Timeline of the American Revolution

Timeline of the American Revolutiontimeline of the political upheaval culminating in the 18th century in which Thirteen Colonies in North America joined together for independence from the British Empire, and after victory in the Revolutionary War combined to form the United States of America. The American Revolution includes political, social, and military aspects. The revolutionary era is generally considered to have begun with the passage of the Stamp Act in 1765 and ended with the ratification of the United States Bill of Rights in 1791. The military phase of the revolution, the American Revolutionary War, lasted from 1775 to 1783, but the land war effectively ended with the British surrender at Yorktown, Virginia October 19, 1781. Britain continued the international conflict after Yorktown, fighting naval engagements with France and Spain until the signing of the Peace Treaty of Paris in 1783. Historical background to the break between the Thirteen Colonies and Britain includes a chronology of the dynasties of Britain, ideas of kingship, its relation to Parliament; establishment of colonies with assemblies ruling local affairs, including taxation. British American colonists had the historical example (1649-1660) of the monarch Charles I ruling in an autocratic manner; Parliament put him on trial and executed him and established a republic with a written constitution.

1485–1603, Tudor dynasty

Allegorical painting of the Tudor monarchs

House of Tudor rules England from 1485 victory of Henry Tudor's victory in a dynastic war, making him Henry VII.

1485-1509, Henry VII

First voyages of exploration by Portugal and Spain; voyage of Christopher Columbus, claiming sovereignty for Spain in the Western Hemisphere; division of the world between Portugal and Spain with the Treaty of Tordesillas(1494); first English voyages of exploration

1497-1498

  • John Cabot voyages of exploration to the Western Hemisphere.

1509-1547, Henry VIII

Henry VIII

1509

  • Henry VIII peacefully succeeds to the English throne, age 17, following the death of his father, Henry VII.
  • Henry VIII marries Catherine of Aragon, his late brother's widow, five years his senior. Catherine's many pregnancies produce a daughter. Princess Mary, but no male heir. No woman had ever succeeded to the English throne, and prospect of it was a disputed succession, civil war, or domination by a foreign power through marriage.[1]

1516

  • Sir Thomas More publishes Utopia, full title The Best State of a Commonwealth and the New Island of Utopia

1529-1536

  • English Reformation Parliament begins meeting 3 November 1529, lasting until 14 April 1536; established the legal basis for the English Reformation, passing major pieces of legislation leading to the break with Rome and increasing the authority of the Church of England. Under Henry VIII's direction, the Reformation Parliament was the first in English history to deal with major religious legislation, transferring many aspects of English life away from the control of the Catholic Church to control under The Crown, and setting a precedent for future monarchs to utilize parliamentary statutes affecting the Church of England. It strengthened the role of the English Parliament and resulted in a massive transfer of wealth from the Catholic Church to the English Crown.

1534

1536-1541

1534-1541

1536-1603

1547-1553, Edward VI

Edward VI
  • Henry VIII dies, succeeded by his Protestant young son Edward VI by Jane Seymour, who dies before he reaches his majority and rule in his own right.
  • Edward's reign was marked by many economic problems and social unrest that in 1549 erupted into riot and rebellion. An expensive war with Scotland, at first successful, ended with military withdrawal from Scotland and Boulogne-sur-Mer in exchange for peace. The transformation of the Church of England into a recognizably Protestant body also occurred under Edward, who even as a youth took great interest in religious matters. Although Henry VIII had severed the link between the English Church and Rome it continued to uphold most Catholic doctrine and ceremony. During Edward's reign, Protestantism was established for the first time in England, with reforms that included the abolition of clerical celibacy and the Mass and the imposition of compulsory English rather than Latin in church services.
  • Edward VI dies, age 15. Succession is complicated because his older, half-sister Mary is Catholic.

1553-1558, Mary I

Mary I
  • Mary I of England, oldest child of Henry VIII, daughter of Catherine of Aragon, succeeds to the throne. She is the first ruling queen in English history. She attempts to return England to Catholicism and restore church properties that her father Henry VIII had confiscated.
  • Mary I weds Philip II of Spain; the marriage is childless. Her death in 1558 ends the attempt to restore Catholicism in England.

