Timeline of US History


 

Prehistory of Native Americans in North America before European Contact

Colonial History from the Earliest European Settlements to the Outbreak of the War of Independence

The Early History of the US: from the War of Independence to the Outbreak of the Civil War

History of the US from the Civil War to World War I

History of the US from World War I to World War II

History of the US since World War II

 


 

 

0. Prehistory of Native Americans in North America before European Contact


 

By c. 10,000 B.P. (before the present): Native American ethnic groups had occupied the whole American continent, arriving originally from Siberia across the Bering Strait. (For more, see )

 

c.300 B.C. – 700 A.D. The prosperity of Teotihuacán, the center of a significant culture in central Mexico: sophisticated social hierarchy, huge pyramids, complex religion. (For more, see )

 

c. 250–900 A.D.: The classic period of the Maya culture in the Yucatan Peninsula (present-day southern Mexico, Guatemala and Belize): irrigated agriculture, urban centers, magnificent stone temples, precise calendar, writing system (For more, see )

 

c. 900–1200: Central Mexico was ruled by the Toltecs, with their capital in Tula: temples and pyramids, militant culture, human sacrifices (For more, see )

 

c. 900–1350: The flowering of the Anasazi, or the ancient Pueblo people, in the present Southwest of the US: significant architecture, but no cultural achievements comparable to Mexican high cultures. Their most significant archeological remains are found at Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado (For more, see )

 

c. 1400–1520: The emergence of the Aztec empire in central Mexico, with their capital in Tenochtitlan. (For more, see )

 

 

1. Colonial History: from the Earliest European Settlements to the Outbreak of the War of Independence


1492: Christopher Columbus landed on one of the Caribbean islands – discovery of the „New World”.

 

1497–98: John Cabot (Giovanni Caboto) discovered the northeastern coast of North America in English service.

 

1519–21: Hernándo Cortés conquered the Aztec Empire in present-day Mexico; Mexico became part of the vast Spanish colonial empire.

 

1534–35: Jacques Cartier explored the St. Lawrence River in the northeastern part of North America.

 

1539–42: Hernando de Soto explored the southeastern part of North America from present Florida to the Mississippi river.

 

1540–42: Francisco Vásquez de Coronado explored the southwestern part of North America, from present New Mexico to Texas.

 

1565: The first permanent North American white settlement, St. Augustine, was established in Florida by the Spanish.

 

1584–87: Sir Walter Raleigh organized two unsuccessful expeditions to establish an English colony in „Virginia” (actually, off the coast of present North Carolina).

 

1607: The foundation of Jamestown, Virginia, the first permanent English settlement.

 

1608: The foundation of Québec, Canada, the first permanent French settlement.

 

1619: The creation of the House of Burgesses, the first legislative assembly in Virginia; the arrival of the first black slaves into Virginia.

 

1620: The foundation of Plymouth, the first English settlement in New England by the Pilgrims.

 

1624: The foundation of New Amsterdam, the first permanent Dutch settlement.

 

1630: The Puritan colonists founded Boston in New England.

 

1632: The Calvert family received a royal grant to colonize Maryland.

 

1636: Dissident Puritans founded Rhode Island and Connecticut colonies in New England.

 

1663: A royal charter issued to eight proprietors to colonize the Carolinas (defined at the time as all the area between Virginia and Spanish Florida).

 

1664: The English defeated the Dutch and occupied New Amsterdam; it was renamed New York after its proprietor, the Duke of York (the future James II).

 

1681: William Penn received the territory between New York and Maryland in return for a debt; he founded Pennsylvania.

 

1730: The Carolinas were divided into two royal colonies.

 

1732: Georgia was founded south of the Carolinas as a military buffer zone against Spanish Florida.

 

1754–1760: The French and Indian War: Canada and the territory between the Appalachians and the Mississippi River came under British control.

 

1763: A royal proclamation forbade white settlement in British territory west of the Appalachians.

 

1764: The Sugar Act; the first Act passed by the British Parliament which was rejected by American colonists on constitutional grounds.

 

1765: The Stamp Act and the Quartering Act provoked widespread anger and protests in the North American colonies.

 

1766: Stamp Act repealed, but the British Parliament’s power to legislate for the colonies reaffirmed.

 

1767: The Townshend Acts: new import duties provoking new protests in the colonies.

 

1770: The Boston Massacre: five people killed when British soldiers fired into an angry mob of civilians; Parliament repealed the duties except for the duty on imported tea.

