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1750-1799 |
Political and
Social History |
Literature |
|
1750-1754 |
1750 (22 June)
Jonathan Edwards is dismissed from his Northampton (Mass.) church when
he rejects the liberal
"halfway covenant." He becomes pastor of a church in the frontier
settlement of Stockbridge, in western Massachusetts.
1754-63
French and Indian
War (See also the
web index
listing of sites and an
encyclopedia entry.)
1754 Colonies adopt
Benjamin Franklin's "Plan of the Union" of English colonies. |
1751.
Benjamin Franklin publishes New Experiments and Observations on
Electricity. |
|
1755-1759 |
1758 General Montcalm and his French
troops are defeated at Fort Ticonderoga, New York.
1758
Jonathan Edwards becomes president of the College of New Jersey, later
Princeton University.
1759 Quebec surrenders to the British under
Wolfe. |
1758 Benjamin Franklin, "The Way to Wealth" |
|
1760-1764 |
1760
Pennsylvania-born painter Benjamin West travels to Italy to study art and
becomes a celebrated artist in London. Benjamin West's
Self Portrait (1770) courtesy of
Carol L. Gerten (Jackson)'s site
at the University of North Carolina.
1763 10 February. Treaty of Paris ends the
Seven Years War (French and Indian War). France cedes Acadia (Nova Scotia),
the St. Lawrence River islands, and Canada to the British.
May-November. When the British refuse to
supply less expensive trade goods and ammunition, the Ottawas under Chief
Pontiac destroy western British garrisons, among them Fort Duquesne.
After beseiging the garrison at Detroit for five months, Pontiac
withdraws.
Patrick Henry presents the theory of a
mutual compact between the governed and the ruler.
1764 Boston lawyer James Otis publishes
The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved. |
1760 Ezra Stiles, A Discourse on the Christian Union
1764 James Grainger, The Sugar-Cane, A Poem in Three Books |
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1765-1769 |
1765 Stamp Act is enacted by English
Parliament and meets with colonial opposition.
1766-67 Daniel Boone travels to the
Kentucky territory through the Cumberland Gap. |
1765-6 William Bartram travels in
Florida with his father,
John Bartram.
1765 James Otis, A Vindication of the
British Colonies
1768
Samson
Occom, A Short Narrative of My Life
1768 John Dickinson, Letters from a
Farmer in Pennsylvania
1768 Milcah Martha Moore, "The Female
Patriots. Address'd to the Daughters of Liberty in America, 1768"
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|
1770-1774 |
1770.
5 March. When British troops arrive in Boston, they are surrounded by angry
colonists and fire into the crowd, killing three Americans and wounding two
others. The event becomes known as the Boston Massacre.
(Image courtesy of
Images of
Political History. See also the
Map of
the Americas showing European powers [1774] [262 k. file])
1773 May 10. Due to pressure from the East
India Company, which has suffered because of the colonists' successful
embargo on tea, the Tea Act becomes effective. It retains the threepenny
tax on tea but repeals the previous export tax, so that British tea
merchants can now undercut the prices of American sellers.
29-30 November. After colonists decide to
send the Dartmouth with her cargo of tea back to England,
Massachusetts Governor Thomas Hutchinson declares that the ship must stay
in Boston Harbor until the tea taxes are paid.
December 16. Boston Tea Party. Samuel Adams
addresses a crowd of 8,000 colonists gathered in the Old South Church,
telling them of Governor Hutchinson's decision. That night, colonists
disguised as Mohawk Indians dump 342 casks of tea into Boston Harbor.
1774. All colonies except Georgia send
representatives to the First Continental Congress.
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1770 Robert Munford's satirical play,
The Candidates; or, The Humours of A Virginia Election
1771-90
Franklin continues writing the Autobiography (Part I published in
1818)
1773
Phillis Wheatley, Poems on Various Subjects
1774
John
Woolman, The Journal of John Woolman
1773-1776 William Bartram
travels throughout the Southeast, a journey that he later chronicles in
his Travels |
|
1775-1779 |
1775 March 23. Patrick Henry's "give me
liberty" speech in Richmond, Virginia.
- April 18-19. Paul Revere's midnight ride. 19
April: Battles of Lexington and
Concord, Massachusetts, first battles of the Revolutionary War.
- 10 May. Second Continental Congress convenes
in Philadelphia, with John Hancock as its president.
- 15 June. George Washington is named
commander-in-chief of the Continental army. (Go to the
George Washington Papers
at the Library of Congress for letters, images, and other materials.)
- 17 June. British victory at Battle of Bunker
Hill.
1776 July 4. Second Continental Congress
adopts the
Declaration of Independence.
