history of the United States
When to date the start of the history of the United States is debated among historians. Older textbooks start with the arrival of Christopher Columbus
in 1492 and emphasize the European background, or they start in 1600
and emphasize the American frontier. In recent decades American schools
and universities typically have shifted back in time to include more on
the colonial period and much more on the prehistory of the Native peoples ]
Indigenous peoples lived in what is now the United States for thousands of years and developed complex cultures before European colonists began to arrive, mostly from England, after 1600. The Spanish had small settlements in Florida and the Southwest, and the French along the Mississippi River and the Gulf Coast. By the 1770s, thirteen British colonies
contained two and a half million people along the Atlantic coast east
of the Appalachian Mountains. In the 1760s British government imposed a
series of new taxes while rejecting the American argument that any new
taxes had to be approved by the people. Tax resistance, especially the Boston Tea Party (1774), led to punitive laws (the Intolerable Acts)
by Parliament designed to end self-government in Massachusetts.
American Patriots (as they were called at the time as a term of
ridicule) adhered to a political ideology called republicanism that emphasized civic duty, virtue, and opposition to corruption, fancy luxuries and aristocracy.
All thirteen colonies united in a Congress that called on the
colonies to write new state constitutions. After armed conflict began in
Massachusetts, Patriots drove the royal officials out of every colony
and assembled in mass meetings and conventions. Those Patriot
governments in the colonies unanimously empowered their delegates to
Congress to declare independence. In 1776, Congress created an
independent nation, the United States of America. With large-scale
military and financial support from France and military leadership by
General George Washington, the American Patriots won the Revolutionary War. The peace treaty of 1783
gave the new nation the land east of the Mississippi River (except
Florida and Canada). The central government established by the Articles of Confederation
proved ineffectual at providing stability, as it had no authority to
collect taxes and had no executive officer. Congress called a convention to meet secretly in Philadelphia in 1787 to revise the Articles of Confederation. It wrote a new Constitution, which was adopted in 1789. In 1791, a Bill of Rights was added to guarantee inalienable rights. With Washington as the Union's first president and Alexander Hamilton his chief political and financial adviser, a strong central government was created. When Thomas Jefferson became president he purchased the Louisiana Territory from France, doubling the size of the US. A second and last war with Britain was fought in 1812.
Encouraged by the notion of Manifest Destiny, federal territory expanded all the way to the Pacific. The expansion was driven by a quest for inexpensive land for yeoman farmers and slave owners. The expansion of slavery
was increasingly controversial and fueled political and constitutional
battles, which were resolved by compromises. Slavery was abolished in
all states north of the Mason–Dixon line by 1804, but the South continued to profit off the institution, producing high-value cotton exports to feed increasing high demand in Europe. The 1860 presidential election of Republican Abraham Lincoln
was on a platform of ending the expansion of slavery and putting it on a
path to extinction. Seven cotton-based deep South slave states seceded
and later founded the Confederacy months before Lincoln's inauguration. No nation ever recognized the Confederacy, but it opened the war by attacking Fort Sumter in 1861. A surge of nationalist outrage in the North fueled a long, intense American Civil War
(1861-1865). It was fought largely in the South as the overwhelming
material and manpower advantages of the North proved decisive in a long
war. The war's result was restoration of the Union, the impoverishment
of the South, and the abolition of slavery. In the Reconstruction era (1863–1877), legal and voting rights were extended to the freed slave. The national government emerged much stronger, and because of the Fourteenth Amendment,
it gained the explicit duty to protect individual rights. However, when
white Democrats regained their power in the South during the 1870s,
often by paramilitary suppression of voting, they passed Jim Crow laws to maintain white supremacy, and new disfranchising constitutions that prevented most African Americans
and many poor whites from voting, a situation that continued for
decades until gains of the civil rights movement in the 1960s and
passage of federal legislation to enforce constitutional rights.
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