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History of the United States

 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Contents :
1 Pre-Colonial America
2 Colonial America (1497-1776)
3 History of the United States (1776-1789)
4 History of the United States (1789-1849)
5 History of the United States (1849-1865)
6 History of the United States (1865-1918)
7 Interwar America and World War II (1918-1945)
8 History of the United States (1945-1964)
9 History of the United States (1964-1980)
10 Contemporary United States History (1980-present)
11 See also
12 Literature
13 External links


Pre-Colonial America
For details, see the main Pre-Colonial America article.

Native Americans arrived on the North American continent at some time 
between the 9th millennium BC and 48,000 BC, and dominated the area until 
the influx of European settlers in the early 17th century.


Colonial America (1497-1776)
For details, see the main Colonial America article.

Colonial America was defined by ongoing battles with Native Americans, a 
severe labor shortage which gave birth to forms of unfree labor such as 
slavery and indentured servitude, and a British policy of benign neglect 
which permitted the development of an American spirit and culture which was 
distinct from that of its European founders.


History of the United States (1776-1789)
For details, see the main History of the United States (1776-1789) article.

During this period the United States won its independence from the Kingdom 
of Great Britain during the American Revolutionary War and established 
itself as the United States of America with 13 States.


History of the United States (1789-1849)
For details, see the main History of the United States (1789-1849) article.

The Louisiana Purchase in 1803 gave Western farmers use of the important 
Mississippi River waterway, removed the French presence from the western 
border of the United States, and provided U.S. farmers with vast expanses 
of land.

Within weeks of the United States gaining control of the territory, war 
broke out between Britain and Napoleonic France. The United States, 
dependent on European revenues from the export of agricultural goods, tried 
to export food and raw materials to both warring great powers and to profit 
off transporting goods between their home markets and Caribbean colonies. 
Both sides permitted this trade when it benefitted them, but opposed it 
when it did not.

Following the 1805 destruction of the French navy at the Battle of 
Trafalgar, Britain sought to impose a stranglehold over French overseas 
trade ties. Thus, in retaliation against U.S. trade practices, Britain 
imposed a loose blockade of the American coast.

Believing that Britain could not rely on other sources of food than the 
United States, Congress and President Jefferson suspended all U.S. trade 
with foreign nations in 1807, hoping to get the British to end their 
blockade of the American coast. The embargo, however, devastated American 
agricultural exports while Britain found other sources of food. Also, 
luxury type goods such as cotton, indigo, and sugar were not as widely 
avaliable.

Led by Southern and Western Jeffersonians, Congress declared war on Britain 
in 1812 under the pretext of opposing British interference with American 
shipping as well as British aid to Native Americans in Canada and west of 
the Mississippi. Westerners and Southerners were the most ardent supporters 
of the war, given their concerns about expanding settlement in Native 
American lands beyond the Mississippi and access to world markets for their 
agricultural exports. The New England Federalists opposed the war, and 
their reputation consequently suffered in its aftermath.

The War of 1812 essentially resulted in the maintenance of the 'status quo 
ante' after bitter fighting, which lasted until January 8, 1815 (after the 
peace treaty) on many fronts. Crucially, the Treaty of Ghent which 
officially ended the war saw the end of the British alliance with the 
Native Americans.

After Napoleon's defeat and the Congress of Vienna in 1815, an era of 
relative stability began in Europe. U.S. leaders paid less attention to 
European trade and conflict, and more to the internal development in North 
America. With the end of the wartime British alliance with Native Americans 
east of the Mississippi River, white settlers were determined to colonize 
indigenous lands beyond the Mississippi. In the 1830s the federal 
government forcibly deported the Southeastern tribes to less fertile 
territories to the west. The Supreme Court had actually ruled in support of 
native claims to land, but was ignored by Andrew Jackson, president at the 
time, in favor of his own agenda.

Americans did not question their right to colonize vast expanses of North 
America beyond their country's borders, especially into Oregon, California, 
and Texas. By the mid-1840s U.S. expansionism was articulated in terms of 
the ideology of "manifest destiny."

