33
/pt/
AIzaSyAYiBZKx7MnpbEhh9jyipgxe19OcubqV5w
August 1, 2025
Public Timelines
Menu
Public Timelines
FAQ
Public Timelines
FAQ
For education
For educational institutions
For teachers
For students
Cabinet
For educational institutions
For teachers
For students
Open cabinet
Criar
Close
Create a timeline
Public timelines
Library
FAQ
Editar
Baixar
Export
Criar uma cópia
Premium
Incorporar ao site
Share
Presidencies of the United States of America
Category:
Outro
Atualizado:
20 ago 2022
0
0
295
Autores
Created by
Claire the Bread Fascist
Attachments
Comments
World History (WIP)
By
Claire the Bread Fascist
15 set 2023
0
0
333
The French Revolution
By
Claire the Bread Fascist
17 nov 2022
1
0
326
Wikipedia Timeline
By
Claire the Bread Fascist
7 meses atrás
0
0
256
The Iranian Revolution
By
Claire the Bread Fascist
20 ago 2022
0
0
241
Fallout Timeline
By
Claire the Bread Fascist
18 nov 2022
0
0
205
The World Wars
By
Claire the Bread Fascist
30 jan 2023
0
0
198
The American Revolution
By
Claire the Bread Fascist
14 nov 2022
0
0
191
Eventos
At Jefferson's behest, Congress passes a law prohibiting the importation of slaves into any place within the jurisdiction of the United States after January 1, 1808.
The Embargo Act, modified and authorized by President Jefferson, now permits vessels to transport American goods from foreign ports.
The infamous Leopard incident occurs.
Circuit court in Richmond acquits Aaron Burr of treason.
In spite of Thomas Jefferson's vehement protest, the British government announces it will continue to impress seamen on American ships thought to be British.
Britain issues its “Order in Council,” forbidding neutral nations and her allies from trading with France except under tribute to England.
Napoleon issues the Milan Decree, forbidding trade with England or her colonies under penalty of confiscation and impressments of any vessel paying tribute to Britain.
President Jefferson signs the Embargo Act, putting a halt to all trading with any country in the entire world.
The law officially banning the slave trade goes into effect.
The Second Embargo Act comes into force.
Napoleon issues the Bayonne Decree, authorising the French seizure of all U.S. vessels entering French and Italian ports and all ports of the Hanseatic League.
The sixth presidential election for President of the United States is held.
James Madison is elected president of the United States, with George Clinton as vice president.
After the U.S. economy suffers at the hands of the embargo, Congress repeals the Embargo Act.
James Madison is inaugurated as the fourth President of the United States, thereby ending Jefferson's presidency.
After negotiations with British minister Erskine, Madison issues a proclamation -- known as the Erskine Agreement -- evoking the embargo on Britain, effective June 10.
George Washington inaugurated as the first President of the United States in New York City, the nation's capital.
Congress, led by Representative James Madison, enacts the first protective tariff.
Congress passes the United States' first naturalization law, establishing terms of citizenship.
Rhode Island ratifies the Constitution, becoming the last of the original thirteen states under the Articles of Confederation to join the newly formed Union.
President Washington signs the first United States copyright law.
President Washington signs a bill into law that permanently places the nation's capital along the Potomac River, in an area to be called the District of Columbia.
President Washington signs a bill into law that directed the federal government to assume the Revolutionary War debts of the states.
The United States Capital officially moves from New York to Philadelphia, where it remains until the completion of the District of Columbia in 1800.
Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, with President Washington's support, sends Congress a controversial message (The Report on a National Bank) calling for the creation of an official Bank of the United States.
Congress approves its first internal revenue law, creating fourteen revenue districts and placing a tax on all distilled spirits.
Commissioners name the territory within the District of Columbia (and the future seat of the Federal Government) the city of Washington in honor of the nation's first President.
The Miami Indians soundly defeat an American military force of 1400 men led by General Arthur St. Clair at the cost of 900 American lives.
The states officially ratify the first ten amendments to the Constitution, also known as the Bill of Rights.
President Washington appoints Thomas Pinckney as the first United States minister to England.
The cornerstone for the President's mansion is laid in Washington D.C.
George Washington is unanimously re-elected President of the United States by the Electoral College.
President Washington issues a proclamation of neutrality, warning Americans to avoid aiding either side in the emerging conflict between Britain and revolutionary France.
President Washington cautiously receives France's envoy to the United States, Edmond Charles Genet.