 

1773: The Tea Act allowed the East India Company to bring tea to North America duty-free; during the Boston Tea Party, a group of Patriots threw a whole cargo of tea of an East India Company ship into the harbor.

 

1774: The Coercive Acts closed Boston Harbor and restricted the powers of the Massachusetts colonial assembly; The First Continental Congress of the colonies gathered in Philadelphia.

 

1775: In April, armed fight broke out between British soldiers and Massachusetts militiamen at Lexington and Concord; the Second Continental Congress gathered in Philadelphia in May and decided to support the uprising in Massachusetts à   The beginning of the War of Independence

 

 

2. The Early History of the US: from the War of Independence to the Outbreak of the Civil War


 

1776: In January, Thomas Paine published his pamphlet entitled Common Sense, which argued in favor of independence; on July 4, the Continental Congress approved the Declaration of Independence. From August to December, the British army occupied New York and New Jersey.

 

1777: In September, the British occupied Philadelphia; in October, the British army unit invading from Canada along the Hudson was forced to surrender at Saratoga; in November, the Continental Congress passed the Articles of Confederation; Washington’s army suffered through a very bad winter at Valley Forge.

 

1778: In February, France signed a treaty of alliance with the US; the British army moved south and occupied Savannah, beginning a campaign in Georgia and South Carolina.

 

1781: The British invaded Virginia to force Washington into a decisive battle, but they were surrounded and forced to surrender at Yorktown à   the end of the military conflict.

 

1783: The Treaty of Paris was signed: Britain recognized the independence of the US and ceded all territory south of the Great Lakes and east of the Mississippi to the US.

 

1784–87: Three Northwest Ordinances were passed by the Confederation Congress, which created the Northwest Territory north of the Ohio River, and described how it should be surveyed, settled and governed.

 

1787: The Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia drafted the new Constitution for the US.

 

1788: The Constitution was ratified by the required nine states; the first Congressional elections were held in November.

 

1789–1797: The presidency of George Washington, elected unanimously both times.

 

1789: The first Congress began to work in September, passing the Judiciary Act and the Bill of Rights.

 

1791: Congress authorized the construction of a new federal capital city on the banks of the Potomac River between Virginia and Maryland, the later Washington D.C.

1793: Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin, a machine with which cotton seeds could be cleaned much quicker than manually à cotton became the most popular crop in the South.

 

1797–1801: Presidency of John Adams (Federalist).

 

1801–1809: Presidency of Thomas Jefferson (Republican, re-elected in 1804), the first of the „Virginia Dynasty”.

 

1801–1835: John Marshall served as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court: he decisively shaped the role and the authority of the Court (see Judicial Review and John Marshall).

 

1803: The Louisiana Purchase: Napoleon sold Louisiana (then the entire area between the Mississippi valley and the Rocky Mountains) to the US for 80 million francs ($15 million).

 

1804–06: The expedition of (Meriwether) Lewis and (George Rogers) Clark, who travelled from St. Louis across the Rockies, along the Missouri and the Columbia Rivers to the Pacific coast and back, exploring unknown territories.

 

1808: Congress banned the importation of black slaves from abroad à   the relative decline of the proportion of black population in the US.

 

1809–1817: Presidency of James Madison (Republican, re-elected 1812), Jefferson’s former Secretary of State.

 

1812–1814: War between the US and Britain: Americans wanted to take revenge on Britain for impressment, for the restrictions on American trade and for British support of Indians. Neither side won a decisive victory.

 

1817–1825: Presidency of James Monroe (Republican, re-elected 1820), another Virginian, Madison's former Secretary of State; by the end of his first term, the Federalist Party had disintegrated and he was reelected without opposition à  so-called "era of good feelings", the end of the first party system.

 

1819: Spain ceded Florida to the US.

 

1820: The Missouri Compromise, the first conflict between the Northern and the Southern states over the issue of slavery. Missouri was admitted as a slave state and Maine as a free state, and slavery was forbidden in the rest of the Louisiana territory north of 36° 30', the southern boundary of Missouri.

 

1824: Several candidates of the Republican Party compete for the Presidency: Andrew Jackson received the most electoral votes, but did not achieve a majority, and the House of Representatives elected John Quincy Adams President.

 

1825–1829: Presidency of John Quincy Adams.

 

1828: Andrew Jackson defeated Adams at the election à  beginning of the second party system.