In May 1846 Congress declared war on Mexico. The U.S. defeated Mexico, 
which was unable to withstand the assault of the American artillery, short 
on resources, and plagued by a divided command. The Treaty of Guadalupe 
Hidalgo in 1848 ceded Texas (with the Rio Grande boundary), California, and 
New Mexico to the United States. In the next thirteen years, the 
territories ceded by Mexico became the focal point of sectional tensions 
over the expansion of slavery.


History of the United States (1849-1865)
For details, see the main History of the United States (1849-1865) article.

In 1854 the proposed Kansas-Nebraska Act abrogated the Missouri Compromise 
by providing that each new state of the Union would decide its stance on 
slavery. The settlement of Kansas by pro- and anti- slavery factions, and 
eventual victory of the anti-slavery camp, was fuelled by convictions 
signalled by the birth of the Republican party. By 1861, the admission of 
Kansas to the Union signalled a break in the balance of power. It also gave 
rise to various sundry movements which occasioned many anti-abolitionist 
and pro slave sentiments that still exist to this day.

After the election of Abraham Lincoln, eleven Southern states seceded from 
the union between late 1860 and 1861, establishing a rebel government, the 
Confederate States of America on February 9, 1861. The Civil War began when 
Confederate General Pierre Beauregard opened fire upon Fort Sumter.

The next four years were the darkest in American history, as the nation 
tore itself apart over the long and bitter issues of slavery and states' 
rights. The increasingly urban and industrialized Northern states (The 
Union) eventually defeated the mainly rural and agricultural Southern 
states (the Confederacy), but between 600,000 and 700,000 Americans on both 
sides were killed and much of the land in the South was devastated. In the 
end, however, slavery was abolished and the American nation was slowly 
reconstructed.


History of the United States (1865-1918)
For details, see the main History of the United States (1865-1918) article.

The United States began its rise to international power in this period with 
substantial population and industrial growth domestically, and a number of 
imperalist ventures abroad. By the late 1800s, the United States had become 
the leading industrial power in the world, building on new technologies 
(such as the telegraph and the Bessemer process), an expanding railroad 
network, and abundant resources to usher in the Second Industrial 
Revolution. An unprecedented wave of immigration, 37 million people between 
1840 and 1920, served both to provide the labor for American industry and 
to create diverse communities in previously undeveloped areas, such as 
California. The expansion of industry and population had a substantial cost 
as well. Native American tribes were mostly forced onto small reservations 
so that white farmers and ranchers could take over their lands, and abusive 
industrial practices led to the origins of the labor movement in the United 
States.

During this period, the United States also became an international player 
in race for overseas possessions. In the 1900-1903 war to conquer the 
Philippines, more than 1 million people, mostly Fillipinos, were killed. 
The United State's late entry in the First World War on the side of the 
Allied Powers shifted the balance of the war, and made the United States a 
major military as well as financial power.


Interwar America and World War II (1918-1945)
For details, see the main History of the United States (1918-1945) article.

The Allied Powers imposed severe economic penalties on Germany in the 
Treaty of Versailles. Despite President Woodrow Wilson's calls for 
agreeable terms, the economic impact of the reparations mandated by the 
Treaty were severe. The misery they produced in Germany helped Adolf Hitler 
to seize power in Germany in 1933. The United States Senate did not ratify 
the Treaty of Versailles; instead, the United States signed separate peace 
treaties with Germany and her allies.

Disillusioned by the failure of the war to achieve the high ideals promised 
by President Woodrow Wilson, the American people chose isolationism: they 
turned their attention inward, away from international relations and solely 
toward domestic affairs.

During most of the 1920s the United States enjoyed a period of unbalanced 
prosperity: prices for agricultural commodities and wages fell at the end 
of the war while new industries (radio, movies, automobiles, and chemicals) 
flourished. The unevenness was also geographic: the standard of living in 
rural areas fell increasingly behind that of urban and suburban areas which 
saw dramatic improvements in housing and urban planning. The boom was 
reflected by the extension of credit to a dangerous degree, including in 
the Stock Market, which rose to dangerously inflated levels.

