Kindle - Highlights U.S..History - For.dummies 1709499385796
Kindle - Highlights U.S..History - For.dummies 1709499385796
Kindle - Highlights U.S..History - For.dummies 1709499385796
Anasazi.
LOCATION: 981
population and were never numerous. But just why their culture died out so suddenly
around the beginning of the 14th century is a puzzle to archaeologists.
LOCATION: 988
Mound Builders,
LOCATION: 994
Historians estimate that at least 250 different tribal groups lived in America at
that time.
LOCATION: 1010
around 1450, when five tribes — the Cayugas, Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, and
Senecas — formed the Iroquois League.
LOCATION: 1035
the Cherokees, the Choctaws, the Chickasaws, the Creeks, and the Seminoles. These
tribes got by through a mix of hunting, gathering, and farming. Europeans would
later refer to them as the Five Civilized Tribes, in part because they developed
codes of law and judicial systems but also because they readily adopted the
European customs of running plantations,
LOCATION: 1041
The first sighting of the New World by a European probably occurred around 987,
when a Viking
LOCATION: 1073
an expedition of three ships, some cattle, and about 160 people — including a few
women — created a settlement. The Karlsefni settlement lasted three years.
LOCATION: 1084
By 1020,
LOCATION: 1087
In Spain, for example, 700 years of war between the Spaniards and the Moors (Arabs
from North Africa) were finally over in 1492. The marriage of Ferdinand of Castile
and Isabella of Aragon had united the country’s two major realms.
LOCATION: 1103
In 1488, the Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias reached the tip of Africa, named
it the Cape of Good Hope,
LOCATION: 1108
on October 12, 1492. It was an island in the Bahamas, which he called San Salvador.
LOCATION: 1125
He
LOCATION: 1137
enslaved the natives, thousands of whom died. And he hanged some of the “settlers”
for rebelling against his authority.
LOCATION: 1138
In 1504, somewhat exaggerated letters by Vespucci about what he called Mundus Novus
— the New World — were printed throughout Europe. A German mapmaker read the
letters, was impressed, and decided in 1507 to call the massive new lands on his
maps America, in Vespucci’s honor
LOCATION: 1159
in 1497, saw lots of fish, and claimed the area for England. In 1498,
LOCATION: 1174
Cabot may have been the first non-Viking European to set foot on what’s now the
continental United States,
LOCATION: 1176
Vasco Nunez de Balboa (Spain): Balboa is credited with being the first European to
see the South Seas from the New World.
LOCATION: 1177
his trips helped France establish a claim for much of what is now Canada.
LOCATION: 1185
Francisco Coronado
LOCATION: 1186
Coronado’s group explored Arizona, Texas, New Mexico, Kansas, and the Gulf of
California and discovered the Grand Canyon.
LOCATION: 1187
Columbus also imposed a gold tax on the Indians and sometimes cut the hands off of
those who couldn’t or wouldn’t pay it.
LOCATION: 1202
When even the populations of the little islands waned, the Spanish looked for other
cheap labor sources.
LOCATION: 1208
1513, King Carlos I of Spain had given his royal assent to the African slave trade.
He made his decision in part, he said, to improve the lot of the Indians.
LOCATION: 1210
in 1493, Columbus stopped by the Canary Islands and picked up some sugar cane
cuttings.
LOCATION: 1216
In 1516, the first sugar grown in the New World was presented to King Carlos I of
Spain. By 1531, it was as commercially important to the Spanish colonial economy as
gold.
LOCATION: 1217
Sugar and rum became so popular that sugar plantations mushroomed all over the
Caribbean.
LOCATION: 1222
In 1514, Pope Leo X declared that “not only the Christian religion but Nature cries
out against the slavery and the slave trade.” In 1537, Pope Paul III declared
Indians were not to be enslaved.
LOCATION: 1226
the New World’s natives were then likely candidates to die from the Europeans’ most
formidable weapon: disease. Because they had never been exposed to them as a
culture, the Native Americans’ immune systems had no defense when faced with
diseases such as measles and smallpox.
LOCATION: 1238
Spanish conquerors defeated mighty empires in Mexico and Peru — the Aztecs and
Incas.
LOCATION: 1261
sophisticated cultures with built-in labor classes. All the Spanish had to do was
kill the old bosses and become the new bosses, so they didn’t have to import slaves
as they had done in the Caribbean.
LOCATION: 1262
Pope Alexander VI divided the Americas between Spain and Portugal by drawing a line
on the map.
LOCATION: 1270
In 1587, Walter Raleigh, who had the royal right to colonize in the Americas, sent
a group that consisted of 89 men, 7 women, and 11 children to what is now North
Carolina. They called their colony Roanoke.
LOCATION: 1290
And no one knows exactly what happened to the first English colony in the New
World.
LOCATION: 1295
1604, however, when England and Spain signed a tenuous peace treaty,
LOCATION: 1313
Protestantism, a rival Christian religion to the one led by the Pope in Rome, had
developed in the 16th century and become firmly rooted in England.