 

1829–1837: Presidency of Andrew Jackson (Democrat, re-elected 1832).

 

1830: The Indian Removal Act, which authorized the removal of tens of thousands of Native Americans living east of the Mississippi in the South (Cherokees, Creeks, Seminoles, Chikasaws and Choctaws) to the Indian Territory (present Oklahoma) west of the river.

 

1833: Foundation of the American Antislavery Society by William Lloyd Garrison, editor of the Boston weekly Liberator à  rise of the abolitionist movement.

 

1836: American settlers led by Sam Houston declared Texas independent of Mexico, and they defeated the Mexican dictator, Antonio de Santa Ana, in the Battle of San Jacinto; Texas, now an independent republic, applied for annexation to the US but President Jackson refused it since Northerners opposed the admission of a large new slave state into the Union.

 

1837: Samuel F.B. Morse invented the telegraph, which revolutionized long-distance communication.

 

1842: Treaty between the US and England, which set the US-Canadian border as far as the Rockies at the 49th parallel.

 

1845–1849: Presidency of James K. Polk (Democrat), who was an ardent supporter of the territorial expansion of the US à the idea of „manifest destiny”.

 

1845: Texas was annexed to the Union, provoking border disputes with Mexico.

 

1846–48: The Mexican War broke out over the disputed southern borderline of Texas. The Americans have conquered the Southwest from California to New Mexico. In the peace treaty, Mexico gave up these territories and agreed to the Rio Grande as the southern border of Texas.

 

1846: The Oregon Treaty between the US and Britain set the northern boundary of Oregon territory (the present Pacific Northwest) at the 49th parallel.

 

1849: The California Gold Rush after gold was found in the Sacramento valley near San Francisco.

 

1850: National political crisis over the admission of California into the Union. Under the Compromise of 1850 California was admitted as a free state, but the rest of the newly gained territories were allowed to decide over the issue of slavery on their own („popular sovereignty” idea).

 

1852: Harriet Beecher-Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin was published in book form and became the greatest bestseller of the 19th century, selling more than 300,000 copies within a year. It was the most effective abolitionist propaganda, mobilizing public opinion in the North and raising widespread anger in the South.

 

1854: The Kansas-Nebraska Act: it created two new territories, Kansas and Nebraska, out of the formerly unorganized territory north of the dividing line of the Missouri Compromise. The act declared that slavery in Kansas territory would be decided by popular sovereignty (the decision of the future state legislature), explicitly repealing the Missouri Compromise à  Enraged free-soilers, Northern Whigs and some Democrats founded the Republican Party, the first sectional party which drew its support only from the North.

 

1855–1858: "Bleeding Kansas": armed conflict in Kansas terrritory between supporters and opponents of slavery, both of which tried to have a majority in the future state.

 

1857: Supreme Court’s decision in the Dred Scott case: former slaves can never become US citizens and have no civil rights under the Constitution; Congress has no power to ban slavery in any federal territory à   created widespread outrage in the North.

 

1859: John Brown, an abolitionist zealot, attempted to start a slave insurrection in Virginia by occupying a US arsenal in Harpers Ferry with 18 people: he was besieged, caught, sentenced to death for treason and executed à   seen as a hero and a martyr by Northerners.

 

1860: Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln won the election over the opposition of the South à  South Carolina decided to secede from the Union, followed by other Southern states

 

 

3. History of the US from the Civil War to World War I


February 1861: Before Lincoln’s inauguration, seven Southern states (South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas) withdrew from the Union and created the Confederate States of America, usually called the Confederacy.

 

April 1861: Fort Sumter, a Union fort on an island in the harbor of Charleston, SC, surrendered to the Confederate army after a long blockade and bombardment à beginning of the Civil War.

 

April 1862: Union Admiral Farragut captured New Orleans, the largest Southern port; Union General Ulysses Grant won a bloody victory at the Battle of Shiloh, TN.

 

September 1862: Confederate General Robert Lee defended Richmond and then attacked Washington à  stopped in the brutal Battle of Antietam, MD.

 

Jan 1863: Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation: freeing all slaves in the rebellious states (but not in slave states that remained within the Union).

 

July 1863: Grant occupied the Southern fort of Vicksburg à  the whole of the Mississippi valley came under Northern control, isolating Texas and Arkansas from the rest of the Confederacy; General Lee’s last attempt to invade of the North was defeated in the Battle of Gettysburg, PA.

