| POLITICS & POWER | AMERICA IN THE WORLD | IDEAS, BELIEFS, & CULTURE | WORK, EXCHANGE, & TECHNOLOGY | IDENTITY |
1840 | | | Ideology of Manifest Destiny prompts U.S. expansionism Free-Soil Party (1848) advocates white smallholder farm society Women seek legal rights at Seneca Falls (1848)
| Irish immigrants build northern canal system Some states default on canal bonds Walker Tariff (1846) lowers rates, increases foreign imports
| Whites migrate to Oregon and California Arrival of millions of Germans and Irish causes social conflicts Wars against Seminole peoples in Florida (1835–1842, 1855–1858)
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1850 | | | Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852) attacks slavery Dred Scott decision (1857) opens way to legalize slavery nationwide Southern secessionists agitate for independence
| Enslaved blacks expand cotton output in South White settlers expand farm society to trans-Mississippi west Entrepreneurs promote railroad building and manufacturing in North and Midwest
| Conflict of Hispanics and Anglos in the Southwest White diseases and brutality kill most California Indians Comanches and Sioux dominate Great Plains peoples and control trade in horses and buffalo hides
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1860 | Eleven southern states secede from Union, sparking Civil War (1861–1865); the Union’s triumph preserves a continental nation Fourteenth Amendment (1868) extends legal and political rights
| U.S. diplomacy and Union army victories in 1863 cause British government to stop sale of ironclad ships to the Confederacy Secretary of State Seward buys Alaska from Russia (1867) Burlingame Treaty (1868) protects missionaries in China and limits Chinese immigration
| Confederate States of America (1861–1865) vow to continue slavery Republicans seek to impose equal rights ideology on South Black families accept ideal of domesticity
| Republicans enact Whigs’ economic policies: Homestead Act (1862), railroad aid, high tariffs, and national banking Women assume new tasks in war economies
| Emancipation Proclamation (1863) and Thirteenth Amendment (1865) free blacks from slavery Aided by Freedmen’s Bureau, African Americans struggle for freedom, land, and education
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1870 | | | Ku Klux Klan attacks Reconstruction governments Republicans embrace classical liberalism White elites challenge ideal of universal suffrage and deny women’s suffrage
| Sharecropping spreads in South Ranchers create cattle empire on Great Plains Depression of 1873 halts railway expansion
| U.S. wars against Plains Indians (Cheyennes, Sioux, Apaches, and Nez Perce) open their lands to white miners, ranchers, and farmers Dawes Act (1887) seeks Indian assimilation
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