American relations with Britain begin to deteriorate rapidly after the British government issues secret orders for the Royal Navy to confiscate any vessels trading with French possessions in the Caribbean.
Thomas Jefferson resigns as secretary of state.
Congress responds to British aggression by authorising the production of six warships (March 11) and announcing a sixty-day embargo on American shipping (March 26).
In the hopes of quelling mounting tensions between the United States and Britain, Washington selects Chief Justice of the Supreme Court John Jay to serve as a special envoy to Britain.
Farmers in western Pennsylvania rebel over the strict enforcement of an excise tax on whiskey passed in 1791.
General Anthony Wayne defeats an Indian force numbering more than 1,000 at the Battle of Fallen Timbers.
Jay Treaty
Alexander Hamilton resigns from his post as secretary of the treasury.
After fierce public debate, the Senate ratifies the Jay Treaty.
The United States signs the Treaty of San Lorenzo with Spain, granting Americans the right to ship goods through the port of New Orleans without having to pay duties to the Spanish Government.
The American Government, represented by David Humphreys, agrees to pay a sum of nearly a million dollars to the Dey of Algiers for protection of American shipping in the Mediterranean and for the ransom of sailors.
A heated dispute erupts between President Washington and his Federalist allies and Democrat-Republicans in the House of Representatives after the latter demand that the President provide Congress with all papers relating to the Jay Treaty.
Congress grants Tennessee's application for statehood, allowing it to become the 16th state in the Union.
France informs James Monroe, America's leading diplomat in Paris, that the Jay Treaty violates, and therefore suspends, certain provisions of the 1778 Treaty of Amity and Commerce between the two nations.
President Washington releases what has become known as his “Farewell Address,” in which he advises future American leaders to minimize “political connection” with foreign powers.
In an agreement resembling the one signed with the Dey of Algiers in 1795, the American government signs a treaty with Tripoli, agreeing to pay a yearly tribute to the Pasha of Tripoli in exchange for the peaceful treatment of U.S. shipping in the Mediterranean region.
John Adams is elected President of the United States.
France refuses to accept Monroe's replacement, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, as American envoy to France, worsening relations between the two nations.
John Adams is inaugurated as the second President of the United States, thereby officially ending the presidency of George Washington.
Adams calls the first special session of Congress to debate the mounting crisis in French-American relations.
Adams appoints a three man commission, composed of Charles C. Pinckney, Elbridge Gerry, and John Marshall, to negotiate a settlement with France.
President Adams is authorized by Congress to raise a militia of 80,000 men for defensive purposes in case of war with France.
XYZ Affair
The Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution of the United States is declared in full force by President Adams.
President Adams exposes the XYZ affair, providing Congress with letters from the peace commission indicating French efforts to bribe and intimidate U.S. officials seeking to speak with French diplomat, Charles Maurice Talleyrand.
Congress establishes the government for the new Mississippi Territory.
Adams appoints Benjamin Stoddert to serve as the first secretary of the Navy for the newly formed Department of the Navy.
Congress empowers Adams to enlist 10,000 men for service in case of a declaration of war or invasion of the country's domain.
Congress Approves the First Alien and Sedition Act
Congress passes the Alien Act, granting President Adams the power to deport any alien he deemed potentially dangerous to the country's safety.
Congress passes the third of the Alien and Sedition acts, the Alien Enemies Act.
Adams appoints George Washington to serve as commander in chief of the United States Army.
Congress adopts the Sedition Act, the fourth and last of the Alien and Sedition acts.
Philadelphia newspaper editor Benjamin Franklin Bache, grandson of Benjamin Franklin, is arrested under Sedition Act for “libeling” President Adams.
The Kentucky State Legislature adopts the Kentucky Resolutions, reserving states' right to override federal powers not enumerated in the U.S. Constitution.
The United States Navy scores its first clear victory against France when the frigate Constellation captures the French ship L'Insurgente near the island of St. Kitts.
President Adams selects Van Murray, Chief Justice Oliver Ellsworth, and North Carolina Governor Davie to serve as U.S. envoys to France upon assurance from the French that they will be received with the respect owed to their nation.
U.S. diplomats conclude a Treaty of Amity between the United States and Prussia in Berlin.
Thomas Cooper, a resident of Northumberland, Pennsylvania, is tried and convicted of libel against President Adams and his administration under the newly adopted Sedition Act.
Congress finally passes a treaty with Tunis, negotiated originally in 1797.
The United States frigate Constellation defeats the French ship La Vengeance on the high seas.