 

1864: Union General William Sherman’s march across the South to break resistance à  he occupied Atlanta in September, and Savannah in December.

 

April 1865: General Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomatox Courthouse, VA à  the end of the Civil War. President Lincoln was assassinated in a theater in Washington five days later.

 

1865–1877: The period of the Reconstruction in the South.

 

1865: The 13th Amendment was ratified, abolishing slavery all over the US. Congress also created the Freedmen’s Bureau to assist former slaves. In response, many Southern states began to pass Black Codes, intended to restrict the freedom of former slaves.

 

1866: Congress passed the 14th Amendment (ratified in 1868), which guaranteed former slaves’ right to US citizenship, and banned former Confederacy leaders from political positions in the US.

 

1867: Military Reconstruction Act: Southern state governments were abolished, states placed under military control, they were forced to give voting rights to all freedmen and to ratify the 14th Amendment.

 

1867: Alaska was purchased by the US from Russia.

 

1868: President Andrew Johnson was impeached by Congress after publicly opposing the 14th Amendment and vetoing Reconstruction bills. He was ultimately acquitted because there was no two-thirds majority in the Senate to convict him, but he soon left office.

 

1869: The first transcontinental railroad line (almost 3,000 km long) was completed between Omaha, Nebraska, and San Francisco, California à settlement of the West is accelerated.

 

1869–1877: Presidency of Ulysses Grant (Republican), the former Union general.

 

1870: The 15th Amendment is ratified, stating the right to vote can not be abridged on account of race.

 

1872: Yellowstone National Park, the first national park in the US and the world, was established by Congress.

 

1876: The federal government ordered all Native American tribes to move into reservations, or designated areas under federal supervision. The tribes which resisted the order were forced by military troops to move into their reservations. An army of Native American (Sioux and Cheyenne) warriors led by Chief Sitting Bull defeated and killed more than 200 cavalry soldiers led by Lt. Colonel George A. Custer at Little Big Horn River, Montana.

 

1876: Inventor Alexander Graham Bell patented the telephone, which revolutioned telecommunication.

 

1877: The new President, Rutherford Hayes, withdrew federal troops from the South, restoring the sovereignty of Southern states à  the end of Reconstruction.

 

1880: Inventor Thomas A. Edison has patented the incandescent light bulb à  beginning of the „age of electricity”

 

1886: The Haymarket Riot in Chicago: during a demonstration of striking workers, an anarchist threw a bomb at the policemen, who fired into the crowd, killing several people à gave rise to commemorative May Day (May 1) celebrations in the international Socialist movement.

 

1890: The Massacre at Wounded Knee, SD: about 150 Sioux, including many women and children, were killed by US cavalry when they left their appointed reservation. The massacre became a symbol of white cruelty against Native Americans.

 

1890: Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act, the first federal government law intended to prevent industrial monopolies.

 

1896: The U.S. Supreme Court decided in the case Plessy v. Ferguson that racial segregation in itself is not unconstitutional à the notorious „separate but equal” principle

 

1898: The Spanish-American War broke out when the US offered support to the Cuban uprising against Spanish rule. Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines came under US control (Cuba formally became independent).

 

1898: Hawaii was annexed by the US after American planters overthrew the local queen.

 

1901–1909: Presidency of Theodore Roosevelt (Republican), generally considered the first Progressive president.

 

1903: Panama, encouraged by the US, declared its independence from Colombia, and signed a treaty giving rights to the US to build and control the Panama Canal (completed 1914).

 

1906: Congress passed the Pure Food and Drug Act, which introduced federal inspection of food and medicine products in an effort to protect customers.

 

1908: Henry Ford’s company began to produce Model T, the first mass-produced car à beginning of „age of the automobile”

 

1909: The foundation of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the first national African-American civil-rights.

 

1913: The 16th and the 17th Amendments were ratified: the former introduced federal income tax, the latter required the popular election of all Senators.

 

 

4. History of the US from World War I to World War II


 

1913–1921: Presidency of Woodrow Wilson (Democrat), a Progressive President led the US during World War I.

 

May 1915: British ship Lusitania was torpedoed off the Irish coast: 1200 people died, including 128 American passengers à American public opinion turned anti-German in the conflict.

 

1917: Germany declared unrestricted submarine warfare against any ship near Britain and made a secret offer to Mexico to ally with Germany against the US (the Zimmermann Telegram).

 

April 1917–November 1918: The US took part in World War I on the Entente side.

