Автор: | Samuel Willard Crompton |
Издательство: | Ingram |
Серия: | The Handy Answer Book Series |
Жанр произведения: | Учебная литература |
Год издания: | 0 |
isbn: | 9781578596171 |
Queen Anne’s War begins
1708
A list of Boston street names appears for the first time
1711
British fail to conquer Québec City
1713
Queen Anne’s War comes to an end
1721
Boston suffers a terrible epidemic of smallpox
1722
First map of Boston streets (the so-called Burgis Map) is printed
1723
Benjamin Franklin runs from home, settles in Philadelphia
1739
Reverend George Whitefield comes to Boston for the first time
1740
Generally believed to be the coldest winter of the eighteenth century
1744
King George’s War begins
1745
New Englanders capture Fortress Louisburg
1747
Knowles Riots in Boston
1748
Britain returns Louisburg to France
1754
George Washington starts the French and Indian War
1755
Boston suffers a powerful earthquake
1759
Québec City falls to the British
1760
Montréal falls to the British. King George II dies and is succeeded by his grandson
1763
French and Indian War ends with Peace of Paris
1765
George III and Parliament place the Stamp Act on American colonies
1766
Stamp Act revoked
1767
Townshend Acts places on American colonies
1768
First British troops arrive in Boston
1769
Tensions between troops and townspeople
1770
Boston Massacre takes place on March 5
British soldiers are tried in November
1772
HMS Gaspee taken and burned in Rhode Island
1773
Parliament passes the Tea Act
Bostonians carry out the Tea Party
1774
Parliament passes the Coercive Acts; General Gage comes to Boston
1775
Battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19
Battle of Bunker Hill on June 17
Washington takes command on July 3
Benedict Arnold leaves for Canada on September 10
1776
Henry Knox brings cannon from Fort Ticonderoga to Cambridge
Washington seizes Dorchester Heights, on March 5
British evacuate Boston on March 17
1780
The Massachusetts state constitution is written and approved
1781
French fleet comes to Boston
1786
First bridge over the Charles River is completed
1789
John Adams of Quincy is elected the first vice president of the United States
1790
Population of Boston is 18,038
1796
John Adams is elected the second president of the United States
1798
USS Constitution is launched in Boston Harbor
1800
President John Adams fails of reelection and returns to Braintree
1806
First African American church founded on Joy Street near the State House
1812
Massachusetts Governor Caleb Strong opposes the War of 1812
USS Constitution meets and defeats HMS Guerriere
1815
Boston cheers the end of the War of 1812
Boston is attacked by the Gale of September 1815
1817
President James Monroe visits Boston, inaugurating the Era of Good Feelings
1821
Two dams are constructed, sectioning off much of what later became the “Back Bay”
1822
Boston incorporated as a city
1824
John Quincy Adams becomes the sixth president of the United States
1826
Lafayette comes to town for the dedication of the Bunker Hill Monument
John Adams and his longtime rival, Thomas Jefferson, die on the same day, July 4
1828
John Quincy Adams fails to get reelected; he returns home to Braintree
1831
William Lloyd Garrison brings out the first issue of The Liberator
1834
The Ursuline convent in Charlestown is burned by a mob
1837
Ralph Waldo Emerson delivers “The American Scholar” speech at Harvard Commencement
1860
John Albion Andrews elected governor of Commonwealth of Massachusetts
1861
The Civil War finds John Albion Andrews as governor of Massachusetts
Many Harvard men enlist in the Union Army
M.I.T. receives its charter from the Massachusetts Great and General Court
1863
Two African American regiments are recruited in and around Boston
The Massachusetts 54th Regiment makes a valiant attempt to capture Battery Wagner, South Carolina
1867