1558-1603, Elizabeth I

Elizabeth I, with an inset of the Spanish Armada
  • Elizabeth I, Protestant, daughter of Anne Boleyn succeeds to the throne as a ruling queen, reigning 44 years. She never marries, leaving succession in doubt. England begins explorations in North America, aiming at planting colonies on the fringes of Spain's Empire.

1558

  • Act of Supremacy, the act of Parliament restoring the English monarch and successors as head of the Church, reversing the policy of Mary I, and restoring Protestantism.

1560s

Protestant Plantations of settlers in Ireland, 1550-1610
  • Elizabeth I attempts to conquer (Catholic) Ireland, to become England's first colony; fierce military campaign against the Irish population; economic goals of keeping Ireland a primitive economy with England supplying manufactured goods; beginning of plantation of Protestant settlers.

1578

  • Elizabeth I grants a charter to Sir Humphrey Gilbert to explore and colonize territories "unclaimed by Christian kingdoms". The terms of the charter granted by the Queen were vague, although Gilbert understood it to give him rights to all territory in the New World north of Spanish Florida. Led by Gilbert, the English briefly claimed St. John's, Newfoundland, in 1583, as the first English territory in North America at the royal prerogative of Queen Elizabeth I, but Gilbert was lost at sea on his return journey to England.

1584

  • Richard Hakluyt writes A Particuler Discourse Concerninge the Greate Necessitie and Manifolde Commodyties That Are Like to Growe to This Realme of Englande by the Westerne Discoueries Lately Attempted, Written in the Yere 1584, commissioned Sir Walter Raleigh and presented to the Queen. His objective was to recommend the enterprise of establishing English plantations in the region of North America not yet colonized by Europeans, and thus gain the Queen's support for Raleigh's expedition.

1585–1590

  • Roanoke Colony, two failed attempts by Sir Walter Raleigh to found the first permanent English settlement in North America. The first colony was established at Roanoke Island in 1585 as a military outpost, and was evacuated in 1586. The more famous second colony, known as the Lost Colony, began when a new group of settlers under John White arrived on the island in 1587; a relief ship in 1590 found the colony mysteriously abandoned. The fate of the 112 to 121 colonists remains unknown.

1586

  • Sir William Herbert, Englishman plants a Protestant colony in Ireland; granted lands confiscated The colony was in Ireland from Irish Catholic noble, Gerald Fitzgerald, 15th Earl of Desmond. He wrote a defense of colonization in Ireland, Croftus Sive de Hibernia Liber. He warned that colonists should not mix with the indigenous population, and urged the colonizers to compel the indigenous population to assimilate to the colonizers' culture."[2]

1588

Title page of Harriot's True Report
  • Thomas Harriot published A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia, an account of his voyage to Roanoke; contains an early account of the Native American population encountered by the expedition; it proved very influential upon later English explorers and colonists.

1594-1603

  • Nine Years' War was a conflict in Ireland between a confederacy of Irish lords (with Spanish support) and the English-led government. The war was primarily a response to the ongoing Tudor conquest of Ireland. The war was the largest conflict fought by England in the Elizabethan era and one of its costliest. At the height of the conflict (1600–1601) more than 18,000 soldiers were fighting in the English army in Ireland.

1603

  • Elizabeth I, "the Virgin Queen", last Tudor monarch dies (March 24)

1603–1649

House of Stuart rules England, Scotland, and Ireland; successful overseas colonies established; settlement of Protestants in majority Catholic Ireland, England's first colony; successful overseas English settlements established in North America and the Caribbean.

1603-1625, James I of England

James VI of Scotland, I of England

1605

1606

Coat of Arms of the Virginia Company
  • Virginia Company established as a corporation to colonize the east coast of North America.

1607

Jamestown's founding commemorated 1907
  • Jamestown, named after James I, founded (14 May) as the first permanent English settlement in North America by the Virginia Company

1607-1610

1608

1609

1612

  • Bermuda officially becomes part of Virginia.
  • John Rolfe, Virginia settler who married Native American Pocahontas, successfully cultivates a strain of tobacco that appeals to English tastes; it became the cash crop central to the Virginia economy throughout the whole colonial era.