In 1920, the manufacture, sale, import and export of alcohol was prohibited 
by an amendment to the constitution in order to alleviate various social 
problems. It was enacted through the Volstead Act. Prohibition ended in 
1933 by another change to the constitution; it is considered to have been a 
failure by most: consumption of alcohol did not decrease markedly while 
organized crime was strengthened. But it did represent the first instance 
of a constitutional amendment that directly regulated social activity. The 
18th Amendment, then, represented the growing strength of the state in the 
early 20th century.

The Stock Market crash in 1929 and the ensuing economic depression have 
been endlessly debated, often along ideological lines. The limited amount 
of reliable economic information suggests that construction and housing 
stagnated after 1926, joining declines in the agriculture, mining, and 
petroleum industries. In all of these overproduction dragged down prices 
and profits. Wages did not rise fast enough to enable consumers to purchase 
all the new homes and home products available. Foreign trade was 
constrained by growing protectionism in the industrialized world. The Stock 
Market crash drained away remaining consumer confidence and, more 
importantly, the confidence of financial institutions. They were extremely 
reluctant to invest. Thus, the economy sank into a severe depression, 
referred to by Americans as the "Great Depression", marked by punishing 
levels of unemployment, negligible investment, and falling prices and wages.

In response to the depression, Congress and the Hoover administration 
enacted a somewhat isolationist Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act and, with its 
public works acts, tried to fix prices for farmers, and enacted a public 
works program based on the belief that the federal government was obliged 
to maintain high employment levels. These efforts were unprecedented, and 
economists today have still not come to a consensus over the 
appropriateness of these policies. While some feel that these efforts did 
not go far enough, and were overwhelmed by the magnitude of the depression, 
others believe that these policies were destructive and contributed to the 
worsening of the depression.

With millions unemployed, political ferment and discontent greatly 
increased among the working classes. An unsympathetic or repressive 
response from the U.S. government might well have sparked a socialist 
uprising, but President Franklin D. Roosevelt, elected in 1932, implemented 
a number of programs to aid the poor and unemployed. He also contributed to 
the future stability of the economy by instituting new regulations in 
business, particularly banking. Over the past twenty years, historians have 
de-emphasized the "revolutionary" legislation of the Roosevelt 
administration, seeing instead a logical, and even conservative, outgrowth 
of Hoover administration policies.

The recovery, however, was very slow. The nadir of the Great Depression was 
in 1933, but the economy showed very little improvement through the end of 
the decade, and remained grim until it was dramatically reshaped through 
America's involvement in World War II.

Isolationist sentiment in America had ebbed, but the United States at first 
declined to enter the war, limiting itself to giving supplies and weapons 
to Britain, China, and the Soviet Union. American feeling changed 
drastically with the sudden Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, and the United 
States quickly joined the British-Soviet alliance against Japan, Fascist 
Italy, and Nazi Germany, known as the "Axis Alliance". Even with American 
participation, it took nearly four more years to defeat Germany and Japan. 
Though the Soviet Union suffered far more casualties than its allies, 
America's active involvement in the war was vital to preventing an eventual 
Axis victory.

After the second world war, America experienced a period of great economic 
growth characterized by the growth of suburban housing, etc. The Allied 
Powers (which included the United States) financed the reconstruction of 
Germany and Japan and eventually turned the former foes into allies.


History of the United States (1945-1964)
For details, see the main History of the United States (1945-1964) article.

The post-war era in the United States was defined internationally by the 
beginning of the Cold War, where the United States and the Soviet Union 
attempted to expand their influence at the expense of the other, checked by 
each side's massive nuclear arsenal. The result was a series of conflicts 
during this period including the Korean War and the tense nuclear showdown 
of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Within the United States, the Cold War 
prompted concerns about Communist influence, and also resulted in 
government efforts to encourage math and science towards efforts like the 
space race.