Congress passes and Adams signs into law the Federal Bankruptcy Act, providing merchants and traders protection from debtors.
A resolution is passed and eventually signed by President Adams calling for the establishment of a Library of Congress.
Congress passes an act dividing the Northwest Territory into two parts, with the border between them running north from the junction of the Ohio and Kentucky Rivers.
The new city of Washington in the District of Columbia becomes the official capital of the United States, succeeding Philadelphia.
The “quasi”-naval war with France effectively ends with the signing of the Treaty of Mortfontaine in Paris.
Spain cedes the Louisiana territory to France with the signing of the secret Treaty of San Idlefonso.
The fourth presidential election is held.
Thomas Jefferson is inaugurated as the third President of the United States, becoming the first President to be inaugurated in Washington, D.C.
Yusuf Karamini, pasha of Tripoli, declares war on the United States by symbolically cutting down the flagpole at the U.S. consulate.
William C.C. Claiborne is appointed the new territorial governor of Mississippi.
President Jefferson delivers his first address to the newly convened seventh Congress of the United States in writing and is read aloud by the House clerk.
A convention between the United States and Britain regarding the treaty of 1794 is concluded.
Congress recognizes the War with Tripoli, authorizing the arming of merchant ships to ward off attacks.
Congress reduces the size of the U.S. army to its 1796 limits.
Infamous excise taxes on commodities such as whiskey are repealed.
The notorious naturalization laws of 1798 are repealed.
The Georgia legislature cedes to the United States its western territory, notorious for the Yazoo land fraud of 1795.
President Jefferson signs the Enabling Act, establishing procedures under which territories organized under the Ordinance of 1787 can become a state.
Congress officially incorporates Washington as a city, empowering Jefferson to appoint the mayor.
The United States and Spain resolve to refer all disputes between the two countries to a special convention at Madrid.
Jefferson appoints James Monroe minister to France and Spain, instructing him to purchase New Orleans and East and West Florida.
Ohio officially becomes the seventeenth state of the Union.
Marbury v. Madison Decided
Spain reopens New Orleans to American merchants.
Louisiana Purchase Treaty Signed
Jefferson commissions Commodore Edward Preble as commander of a U.S. Navy squadron sent to battle Tripoli.
Captain Meriwether Lewis, formerly Jefferson's personal secretary, sets out from Pittsburgh to begin an expedition of the newly acquired western territory of the Louisiana Purchase.
Motivated by the infamous election of 1800, Congress passes the Twelfth Amendment to the Constitution, requiring electors to vote for President and vice president separately.
The French flag is lowered in New Orleans and the U.S. flag raised, symbolizing the transfer of the Louisiana territory from France to the United States.
Lt. Stephen Decatur burns the captured U.S. frigate Philadelphia while docked in Tripoli harbour.
Congress passes the Louisiana Territory Act, dividing the Louisiana Purchase into the Territory of Orleans in the south and the district of Louisiana in the north.
Burr Kills Hamilton in Duel
The Twelfth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is officially ratified, allowing for the presidential election of 1804 to be conducted under new rules.
The fifth presidential election is held under the auspices of the newly ratified Twelfth Amendment.
Thomas Jefferson is officially reelected President of the United States.
President Jefferson is inaugurated for his second term.
Lewis and Clark reach the mouth of the Yellowstone River.
U.S. Marines and Arab mercenaries capture the Tripolitan port city of Derna, achieving a major victory for the United States in the Tripolitan War.
The United States and Tripoli sign a Treaty of Peace and Amity in Tripoli, effectively ending the Tripolitan War.
Rumours circulate about the subversive activities of Aaron Burr as he arrives in New Orleans.
The British justify seizure of American ships in neutral ports with the invocation of the Rule of 1756.
Lewis and Clark reach the Pacific after a perilous journey of nearly eighteen months and 4,000 miles.
Jefferson makes two addresses, one public and one before Congress, regarding land in Florida.
Michigan is formed from the territory of Indiana.
Congress authorizes a commission to build a national road from Cumberland, Maryland, to the Ohio River.
In protest against the seizure of American ships and the impressment of American sailors by Britain, Congress passes a law prohibiting the importation of many British products into the United States.
Zebulon Pike begins his exploration of what is now the southwestern United States.
American envoys James Monroe and William Pinckney commence talks with British official Lord Holland on the current naval hostilities.
Lewis and Clark Expedition Arrives Back in St. Louis
Congress passes legislation providing for a military organizational structure.