1775-83 Revolutionary War
(see timelines for battles and events)
|
1775 Mercy Otis Warren,
The Group
1776 Thomas Paine,
Common Sense |
|
1780-1784 |
1783-5 Noah Webster's "Blue-Backed
Speller" (A Grammatical Institute of the English Language) helps to
standardize spelling and to distinguish British from American English. |
1782
J. Hector St. John de Crevecoeur, Letters from an American Farmer
1783
Franklin's Remarks Concerning the Savages of North America |
|
1785-1789 |
1785. March. Thomas Jefferson is
appointed minister to France, replacing Benjamin Franklin.
28 November. In the Treaty of Hopewell, the
Cherokees' right to land in the Tennessee area is reinstated, nullifying
an earlier treaty.
1786 Congress adopts a decimal coinage
system based on the Spanish milled dollar.
1787 Shays's Rebellion in western
Massachusetts. Farmers facing foreclosure deny judges entrance to the
courthouses where bankruptcy proceedings are heard. In a confrontation at
Springfield, four farmers are killed as 1,000 militiamen fend off
approximately 1,500 farmers.
1787. 25 May. The Federal Convention
convenes in Philadelphia, although only seven states are represented.
Several provisions of James Madison's Virginia Plan become part of the U. S.
Constitution, including a bicameral legislature, a federal judiciary
branch, and an executive branch. The Constitution is approved on 17
September and then is sent to the states for ratification.
1789 George Washington elected president. |
1786
Philip
Freneau, Poems
1787 Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the
State of Virginia
Abraham Panther, A Surprising Account of
the Discovery of a Lady . . . ("Panther Captivity"
narrative)
October 1787-May 1788. The Federalist
Papers appear in New York newspapers under the pseudonym Publius. The
letters are written by James Madison (1731-1836), Alexander Hamilton
(1757-1804), and John Jay (1745-1829).
1789
Olaudah
Equiano, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano
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|
1790-1794 |
1790 First American cotton mill.
1791 Washington, D. C. established as U. S.
capital.
1794 Whiskey Rebellion breaks out in
western Pennsylvania among farmers who oppose the collection of the tax on
liquor and stills.
1794 Jay's Treaty provides for withdrawal
of British forces from the Northwest Territory by 1 June 1796 in exchange
for payments of war debts to British citizens. It is ratified on 24 June
1795. |
1790 Judith Sargent Murray, "On the
Equality of the Sexes"
1791
Susannah
Rowson, Charlotte: A Tale of Truth
1792 Bunker Gay, A Genuine and Correct
Account of the Captivity, Sufferings, and Deliverance of Mrs. Jemima Howe
(captivity
narrative)
1793 Elihu Hubbard Smith publishes
anthology American Poems, Selected and Original. It includes several
poems by the Connecticut Wits: Joel Barlow, Timothy Dwight, Lemuel Hopkins,
and John Trumbull
1793
John
Woolman, A Word of Remembrance and Caution to the Rich (calls for
social reforms, including the abolition of slavery)
1793 The Hapless Orphan; or, Innocent
Victim of Revenge by "an American Lady"
1794 Timothy Dwight (1752-1817),
Greenfield Hill |
|
1795-1799 |
1795. 3 August. In the Treaty of
Greenville, twelve Ohio tribes turn over lands to General Anthony Wayne
after their defeat in the Battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794.
1796. 1 June. Tennessee is admitted to the
Union as a slave-holding state.
17 September. Washington publishes his Farewell
Address; it states his reasons for returning to private life and deciding
not to run for a third term as president.
7 December. John Adams (Federalist party) wins the
presidency and Thomas Jefferson (Democrat-Republican) becomes vice president
in the nation's third presidential election.
1797. A cast-iron plow is invented, but
farmers fear it will poison the soil and refuse to use it.
18 October. Amid tensions between the US and
France, French foreign minister Tallyrand's agents suggest a "loan,"
essentially a bribe, to bring the French to the bargaining table. Charles
C. Pinckney, the American minister to France, refuses, saying, "Millions for
defense, but not one cent for tribute."
The USS Constitution ("Old Ironsides") is
launched as part of the new US navy.
1798. The passing of several Alien and
Sedition Acts draws fire when Benjamin Franklin Bache, the grandson of
Benjamin Franklin, is arrested for libeling President Adams. Thomas
Jefferson later pardons all those convicted under the Sedition Act, many of
whom were Democrat-Republicans.
Congress abolishes debtors' prisons.
1799. George Washington dies at Mount
Vernon. |
1798 Charles Brockden Brown,
Wieland; or, the Transformation (September) and Alcuin, a
Dialogue (April)
1799 Charles Brockden Brown, Arthur
Mervyn; or, Memoirs of the Year 1793 (May) and Ormond; or, the Secret
Witness (February) |
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