Meanwhile, the American people completed their great migration from the 
farms into the cities, and experienced a period of sustained economic 
expansion. At the same time, institutionalized racism across the United 
States, but especially in the American South, became increasingly 
challenged by the growing Civil Rights movement and African American 
leaders like Martin Luther King, Jr. During the 1960s, the Jim Crow laws 
that legalized racial segregation between Whites and Blacks had come to an end.


History of the United States (1964-1980)
For details, see the main History of the United States (1964-1980) article.

The Cold War continued through the 1960s and 1970s, and the United States 
entered the Vietnam War, whose growing unpopularity fed already existing 
social movements, including those among women, minorities and young people. 
President Lyndon Johnson's Great Society social programs and the judicial 
activism of the Warren Court added to the wide range of social reform 
during the 1960s and 70s. The period saw the birth of feminism and the 
environmental movement as political forces, and continued progress towards 
Civil Rights. In the early 1970s, Johnson's successor, President Richard 
Nixon brought the Vietnam War to a close, as the American-backed South 
Vietnamese government collapsed. The war cost the lives of 58,000 American 
troops and many more Vietnamese. Nixon's own administration was brought to 
an ignominious close with the political scandal of Watergate. The OPEC oil 
embargo and slowing economic growth led to a period of stagflation under 
President Jimmy Carter as the 1970s drew to a close. Space Stations were 
launched as early as 1971. Huge space advancements became known to man.


Contemporary United States History (1980-present)
For details, see the main History of the United States (1980-1988) and 
History of the United States (1988-present) articles.

In the 1980s, President Ronald Reagan was elected, and instituted a 
domestic program of tax cuts and an international policy of aggressive 
anti-Soviet actions. Although the United States deficit rapidly expanded, 
the Eastern Bloc began to unravel under increasing economic strain, finally 
and dramatically collapsing during the administration of President George 
H.W. Bush. Despite the fall of the Soviet Union, the United States still 
found itself involved in military action overseas, including the 1990 Gulf 
War. In 1992, President Bill Clinton oversaw the longest economic expansion 
in American history, a side effect of the digital revolution and new 
business opportunities created by the Internet (see Internet bubble). At 
the beginning of the new millennium, the United States found itself 
attacked by Islamist terrorism, with the September 11 attacks on the World 
Trade Center and The Pentagon orchestrated by Osama bin Ladin. In response, 
under the administration of President George W. Bush, the United States 
(with the military support of NATO and the political support of most of the 
international community) invaded Afghanistan and overthrew the Taliban 
regime, which had supported and harbored bin Ladin. More controversially, 
President Bush continued what he dubbed the "war on terror" by invading 
Iraq and overthrowing and capturing Saddam Hussein. This second invasion 
proved very unpopular amongst the international community, even amongst 
long-time American allies such as France and Germany, and resulted in a 
global wave of anti-American sentiment.

As of 2005, the political climate remains polarized as debates continue 
over abortion, stem cell research, separation of church and state issues, 
and gay marriage, as well as the ongoing conflict in Iraq.


See also :
- Pre-Colombian era
- Colonial Era
- Articles of Confederation
- Jacksonian Democracy
- Industrial Revolution
- Antebellum
- American Civil War
- Reconstruction
- Gilded Age
- Progressive Era
- Roaring Twenties
- Great Depression
- Atomic Age
- Space Age
- Cold War
- Information Age
- Dot-com era


Literature :
- The state of U.S.history, ed. by Melvyn Stokes, Berg Publishers 2002
- A People's History of the United States, by Howard Zinn, Perennial 
Classics 2003
- The American Pageant: A History of the Republic (12th Ed.), Bailey, 
Thomas A., Cohen, Lizabeth, and David M. Kennedy. Houghton Mifflin 
Company,    2001. ISBN 061810349X


External links :
- Houghton Mifflin Company: U.S. History Resource Center
- United States History article from Encarta Encyclopedia. Extensive 
information plus over 200 multimedia files.
- Library of Congress American History Guide
- American Historical Association
- The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_United_States

===


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