In Washington, D.C., President Jefferson publicly warns citizens not to take part in a plot to invade Spanish territory.
Jefferson appeals to Congress asking for a ban on the slave trade.
Aaron Burr is arrested near Fort Stoddart, Alabama, in connection with his alleged conspiracy against the government.
Madison persuades Albert Gallatin to remain secretary of treasury in the face of strong congressional opposition and discord within Madison's cabinet.
Prompted by tensions with Spain over West Florida, Madison calls for renewal of an act authorising the President to call out 100,000 militiamen, fill up the regular army to its authorised strength, establish a force of 20,000 volunteers for immediate emergencies, and reactivate idle components of the naval fleet.
John Marshall overrules state legislation in Fletcher v. Peck, finding attempts to rectify the Yazoo land fraud scheme a violation of contract rights.
To replace the Nonintercourse Act, Congress passes Macon's Bill Number 2, which allows American ships to carry French or English goods while barring belligerent powers from American ports.
The Cadore letter notifies the American minister in France that the Decrees of Berlin and Milan will be repealed, effective November 1, if Britain revokes its Orders in Council or if the United States bars trade with Britain.
Proclamation to Occupy West Florida
Under the terms of Macon's Bill Number 2, Madison accepts a French offer to stop confiscation of American supplies and ships.
Madison vetoes two bills of Congress, one granting land in the Mississippi Territory to a Baptist congregation and the other incorporating an Episcopal church in Washington, D.C.
Madison reestablishes nonintercourse with Britain.
The Bank of the United States closes.
After Madison dismisses Secretary of State Robert Smith, James Monroe accepts Madison's offer of the cabinet position.
Editor Gales, of the National Intelligencer, prints a summary of his discussion with Madison.
After it is attacked, the U.S. battleship President fires on the British ship HMS Little Belt.
The British foreign secretary announces an end to the Orders in Council.
Former secretary of state Robert Smith publishes an Address to the People of the United States, attacking Madison's administration and revealing the disagreements within the cabinet.
The new British foreign minister, Foster, arrives in Washington and warns Madison that if nonintercourse remains the policy of the United States, Britain will retaliate against American commerce.
Madison calls a special session of Congress to convene November 4 in preparation for war against Britain.
Madison delivers a tentative war message to Congress, indicating his shift in policy.
After acknowledging the danger posed by Shawnee leader Tecumseh, who hopes to assemble a confederation of tribes, General William Henry Harrison, the governor of the Indian Territory, carriers out a pre-emptive strike on Tecumseh.
The Senate confirms James Monroe as secretary of state, replacing Robert Smith.
The House Committee on Foreign Relations recommends legislation to bring the Army up to full strength, establish a second regular army of 10,000, enable the President to organize 50,000 volunteers, strengthen the Navy, incorporate militia units into national service, and arm merchantmen.
Congress passes an Army bill to enlarge the second regular army to 25,000.
The House refuses to enlarge the Navy.
Madison shares the letters of John Henry, agent for governor of Canada, with Congress, having purchased the letters the previous month for $50,000.
British minister Foster tells Madison's administration that the Orders in Council will be continued.
News arrives that France has sunk American ships carrying flour to British troops in Spain, leading many in Congress to call for war against France.
Madison and his cabinet decide to continue with the attempted invasion of Canada.
Madison convenes his cabinet to establish a special military district for the protection of Washington and Baltimore, placing it under the command of Brigadier General William Winder.
The Battle of the Burnt Corn in the Mississippi Territory brings the Creek Indians into the war against the United States.
British Troops Set Fire to White House
Following the sack of Washington, U.S. General Samuel Smith turns back a British attack on Fort Henry at Baltimore.
Congress passes an embargo, effective through July 4, on all shipping to give shippers the opportunity to get their vessels to safe haven.
Louisiana is admitted to the nation as the eighteenth state of the Union.
Amidst fierce intra-party competition, Madison is nominated by the Democratic-Republicans for a second term as President.
Madison sees the letter from Lord Castlereagh to British minister Foster confirming the continuance of the Orders in Council, and the President begins drafting his war message to Congress.
Madison delivers a message to Congress, justifying war against Britain and asking for a declaration of war.
Madison issues a declaration of war against Britain.
General Henry Dearborn, commanding American forces into Canada, requests that all New England governors cap the size of militias guarding their respective coasts and frontiers; Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island refuse.
Michigan governor and general William Hull, in charge of the American offensive from Detroit into Upper Canada, gives up his attack on Fort Malden and surrenders Detroit to British forces on August 16 without firing a shot.