1619

Depiction (1921) of the first meeting of the Virginia assembly
  • House of Burgesses established, the first representative legislature in the Americas, meeting in Jamestown, Virginia, (July 19)
Depiction (1910) of the first Africans in Virginia

1620

Signing The Mayflower Compact

1623

1624

  • Virginia becomes a royal colony

1625

  • Barbados claimed for James I of England.

Charles I, 1625-1649

Charles I

1628

  • Nevis settled by the English.

1629

1629-1640

1630

  • John Winthrop leads Puritan settlers to Massachusetts Bay. "Great Migration" of Puritans begins, with some 21,000 English men and women migrating by 1642. They come in family groups for religious reasons.

1632

Coat of Arms of Lord Baltimore

1634

1635

1636

1639-1653

1641

1642

1643

1649–1660, Commonwealth of England, the "Interregnum"

Trial of Charles I
Flag of the Commonwealth
Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector, 1653–58
Coat of Arms of the Protectorate, 1653–59
  • Trial of Charles I for treason by an ad hoc High Court, found guilty, and publicly executed by beheading. Oliver Cromwell is among those signing the death warrant. 30 January. Charles claimed the court had no jurisdiction to try him, asserting he ruled by divine right. The trial and execution of Charles I remain pivotal events that challenged the traditional ideas of monarchy. Patrick Henry references Charles I's fate in his "Give me liberty or give me death" speech.
  • Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, republic established 19 May 1649 by Parliament, lasting until 1660, when the monarchy is restored. It was England's first and only republic.
  • Maryland Toleration Act 1649, established religious toleration for all Christians, including Catholics. The colony was founded as a refuge for Catholics and protections continued during the Commonwealth.
  • Board of Trade established 1650
  • Act prohibiting trade with Barbados, Virginia, Bermuda, and Antigua for recognizing Charles II as ruler rather than Parliament. (October 30)
  • Navigation Act of 1651, 1652
  • Cromwell reforms the navy, increasing the number of ships, promoting officers on merit rather than family connections, and cracking down on embezzlement by suppliers and dockyard staff, thereby positioning England to mount a global challenge to Dutch mercantile dominance.
  • First Anglo-Dutch War 1652–53. The Commonwealth challenges the Dutch Republic, seeking to weaken it as a commercial power and carrier of goods.
  • Instrument of Government, first written constitution for England, Scotland, Ireland and overseas possessions adopted 15 December 1653. Power was formally split.
    • Executive power was held by the Lord Protector. The post was elective, not hereditary, but appointment was to be held for life.
    • Legislation was raised in Parliament. These had to be called triennially, with each sitting for at least five months.
    • Provision for a standing army was made "of 10,000 horse and dragoons, and 20,000 foot, in England, Scotland and Ireland, for the defense and security thereof" and "a convenient number of ships for guarding of the seas" (XXVII).
    • Permanent intolerance of Roman Catholicism.
  • First Families of Virginia arrive 1647–60. Major migration of royalists fleeing the Commonwealth of England. Virginia comes to be known as the "Old Dominion" for its loyalty to the crown.
  • Battle of the Severn, Maryland, a Puritan force fighting under a Commonwealth flag defeated a Royalist force fighting for Lord Baltimore 25 March 1655
  • Jews allowed to resettle in England 1655; banned since 1290.
  • Capture of Jamaica from Spain after England's failure to take Hispaniola. May 1655. Jamaica becomes Britain's richest possession, producing sugar with black slave labor.
  • Jews allowed to settle in Newport, Rhode Island, a major center of colonial trade. 1658.
  • Death of Oliver Cromwell 1658, succession of his ill-prepared son Richard Cromwell as Lord Protector
  • Resignation of Richard Cromwell 1659.

1660–1688, Restoration of Monarchy

1660

Charles II r. 1660–1685
  • Restoration of the Stuart monarchy, Charles II returns from European exile
  • Royal authority returns to the colonies

1663

  • Carolina proprietors receive a royal charter for Carolina colony

1664

  • English seize Dutch colony of New Netherland, renaming it New York
  • Charles II grants New York to his brother James, Duke of York as proprietor. He subdivides it and creates New Jersey.
  • Delaware colony founded.

