by a series of
scandals
that centred on the private life of the president and on his financial
past,
but Clinton
survived the scandal.
George W. Bush beat Al Gore in the following
elections by
a hair’s
breadth. The major event occurring during Bush’s term of office was the
war
against terrorism, a war that America
is still leading.