Despite fierce competition and conflict within the Democrat-Republican party, Madison wins reelection, securing 128 electoral votes to Federalist DeWitt Clinton's 89.
William Jones of Pennsylvania replaces Paul Hamilton as secretary of the Navy.
John Armstrong of New York replaces William Eustis as secretary of war.
Americans throughout the northwest are outraged by Winchester's battle and surrender at Frenchtown, and the Wyandotte murder of sixty Kentucky prisoners of war.
Albert Gallatin and James A. Bayard leave to join John Quincy Adams in St. Petersburg for peace negotiations sponsored by Russia.
John Quincy Adams, James A. Bayard, and Albert Gallatin are nominated as representatives to the peace negotiations, but the Senate rejects Gallatin on July 19.
In an impressive display of valor, Captain Oliver Perry wins control of Lake Erie in the Battle of Put-In-Bay.
The United States under General Harrison emerges victorious at the Battle of the Thames -- the most important American victory to date -- as it ends British and Indian control in Northwest and Upper Canada.
Madison calls for a total embargo on exports and a ban on all imports of British origin, believing that Britain depends on trade with the United States.
James Jackson of Virginia introduces a constitutional amendment in the House authorising the establishment of a national bank, but Congress postpones consideration.
Madison appoints Henry Clay, Albert Gallatin, James Bayard, Jonathan Russell, and John Quincy Adams as commissioners to negotiate directly with Britain in Gothenburg, Sweden.
George Washington Campbell of Tennessee replaces Gallatin as Secretary of the Treasury.
Under the command of Andrew Jackson, 2,000 troops defeat the Creek Confederation at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in the Tallapoosa River, eliminating the Confederation as an obstacle to American expansion toward the Gulf Coast.
Napoleon's European empire collapses.
William Henry Harrison resigns as Major General and is replaced by Andrew Jackson, against Madison's orders.
Monroe signs the Military Establishment Act, forwarded by Secretary of War Calhoun, to reduce the Army's manpower by 40 percent to 6,126 men.
Monroe begins his second presidential term.
Missouri is admitted as the twenty-fourth state of the Union.
Monroe vetoes the Cumberland Road bill, which would extend construction of the interstate artery to Zanesville, Ohio.
In a letter to Richard Rush, British foreign secretary George Canning discreetly contemplates recognition of what is referred to as the “no-transfer” principle advocated by the United States.
Monroe Doctrine Announced
Cherokee chiefs arrive in Washington, D.C., to object to the government's removal policies and plead for their sovereign right to stay in Georgia.
Monroe signs the General Survey Bill, departing from his opposition to congressionally sponsored internal improvements.
Madison nominates James Monroe as Secretary of War to replace John Armstrong.
Alexander J. Dallas is appointed secretary of treasury, replacing the inept George W. Campbell.
The Massachusetts General Court calls a convention of New England states, whose livelihood depends largely on international trade, to coordinate regional grievances against the federal government.
Without authorisation, Andrew Jackson takes Spanish-held and British-occupied Pensacola, Florida, in pursuit of Creek warriors.
Twenty-two delegates at the Hartford Convention issue a report condemning the federal government for failing to defend New England.
In Europe, the United States and Britain sign the Treaty of Ghent.
The House of Representatives passes an amended bank bill as a compromise between Federalists and anti-bank Republicans.
Jackson, leading 4,000 militiamen, citizens, and regular soldiers, wins a resounding victory over 6,000 British forces in the Battle of New Orleans.
Madison signs a bill allowing the President to call up 40,000 state troops.
News arrives of the December 1814 Treaty of Ghent that ends the War of 1812.
With Madison having secured a declaration of war on Algiers, Captain Stephen Decatur leads a flotilla from New York against the Mediterranean pirates, who attack American ships during the War of 1812.
Gallatin negotiates a commercial convention with Britain, further signifying the potential for the United States to play an important role in international trade and industrialization.
Madison presents his seventh annual message to Congress, advocating military streamlining, a new national bank, protective tariffs to promote industry, and internal improvements.
Madison signs a bill re-chartering a new national bank in Philadelphia.
Madison signs a bill admitting Indiana to statehood.
Secretary of State James Monroe is elected President, easily defeating Federalist Rufus King of New York.
Madison delivers his eighth annual address to Congress, calling for vigilance in foreign affairs, internal improvements, and the restructuring of the judiciary and executive offices.