1670

1675-1678

  • King Philip's War was an armed conflict in 1675–1678 in New England between a group of indigenous peoples of the Northeastern Woodlands against the English New England Colonies and their indigenous allies. The colonies assembled the largest army that New England had yet mustered, consisting of 1,000 militia and 150 Native allies. The war caused enormous loss of life and tremendous damage economically. The war was the Native last-ditch effort to eliminate British colonization, which instead helped create an independent American identity. The New England colonists fought the war themselves without support, giving them a group identity separate and distinct from Britain.

1676–77

  • Bacon's Rebellion of English frontiersmen Virginia against the royal governor William Berkeley for his failure to drive Native Americans from Virginia; rebels torch the capital of Jamestown.

1679

1679-1681

  • Exclusion Crisis during the reign of King Charles II of England bills in Parliament sought to exclude the King's brother and heir presumptive, James, Duke of York, from succession the throne because he was a Roman Catholic. Although none of the bills became law, two new parties formed. The Tories were opposed to this exclusion, were generally conservative. The other party, while the Whigs, supported it. Whigs later became important supporters of the American colonists' position in opposition to actions of the monarch.

1682

1683

1684

1685

James II, r. 1685–88

1686

1688

Expeditionary banner of William III Dutch stadholder during his successful invasion

1689–1700

1689

Allegory of the English Bill of Rights, with Wm. III and Mary II signing the document
Locke's Two Treatises
  • John Locke anonymously publishes Two Treatises of Government. The Second Treatise outlines Locke's ideas for a more civilized society based on natural rights and contract theory. The book is a key foundational and influential text in the theory of liberalism.

1690

  • Massachusetts Bay Colony the first to issue paper money, with other colonies following.

1691

1693

1699

Governor's Palace, Williamsburg

1700–1765

1700

  • English settlers in North America reach 200,000; French settlement in New France is no more than 12,000. The rest of North America is claimed by a waning Spanish Empire.[3]

1701

  • Act of Settlement mandated that succession to the English and Irish crowns to Protestants only, specifically also disqualifying anyone who became a Roman Catholic, or who married one. It had the effect of deposing the remaining descendants of Charles I, other than his Protestant granddaughter Anne, as the next Protestant in line to inherit to inherit the throne.
  • Yale College, New Haven, Connecticut founded. American Revolutionary War hero alumnus Nathan Hale.
Anne, Queen of Great Britain and Ireland

1702-1714, Queen Anne

1702

1706

1707

  • Acts of Union 1707, two acts of Parliament, one by the Parliament of Scotland in March 1707, followed shortly thereafter by an equivalent act of the Parliament of England, followed by a treaty, which politically joined the Kingdom of England and Kingdom of Scotland into a single "political state" named Great Britain, with Queen Anne as its sovereign. The English and Scottish acts of ratification took effect on 1 May 1707, creating the new kingdom, with its parliament based in the Palace of Westminster.

House of Hanover, established 1714

1714-1727, George I

George I
  • George I of Great Britain of the German state of Hanover is chosen monarch for Great Britain. Despite his being a German-speaking, fifty-year old ruler of a small Central Europe state, but is Protestant, a Lutheran, and considered a better alternative to the Catholic Stuart pretender to the throne, resident in France. George I came with a living male heir, allaying fears of yet another dynastic crisis.

1722

1727-1760, George II

George II

1732

George Washington

1733

1735

John Adams

1739

  • Stono Rebellion, South Carolina slave insurrection, largest in the colonial era.