LOCATION: 1320
England’s woolen industry was booming in the late 1500s and early 1600s. Farms were
turned into pastures for more and more sheep, and the tenant farmers on the former
farms were forced off, with no particular place to go — except the New World.
LOCATION: 1324
In the winter of 1609, called “the starving time,” conditions got so bad colonists
resorted to eating anything they could get — including each other. One man was
executed after eating the body of his dead wife.
LOCATION: 1348
The Portuguese were the first Europeans to raid the African coast for slaves, in
the mid-15th century. They were quickly followed by the Spanish, who used Africans
to supplant the New World Indians who had either been killed or died of diseases.
By the mid-16th century, the English sea dog John Hawkins was operating a thriving
slave trade between Africa and the Caribbean.
LOCATION: 1371
While the Northern colonies had less use for slaves as agricultural workers, they
put Africans to work as domestic servants or as unpaid laborers
LOCATION: 1379
Although the total population of slaves was relatively low through most of the
1600s, colonial governments took steps to institutionalize slavery. In 1662,
Virginia passed a law that automatically made slaves of slaves’ children. In 1664,
Maryland’s assembly declared that all black people in the colony were slaves for
life, whether they converted to Christianity or not. And in 1684, New York’s
legislators recognized slavery as a legitimate practice.
LOCATION: 1387
In 1670, Virginia had a population of about 2,000 slaves. By 1708, the number was
12,000.
LOCATION: 1392
a group of 102 men, women, and children left England on September 16, 1620, on a
ship called the Mayflower.
LOCATION: 1409
They had an extremely able leader in William Bradford, who was to be governor of
the colony for more than 30 years,
LOCATION: 1427
The locals showed the newcomers some planting techniques and then traded the
colonists’ furs for corn, which gave the Pilgrims something to send back to
England. By the fall of 1622, the Plymouth colonists had much to be thankful for.
LOCATION: 1430
It’s easy to confuse the Pilgrims and the Puritans. Both groups moved to journey to
America for religious reasons. Both were remarkably intolerant of other people’s
beliefs.
LOCATION: 1452
Winthrop led about 500 Puritans to the Massachusetts Bay colony in New England in
1630, establishing the city of Boston later that year.
LOCATION: 1459
Adultery was punishable by death until 1632, when the penalty was reduced to a
public whipping and the forced wearing of the letters “AD” sewed onto the clothing.
LOCATION: 1466
In early 1692, three young girls in Salem, Massachusetts, threw fits and claimed
they had been bewitched by a West Indian slave and two other local women.
LOCATION: 1474
When they admitted they had made it up, it was too late.
LOCATION: 1476
none was burned at the stake, as witches were commonly dealt with in Europe.
LOCATION: 1480
Puritans
LOCATION: 1507
Catholic
LOCATION: 1511
they
LOCATION: 1511
in 1649,
LOCATION: 1511
recognized all Christian religions — and decreed the death penalty for Jews and
atheists.
LOCATION: 1511
In 1681, a wealthy Quaker named William Penn got a charter to start a colony in
America.
LOCATION: 1517
the Dutch
LOCATION: 1524
in 1626 established a colony in the New World at the mouth of the Hudson River,
calling it New Amsterdam.
LOCATION: 1525
in 1664, when English ships and troops showed up to attack the settlement, it
surrendered without firing a shot. New Amsterdam became New York, named after its
new owner, James, the Duke of York.
LOCATION: 1531
In 1642, Native Americans under Chief Opechencanough attacked settlers over a large
area of the Virginia colony and killed about 350 of them. The settlers
counterattacked a few months later and killed hundreds of Native Americans. In New
Netherland, the Dutch settlers murdered nearly 100 Native Americans in their sleep,
cut off their heads, and kicked them around the streets of New Amsterdam. That
launched a nasty war that ended when 150 Dutch soldiers killed about 700 Native
Americans at a battle near present-day Stamford, Connecticut.
LOCATION: 1545
After the Civil War, however, Americans moved west as much to make a buck as to
settle into a new life. The West was seen as a bottomless treasure chest of
resources to exploit.
LOCATION: 4311
strike. In 1859, thousands descended on Pike’s Peak in Colorado, looking for gold.
LOCATION: 4316
1861, it was Idaho; in 1863, Montana; in 1874, the Black Hills of Dakota; and in
1876, it was back to Colorado.
LOCATION: 4317
By 1871, 750,000 head of cattle were moving through Abilene alone. By 1875, the
advent of the refrigerated car allowed cattle to be slaughtered and butchered in
Midwest cities like Kansas City and Chicago before being shipped east.
LOCATION: 4342
He was likely in his late teens or early 20s, and about one in five was African
American.
LOCATION: 4349
By the early 1890s, the day of the cowboy and the cattle drive was coming to an
end.
LOCATION: 4351
But in the 1880s, crop prices fell as new producers in Australia and India came on
the scene.
LOCATION: 4364
There were plenty of dead Native Americans by 1876. When Columbus arrived, there
were probably 1 million to 1.5 million Native Americans living in what is now the
United States. By the time of the Civil War, that number had dropped to about
300,000,
LOCATION: 4383
to ending tribal customs and forcing Native Americans to adopt white culture, a
process known as acculturation.
