| WORK, EXCHANGE, & TECHNOLOGY | PEOPLING | POLITICS & POWER | IDEAS, BELIEFS, & CULTURE | IDENTITY |
1763 | Merchants defy Sugar and Stamp Acts Patriots mount three boycotts of British goods, in 1765, 1767, and 1774 Boycotts spur Patriot women to make textiles
| | Stamp Act Congress (1765) First Continental Congress (1774) Second Continental Congress (1775)
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1776 | | | The Declaration of Independence (1776) States adopt republican constitutions (1776 on) Articles of Confederation ratified (1781) Treaty of Paris (1783)
| Judith Sargent Murray publishes “On the Equality of the Sexes” (1779) Emancipation of slaves begins in the North Virginia enacts religious freedom (1786)
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1787 | | State cessions, land ordinances, and Indian wars create national domain in the West The Alien Act makes it harder for immigrants to become citizens and allow for deporting aliens (1798)
| U.S. Constitution drafted (1787) Conflict over Alexander Hamilton’s economic policies First national parties: Federalists and Republicans
| Politicians and ministers deny vote to women; praise republican motherhood Bill of Rights ratified (1791) Sedition Act limits freedom of the press (1798)
| Indians form Western Confederacy (1790) Second Great Awakening (1790–1860) Emerging political divide between South and North
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1800 | Cotton output and demand for African labor expands Farm productivity improves Embargo encourages U.S. manufacturing Second Bank of the United States chartered (1816–1836) Supreme Court guards property
| Suffrage for white men expands; New Jersey retracts suffrage for propertied women (1807) Atlantic slave trade ends (1808) American Colonization Society founded (1817)
| Jefferson reduces activism of national government Chief Justice Marshall asserts federal judicial powers Triumph of Republican Party and end of Federalist Party
| | Tenskwatawa and Tecumseh revive Western Indian Confederacy War of 1812 tests national unity State constitutions democratized
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