1739-1748

1740

Thomas Jefferson

1742

1743

1744-1748

British and British American military besiege the French at Louisbourg, 1745

1746

1747

1748

Lord Halifax
  • Lord Halifax appointed head of the British Board of Trade, the only royal office dealing solely with the American colonies; attempts to end previous royal policy of salutary neglect of colonial affairs, allowing much local autonomy and loose oversight of royal officials. Implementation of a new, unitary and restrictive approach to royal control largely a failure, but renewed in 1763, after the Seven Years' War, called in colonial America the French and Indian War[4]

1749

  • Parliament passes the Currency Bill; includes a clause declaring that "any colonial legislative enactments contrary to [government] instructions null and void"; pushback from colonial agents and government reserved this for "future consideration."[5]
  • Halifax is founded as the capital of Nova Scotia (June 21)

1751

James Madison

1754

Join, or Die woodcut by Benjamin Franklin, 1754

1755

Mitchell Map of North America
  • The Mitchell Map, Map of the British and French Dominions in North America is published by cartographer John Mitchell, showing the western boundaries of English colonies extending beyond far past Mississippi River; political assertion by Britain of territory it disputed with France; used in the treaty negotiations ending the Revolutionary War in 1783.
  • College of Philadelphia later named University of Pennsylvania founded by Benjamin Franklin, who remained a trustee until his death.

1757

Alexander Hamilton
  • Prime Minister William Pitt commits to all-out effort in the Seven Years' War, incurring massive debt for the royal treasury
  • Alexander Hamilton born British Caribbean island of Nevis (January 11)

1759–60

After a campaign of three months British forces captured Quebec City after the Battle of the Plains of Abraham.
George III

1760

1760-1820, George III

  • George III, George II's grandson, age 22, succeeds to the throne. (October 25) He is the first of the Hanoverian monarchs to be born in Britain and speak English as his native tongue. His reign began during the Seven Years' War and continued through the entirety of the American War of Independence, the Napoleonic Wars, and the War of 1812.

1760

  • George III on the first day of his reign declares he wants an end to the war, since he saw it benefiting Hanover's interests in Europe, while Britain was being ruined financially by the expense of the war, vastly increasing the national debt.[6]

1763

New map of North America drawn following the Treaty of Paris (1763)
  • The Treaty of Paris (February 10) ends the Seven Years' War (1756–1763), called in North America the French and Indian War (1754–1763). France cedes most of its territories in North America to Great Britain, but Louisiana west of the Mississippi River is ceded to Spain. France also recognized the sovereignty of Britain over the islands of Dominica, Grenada, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Tobago. George III is dissatisfied with the terms of the treaty, which he deems favorable to the losing powers France and Spain rather than the winner, Great Britain.
  • George Grenville becomes Prime Minister (April 16) – a hardliner, who implemented policies to make the colonies contribute to paying off the massive debt from the Seven Years' War and assert Parliament's authority over the colonies.
Pontiac and war council
Eastern North America in 1775, including the British Province of Quebec (pink), Indian Reserve (pink), and areas open to European-American settlement in the 13 Colonies along the Atlantic coast (red), plus the westward border established by the Royal Proclamation of 1763 and present–day state borders
  • Pontiac's War is launched by a Native American confederation in the Great Lakes region under the overall command of the eponymous Ottawa chief. Previously allied with France, they were dissatisfied by the policies of the British under Amherst (April 25, 1763 – July 25, 1766)
  • Royal Proclamation of 1763 establishes royal control in territories newly ceded by France, land to which some English colonies claim. To prevent further violence between White settlers and Native Americans, the Proclamation sets a western boundary on the American colonies (October 7). American colonies view this as a limitation on their previous rights to continue expansion westward that encroached on Native American territory.
  • Navigation Acts re-enforced by George Grenville as a part of his attempt to reassert unified economic control over the British Empire following the Seven Years' War

1764

  • Sugar Act also known as uthe American Duties Act (April 5), intended to raise revenues, and the Currency Act (September 1), prohibiting the colonies from issuing paper money, are passed by Parliament. These Acts, coming during the economic slump that followed the French and Indian War, required that colonists contribute to paying off the war debt and lead to colonial protests.