LOCATION: 4393
Between 1859 and 1876, soldiers and Native Americans fought at least 200 pitched
battles and signed 370 treaties.
LOCATION: 4394
“They made us promises more than I can remember,” noted one Sioux leader, “but they
never kept but one.
LOCATION: 4396
offered to buy the land from the Native Americans but was refused. The last great
war against the Native Americans began, and for the first time, the Plains tribes
united into a formidable fighting force. On June 25, 1876, the U.S. 7th Cavalry
regiment, led by Custer, rashly attacked a Native American encampment at the Little
Bighorn River in Montana. It proved to be populated by 2,500 warriors.
LOCATION: 4409
In 1887, Congress passed a law, called the Dawes Act, that divided land into
individual allotments for Native Americans, as part of an effort to turn them into
small farmers. It also provided for an education system and eventual U.S.
citizenship. However well intentioned the law was, it didn’t work.
LOCATION: 4418
Many Native Americans eventually signed away their land for a few cents an acre to
speculators, who promptly resold it to settlers for a few dollars an acre.
LOCATION: 4421
In 1890,
LOCATION: 4423
The soldiers killed more than 200 men, women, and children and then left their
bodies in the snow for three days before burying them in a mass grave. It was the
last major
LOCATION: 4424
violence between the Native Americans and whites, and a tragic and horrifyingly
typical response to America’s “Indian Problem.”
LOCATION: 4426
which not only tried to completely separate the races, but also take away most of
the rights they had been accorded by the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments.
LOCATION: 4455
Blacks couldn’t serve on juries, represent themselves in court, or drink from the
same public drinking fountains as whites. If they quit a job, they could be
arrested for vagrancy.
LOCATION: 4456
the best-known African American leader of the day was not ready to challenge the
injustices. Born into slavery, Booker T. Washington had become a schoolteacher, the
founder of a major vocational school in Alabama called the Tuskegee Institute,
LOCATION: 4462
Anti-Chinese riots broke out in San Francisco in 1877. In 1882, Congress passed a
law prohibiting all Chinese immigration for ten years. The ban, called the Chinese
Exclusion Act, was later extended to last indefinitely and wasn’t repealed until
1943.
LOCATION: 4470
Between 1866 and 1915, 25 million immigrants came to the United States. Most of
them came from Italy and Southeastern Europe, but they also came from Scandinavia,
Russia, Poland, Germany, Ireland,
LOCATION: 4476
country. The presence of so many immigrants in so short a time caused alarm in some
“natives,” who feared the newcomers would weaken their chances in the job market
and pollute American culture.
LOCATION: 4482
from 1830 to 1870, about 40,000 miles of track were laid in the country. But in the
20 years from 1871 to 1890, more than 110,000 miles were laid. In 1869, the first
transcontinental line
LOCATION: 4512
linking the East and West coasts was opened, and by 1900, there were four more.
LOCATION: 4513
they helped speed development of America’s telegraph system, because where the
rails went, the wires went.
LOCATION: 4519
Carnegie. Born in Scotland, Carnegie came to America at the age of 13 and got a job
working in a Pennsylvania factory for $1.50 a week.
LOCATION: 4552
In 1901, Carnegie sold out to financier J. P. Morgan for the staggering sum of $447
million. In his later years, he gave away more than $300 million of his fortune
through philanthropies that included building 2,811 public libraries and donating
8,000 organs to churches.
LOCATION: 4558
In the 1850s, whale oil — the primary fuel for providing light
LOCATION: 4561
miles. Then a man named George Westinghouse began using alternating current (AC),
which allowed high voltage
LOCATION: 4586
In 1877, America faced its first national labor strike when railroad
LOCATION: 4603
workers walked off the job after wages were cut. State and federal troops were
called in, hundreds of strikers were killed or wounded,
LOCATION: 4603
In 1894, a strike against the Pullman railroad car company spread over 27 states
and paralyzed the country’s railroads.
LOCATION: 4609
These hard times triggered a political movement called Populism. Populists sought
higher crop prices and lower interest rates.
LOCATION: 4644
They also wanted more money put into circulation and more silver coins made. The
idea was that more money in circulation would raise crop prices,
LOCATION: 4646
Some Americans wanted to free Cuba from Spanish oppression. Some wanted to protect
U.S. economic interests, and others just saw it as a chance to pick off some of
Spain’s colonies for America.
LOCATION: 4659
The islands of Hawaii have always been a great place to visit for Americans. Yankee
traders visited there in the 1790s. In the 1840s, the islands were home to American
whaling ships. And by 1860, many U.S. citizens owned land there.
LOCATION: 4673
in 1898, Hawaii became a U.S. territory. In 1959, it became the 50th state.
LOCATION: 4680
Chapter 13 Growing into the 20th Century: 1899–1918 IN THIS CHAPTER Winning
colonies from Spain
LOCATION: 4683