 

January 1918: President Wilson issued his Fourteen Points, a plan to establish a fair and lasting peace in Europe after the war.

 

1919: Wilson participated at the Paris Peace Conference, where most of his ideas were overruled by his British and French partners, but the League of Nations was created at his proposal. The US Senate, influenced by isolationists, rejected the ratification of the Treaty, so the US never joined the League.

 

1919–1933: The Prohibition Era: in 1919, the 18th Amendment was ratified, which forbade the sale and manufacture of all kinds of alcoholic drinks; the Amendment was repealed in 1933.

 

1920: The 19th Amendment was ratified, giving women the right to vote.

 

1924: National Origins Act of 1924 established annual immigration quotas for each nationality, strongly restricting Southern and Eastern European immigration à  end of mass immigration into the US from Europe.

 

1929–1933: Presidency of Herbert Hoover (Republican).

 

October 24 and 29, 1929: „Black Thursday” and „Black Tuesday”; the collapse of share prices at the New York Stock Exchange, popularly known as the Wall Street Crash.

 

1929–1933: The Great Depression, the greatest economic collapse and social crisis in the history of the US.

 

1933: Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat) was inaugurated President, and he started the New Deal, a massive program of relief and reform program

 

1935: The Social Security Act was passed, creating the first federal insurance system offering old-age pension, disability payment and unemployment benefit too all citizens.

 

November 1939: Congress broke its isolationist position and authorized arms sales on a cash-and-carry basis to war combatants in an effort to help Britain and France.

 

March 1941: The Lend-Lease Act was passed to give the British military equipment and supplies on credit; in November, it was extended to the Soviet Union.

 

August 1941: The Atlantic Charter issued by the leaders of Britain and the US (Churchill and Roosevelt) about the peace purposes of the future Allied powers after the war.

 

December 7, 1941: The surprise Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor; the US entered World War II.

 

May 1942: The Battle of the Coral Sea, a naval and air battle in which the US averted Japanese threat against Australia.

 

June 1942: The Battle of Midway, a decisive naval and air battle in which the US stopped Japanese advance in the Pacific, and seriously reduced the power of the Japanese Navy.

 

July 1943: The invasion of Italy began by Allied (British and US) forces.

 

November 1943: The Tehran Conference of the three Allied leaders (Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill), in which they agreed to open a western front against Germany.

 

June 6, 1944: D-Day in Normandy, the western front against Germany was opened in Northern France.

 

October 1944: The US reoccupied the Philippines from Japan.

 

December 1944–January 1945: The Battle of the Bulge, the last major German counterattack in the war, which took place in the Ardennes region of Belgium, and almost broke through the Allied frontline.

 

February 1945: The Yalta Conference of the three Allied leaders, where they made crucial decisions about the future of Europe.

 

March 1945: The death of Franklin D. Roosevelt, the longest-serving President in American history; he was replaced by Harry Truman.

 

May 5, 1945: The surrender of Germany à  the end of WWII in Europe.

 

June 1945: The founding charter of the United Nations was signed at the San Francisco conference.

 

July 1945: The Potsdam Conference of the Allied leaders (Truman, Churchill and Attlee, and Stalin), where the first post-war conflicts of interest surfaced.

 

August 6 and 9, 1945: Two atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, causing enormous destruction and killing over 100,000 people.

 

September 2, 1945: Japan surrendered to the US à  the end of World War II.

 

5. History of the US since World War II 


 

1945 – 1953: Presidency of Harry Truman (Democrat), who came to power as Vice-President after Franklin D. Roosevelt’s death (re-elected 1948).

 

1947: The National Security Act created the National Security Council (NSC ) and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA ); President Truman proclaimed the Truman Doctrine and the doctrine of containment.

 

1947–1951: The Marshall Plan, a program of financial aid for European recovery, which distributed more than $12 billion in aid.

 

1949: The creation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO ), a defense alliance of Western Europe and the US against the Soviet threat.

 

1950–1953: The Korean War, the first international military conflict during the Cold War, which made the division of the Korean Peninsula permanent.

 

1950–1954: The McCarthy Era: Senator Joseph McCarthy accused various government officials and well-known public figures of being Communist spies or sympathizers, but most of his accusations proved false.

 

1952: The US developed the hydrogen bomb (H-bomb) à  the nuclear arms race began against the Soviet Union.

 

1953–1961: Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower (Republican), the former Supreme Commander of Allied Fores in Europe.