1765–1774

1765

Official one-penny stamp
  • Bankruptcy of Boston private banker and military contractor Nathaniel Wheelwright, who fled to Guadaloupe, leaving £170,000 in unpaid debts resulting in financial disaster for Boston's economy.[7]
Col. Isaac Barré, MP
Anti-Stamp Act propaganda
  • Col. Isaac Barré Irish MP defends American colonists in a fiery speech in Parliament during the debate on the Stamp Act.[8]
  • Stamp Act enacted by Parliament (March 22) to impose control and help defray the cost of keeping troops in America to control the colonists, imposing a tax on many types of printed materials used in the colonies. Seen as a violation of rights, the Act sparks violent demonstrations in several Colonies. In May, Virginia's House of Burgesses Patrick Henry sponsors the Virginia Resolves claiming that, under British law, Virginians could be taxed only by an assembly to which they had elected representatives
  • Quartering Act (March 24), act of Parliament requiring the Colonies to provide housing, food, and other provisions to British troops. The act is resisted or circumvented in most of the colonies. In 1767 and again in 1769, Parliament suspended the governor and legislature of New York for failure to comply
Patrick Henry

1766

Liberty pole, New York City
  • William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham becomes Prime Minister (July 31), serving until 1768.
  • Stamp Act repealed by Parliament; Declaratory Act simultaneously issued asserting Parliament's "full power and authority to make laws and statutes ... to bind the colonies and people of America ... in all cases whatsoever"; designed to overrule actions by the legislative assemblies of each colony, which had traditionally held authority (March 18)
  • Liberty pole erected in New York City commons in celebration of the Stamp Act repeal (May 21). An intermittent skirmish with the British garrison over the removal of this and other poles, and their replacement by the Sons of Liberty, rages until the Province of New York is under the control of the revolutionary New York Provincial Congress in 1775

1767

Charles Townshend
John Dickinson
  • Townshend Acts – renewed Parliament assertion of its right to tax the American colonies after the repeal of the Stamp Act, placing duties on many items imported into America, including tea (June 29). The American colonists, who were denied any representation in Parliament, strongly condemned the Acts as an egregious abuse of power.
    • The Revenue Act 1767 passed on 29 June 1767.
    • The Commissioners of Customs Act 1767 created a new Customs Board for the North American colonies, to be headquartered in Boston with five customs commissioners to enforce shipping regulations and increase tax revenue for the Crown. Previously, customs enforcement was handled by the Customs Board in London. Due to the distance, enforcement was poor, taxes were avoided and smuggling was rampant. (29 June 1767.
    • The Indemnity Act 1767 (passed on 2 July 1767).
    • The New York Restraining Act 1767 forbade the New York Assembly and the governor of New York from passing any new bills until they complied with the Quartering Act 1765, which required New York to provide housing, food and supplies for the British troops now stationed permanently, despite the end of the French and Indian War. The New York Assembly resisted the Quartering Act on the grounds it did not limit the number of troops to be quartered and that Parliament could not constitutionally tax the colony without its consent. (Passed 2 July 1767).
    • The Vice Admiralty Court Act 1768 passed on 8 March 1768.
  • Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania by John Dickinson responds to the Townshend Acts.

1768

Boston Harbor 1768, engraving by Paul Revere showing British warships
John Hancock, owner of the Liberty
  • Liberty Riot (June 10) Mob violence in Boston attacking customs officials seizing the ship Liberty of John Hancock for smuggling. British send a warship armed with 50 cannons to occupy Boston harbor to impose order.
Johann de Kalb
  • Royal governor of Massachusetts dissolves the assembly (July) after the legislature defies his order to revoke Samuel Adams's circular letter. In August, in Boston and New York, merchants agree to boycott most British goods until the Townshend Acts are repealed. In September, at a town meeting in Boston, residents are urged to arm themselves. Later in September, more British warships sail into Boston Harbor; two regiments of British regular infantry land in Boston and set up permanent military occupation.
  • France sends military officer Johann de Kalb on a covert mission to assess American resistance to the British; he later becomes a general in the Continental Army, dies in combat

1769

  • Hancock's confiscated ship was refitted in Rhode Island to serve as a Royal Navy ship, renamed HMS Liberty, and then used to patrol off Rhode Island for customs violations. On 19 July 1769, the crew of Liberty under Captain William Reid accosted Joseph Packwood, a New London captain, and seized and towed two Connecticut ships into Newport. In retribution, Packwood and a mob of Rhode Islanders confronted Reid, then boarded, scuttled, and later burned the ship on the north end of Goat Island in Newport harbor as one of the first overt American acts of defiance against the British Crown.