Britain's minister to the United States, Charles Bagot, agrees to the conditions of the Rush- Bagot Agreement.
Monroe embarks on a lengthy, sixteen-week tour of New England.
Monroe enunciates a policy of neutrality towards the Latin American colonies seeking independence.
Mississippi becomes the twentieth state in the Union.
Secretary of War John C. Calhoun orders General Andrew Jackson to quell Seminole Indian uprisings in the Floridas and southern Georgia; Jackson also receives a private letter from Monroe urging such action.
Monroe learns of Jackson's exploits and, along with his cabinet (except John Quincy Adams), disapproves of Jackson's actions.
British and American diplomats meet at the Anglo-American Convention and conclude a treaty resolving some, but not all, of the outstanding issues from the War of 1812.
Illinois is admitted as the twenty-first state of the Union.
Alabama becomes the twenty-second state of the Union.
The Panic of 1819 begins to take shape.
Debates over Missouri's admission to the Union are triggered in February by New York Republican congressman James Tallmadge, Jr.
The Transcontinental Treaty, also known as the Adams-Onis treaty, is resolved in February after the conclusion of negotiations dating back to July 1818.
Under Chief Justice John Marshall, the United States Supreme Court rules against the state of Maryland in McCulloch v. Maryland.
Monroe Signs Missouri Compromise
Maine is admitted as the twenty-third state of the Union.
As expected, Monroe secures reelection as President of the United States, receiving 231 electoral votes to John Quincy Adams's 1.
Monroe signs the Tariff of 1824 into law, implementing protectionist measures in support of local manufactures and goods.
Following Congress's invitation, the Marquis de Lafayette, the inspirational liberal French philosopher, makes a lengthy visit to the United States.
At sixty-seven, Monroe decides not to seek re- election in the presidential race -- a contest that is far more contentious than the previous one.
Unable to alter the demands of the Georgia congressional delegation, Monroe concedes that the only way to mitigate Indian concerns is through their removal west of the Mississippi.
John Quincy Adams is sworn in as the sixth president of the United States.
John Quincy Adams Elected President
John Quincy Adams, the sixth President of the United States and son of John Adams, the second President, makes his inaugural address.
Captain David Porter, a perennial thorn in the side of the United States Navy, is courtmartialed for overstepping his powers when he chooses to land 200 troops at Fajardo, Puerto Rico, in November 1824.
The Tennessee legislature nominates Andrew Jackson their presidential challenger for the 1828 election.
The first passage on the 363 mile-long Erie Canal is completed from Lake Erie to New York City, linking the Atlantic and trans-Atlantic marketplaces with growing agricultural production in the Northwest states.
Military standardisation and integration of Union and state militias is a foremost concern during the Adams administration.
Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, founding fathers and former Presidents, both die.
Under the mediation of Czar Nicholas I, President Adams finalises a settlement with the British over restitution for damages incurred during the War of 1812, left unresolved by the Treaty of Ghent.
Adams proclaims all American ports closed to trade with British colonies, suspending disagreements from an era of protracted contention with the British over tariffs, navigation and duties.
Additional European states are incorporated into the MFN trade system, the pre-conditions of commercial growth being ëneutral rights,' which began in April 1826.
Nicholas Biddle of the Bank of the United States implements the sale of government securities to curtail the outward flow of specie.
Joel Poinsett accedes to a Mexican boundary settlement on behalf of the United States.
Antonio José Caóaz, Guatemalan minister to the United States, proposes the construction of a canal adjoining the Pacific and Atlantic through Nicaragua.
Proposed by South Carolinian and Vice President John Calhoun in an attempt to bolster support for Andrew Jackson's bid for President, Congress passes a new tariff bill.
Andrew Jackson, running on the Democratic ticket, ends Adams's bid for reelection.
Andrew Jackson is sworn in as the seventh President of the United States.
Following his anonymous printing of the South Carolina Exposition and Protest in 1828, Vice President John C. Calhoun suggests that his state of South Carolina annul the federally imposed protective cotton tariff.
Congress passes the Indian Removal Act, sanctioning the forcible relocation of Creek, Chickasaw, Cherokee, Choctaw, and Seminole tribes to land allotments west of the Mississippi river.
About & Feedback
Acordo
Privacidade
Biblioteca
FAQ
Support 24/7
Cabinet
Get premium
Donate
The service accepts bank transfer (ACH, Wire) or cards (Visa, MasterCard, etc). Processed by Stripe.
Secured with SSL
Comments