 

1954: The Supreme Court decided the Brown vs. Board of Education in Topeka case à  racial segregation in public schools was declared unconstitutional, the major step to dismantle racial discrimination against blacks.

 

1955: The Montgomery bus boycott begins, sparking the modern civil rights movement. The boycott started when Rosa Parks, a civil rights activist, refused to give up her seat on the bus to a white man. The bus boycott continued for more than a year, and ended with the desegregation of the local bus system.

 

1956: The Highway Act was passed by Congress, establishing the federal Interstate Highway system (eventually 41,000 miles of highway have been built).

 

1957: President Eisenhower sent federal troops to protect black students in Little Rock, Arkansas, after they were threatened by whites and the governor refused to protect them.

 

1958: The National Air and Space Administration (NASA ) was established to coordinate the US space program.

 

1961–63: Presidency of John F. Kennedy (Democrat), the youngest elected and the only Catholic president in US history.

 

1962: The Cuban missile crisis: the hottest moment of the Cold War, when the US and the Soviet Union were on the brink of a nuclear conflict.

 

August 1963: The March on Washington, the largest civil rights demonstration in American history, where civil rights leader Martin Luther King made his famous „I have a dream” speech.

 

November 22, 1963: President Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas; he was replaced by Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson.

 

1963–1969: Presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson (Democrat).

 

1964: The Civil Rights Act was passed by Congress, which made discrimination on the basis of race, religion, gender, illegal in the US.

 

1964: The Tonkin Gulf incident: US warships were reportedly attacked by North Vietnamese forces à  Congress passed the Tonkin Gulf Resolution, authorizing President Johnson to retaliate against North Vietnam.

 

1965–1975: The Vietnam War, the longest military conflict in the history of the US and the first that ended in American defeat.

 

1965: President Johnson’s Great Society program: established Medicare and offered federal aid for general education.

 

1968: The murder of civil rights leader Martin Luther King and Democratic Presidential nominee Robert Kennedy, the younger brother of JFK.

 

1969: Neil Armstrong landed on the Moon with the Apollo-11 mission.

 

1969–1974: Presidency of Richard Nixon (Republican).

 

1973: Secretary of State Henry Kissinger signed a ceasefire with North Vietnam, American troops left Vietnam.

 

1973: The outbreak of the Watergate scandal, in which the government used illegal methods to spy on the Democratic Party and then cover up its operations.

 

1974: President Richard Nixon resigned due to the Watergate scandal, the first president in US history to do so; he was replaced by Vice-President Gerald Ford.

 

1974–1977: Presidency of Gerald Ford (Republican).

 

1977–1981: Presidency of Jimmy Carter (Democrat).

 

1979–80: The hostage crisis in Tehran, where militant Muslim revolutionaries occupied the American embassy and held Americans hostage for 444 days (about 14 months).

 

1981–1989: Presidency of Ronald Reagan (Republican), the oldest elected President in US history.

 

1989–1993: Presidency of George Bush (Republican), the former Vice-President of Reagan.

 

1991: The collapse of the Soviet Union, the end of the Cold War.

 

1991: The Gulf War; the first clash between the US and Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, in which the US-led international coalition liberated Kuwait and defeated Iraq.

 

1993–2001: Presidency of Bill Clinton (Democrat).

 

2001–2009: Presidency of George W. Bush (Republican), the son of former President George Bush Sr.

 

Sept 11, 2001: Terror attacks against the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington, organized by Osama bin Laden and the Al-Queda Muslim terrorist organization à  President Bush declares „war on terror”.

 

2003: The US invaded Iraq on suspicion that Saddam Hussein is secretly developing weapons of mass destruction and aids terrorism, but these allegations have never been proved. Hussein’s regime collapsed but US troops have been forced to stay in order to prevent chaos and the total breakdown of government.

 

Sources:


J.A. Henretta―W. E. Brownlee―D. Brody―S. Ware, America's History. Vol. 1 to 1877. 2nd Edition. New York: Worth Publishers, 1993.

M.B. Norton―D.M. Katzman―P.D. Escott―H.P. Chudacoff―T.G. Paterson―W.M. Tuttle, Jr., A People and a Nation. A History of the United States. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1986.

Paul Boyer (ed.),  The Oxford Companion to United States History. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001.

Tamás Magyarics―Tibor Frank, Handouts for U.S. History. Budapest: Panem―McGraw-Hill, 1995.

Internet resources