1770

The Boston Massacre, an engraving by Patriot Paul Revere. The image frames the incident as British soldiers deliberately firing on a crowd.
  • Golden Hill incident in New York involving the Sons of Liberty; British troops wound civilians, including one death (January 19)
  • Lord North becomes Prime Minister of Great Britain (January 28), serving until 1782, essentially the entire span of the war
  • Shooting of Christopher Seider (February 22)
  • Boston Massacre (March 5), a small number of British soldiers, harassed by an unruly crowd of 300–400 and pelted with snowballs and oyster shells, fired upon the civilians, killing 5. The soldiers were arrested and tried. Patriot John Adams defended them in court.

1771

1772

  • Letters of Junius, a collection of anonymous political pieces written between 1769 and 1772, is published in London. One letter warns the king, "Remember that a throne acquired by one revolution may be lost by another."
Samuel Adams

1773

Boston Tea Party
  • James Rivington's New-York Gazetteer begins publication (April 22)
  • Tea Act passed by Parliament, requiring the colonies to buy tea solely from the East India Company rather than a variety of sources now deemed illegal (May 10)
  • Association of the Sons of Liberty in New York published by local Sons of Liberty (December 15)
  • Colonists in all major ports refuse to allow tea to be landed
  • Boston Tea Party (December 16)

1774

"Bostonians in Distress" after the closing of the port
    • Boston Port Act (March 31) – closing the port
    • Administration of Justice Act (May 20)
    • Massachusetts Government Act (May 20)
    • A second Quartering Act (June 2)
    • Quebec Act (June 22) set the terms for the governance of territory won from France in the French and Indian War; continuation of French civil law and governmental, and toleration of Catholicism; the territorial boundaries extended through the Ohio Valley, which the colonies of Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut colonies claimed by their charters and expected to profit from by land sales to white settlers, ignoring the claims of Native Americans.
Edmund Burke
  • Anglo-Irish MP Edmund Burke delivers the speech On American Taxation in Parliament, calling for a repeal of the Townshend acts, warning that the draconian and punitive policies against the Americans were wrong and would be counterproductive. He had the speech printed and it was widely distributed.
Carpenters' Hall where the First Continental Congress met

American Revolutionary War, 1775–1783

1775

Battle of Lexington
Independence Hall in Philadelphia, where the Second Continental Congress met
Battle of Bunker Hill, Boston
George Washington
Gadsden Flag, "Don't Tread on Me"

1776

Common Sense
  • Burning of Norfolk, Virginia (January 1)
  • New Hampshire ratifies the first state constitution (January 5)
  • Publication of Common Sense by Thomas Paine (January 10). It becomes a runaway bestseller, selling 500,000 copies, convincing many colonists that independence was the only course
  • Publication of English philosopher Richard Price's Observations on the Nature of Civil Liberty, the Principles of Government, and the Justice and Policy of the War with America, justifying the American cause and refuting arguments for those policies. It goes through 13 printings after its first publication. (February)
  • David Mathews appointed Mayor of New York, the highest ranking civilian officer for English North America for the duration of the Revolution
  • Battles: Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge, North Carolina (February 27) North Carolina militia victory; Battle of the Rice Boats, Georgia (March 2–3); Battle of Nassau (March 3–4)
British navy evacuates Boston
Beaumarchais funnels covert aid from France to the Americans
Board of War
Declaration of Independence, 1819 painting by John Trumbull
Statue of George III pulled down, New York City
Washington Crossing the Delaware, painting 1851 by Emanuel Leutze
  • Battle of Trenton (December 26) Washington's surprise attack on Hessian mercenaries and victory. The crossing of the Delaware River the night before is an iconic image.
  • Thomas Paine publishes The American Crisis, inspiring Americans to continue in their struggle. (1776–1777)

1777

Early revolutionary flag with the Stars and Stripes, whose design was attributed to Betsy Ross, first used 1777
Washington and Lafayette at the Battle of Brandywine
Surrender of General Burgoyne, 1821 painting by John Trumbull
Bicentennial Commemorative stamp
Baron von Steuben drills Continental soldiers at Valley Forge
  • Continental Army in third winter quarters at Valley Forge (December 19, 1777 – June 19, 1778)

1778

Coat of Arms of France

1779

Flag of Spain, ally of France

1780

Viceroy Bernardo de Gálvez
Battle of Camden, British victory, death of de Kalb in battle
Benedict Arnold

1781

Battle of Cowpens, S.C.
Battle of the Chesapeake
Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown, Virginia
  • Battle of Eutaw Springs (September 8)
  • The British surrender at Yorktown, effective end of the land war in North America. (Oct. 19) Joint French-American armies of Washington and Rochambeau and the French navy trap Cornwallis and force the surrender of his entire army. War continues on other fronts until the Peace Treaty of 1783.
  • Continental Army returns to Hudson Highlands and Morristown New Jersey for its seventh winter encampment (December)
  • Bank of North America chartered (December 31)

1782

1782–1783

1783

Signing of the Treaty of Paris showing only the American representatives; the British refused to sit for painting
George Washington resigns as commander-in-chief of the Continental Army
Allegorical painting of the British Empire taking in American Loyalists, 1783

1784–1787

1784

1785

1786

1787

Scene at the Signing of the Constitution of the United States, by Howard Chandler Christy (1940)
The Federalist Papers

1788–1797

1788

1789

1790

  • (May 29) Rhode Island becomes the 13th state to ratify the Constitution, with a vote of 34 to 32
  • Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton's plans for funding the Federal government and assuming states' debts approved.
  • Federal government moves from New York City to Philadelphia.

1791

James Madison, chief author and advocate for the Bill of Rights

1792

1793

  • President Washington and Vice President Adams begin their second terms (March 4).
  • Napoleonic Wars break out between France and Britain.
  • Neutrality Proclamation issued by Washington, leaving its alliance with France (April 22).

1794

  • Whiskey Rebellion, a violent tax protest in western Pennsylvania, suppressed by the Federal government.

1795

  • Jay's Treaty ratified in June toward resolving post Revolution tensions between the United States and Great Britain. First use of arbitration in modern diplomatic history for Canada–United States border disputes.

1796

1797

  • Adams becomes the second president, Jefferson becomes the second vice president (March 4).

1798

1800s

1800

1804

1825

See also

References

  1. ^ Cannon, John and Ralph Griffiths, The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy. Oxford University Press 1988, 319
  2. ^ Mancall, Peter C, Envisioning America: English Plans for the Colonization of North America, 2nd ed.. Bedford/ St Martin's 2017, 9-10
  3. ^ Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy, 499
  4. ^ Green, Jack P., "The Origins of the New Colonial Policy, 1748–1763" in The Blackwell Encyclopedia of the American Revolution. Cambridge: Basil Blackwell 1991, 95–106
  5. ^ Greene, Jack P. "The Origins of the New Colonial Policy, 1748–1763" in The Blackwell Encyclopedia of the American Revolution. Blackwell 1991, 99
  6. ^ Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy, p. 486
  7. ^ Anderson, Fred. Crucible of War: The Seven Years' War and the Fate of Empire in British North America, 1754–1766. New York: Vintage Books 2000, 668–69, 824
  8. ^ Middlekauff, Robert. The Glorious Cause: the American Revolution, 1763–1789. New York: Oxford University Press 2005, 78–79
  9. ^ "Founders Online: The Final Hearing before the Privy Council Committee for Plant …".
  10. ^ Jasanoff, Maya, Liberty's Exiles: American Loyalists in the Revolutionary World, New York: Vintage Press 2011, 25–27
  11. ^ Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress, New Haven, Connecticut: Lillian Goldman Law Library, Yale Law School: Avalon Project, October 14, 1774, retrieved January 10, 2022
  12. ^ Continental Congress (October 20, 1774). "Continental Association (Articles of Association)". Founders Online (founders.archives.gov). National Archives. Retrieved January 10, 2022.

Further reading