A Short History of the United States by Channing

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A Short History of the United States by Channing Page 32

by Edward Channing


  Albany Congress.

  Algerine War.

  Alien and Sedition Acts.

  Allen, Ethan.

  America, discovery of; naming of.

  American Association.

  Americus Vespucius, see Vespucius.

  André, Major.

  Andros, Sir Edmund.

  Antietam, battle of.

  Antislavery agitation.

  Appomattox, surrender at.

  Arnold, Benedict, at Quebec; in Burgoyne's campaign; treason of.

  Arthur, C.A., Vice-President; President.

  Articles of Confederation.

  Atlanta Campaign.

  Bacon's Rebellion.

  Balboa discovers Pacific Ocean.

  Baltimore, Lord.

  Bank of the United States, the First; the Second.

  Bennington, battle of.

  Blaine, J.G., candidate for the Presidency.

  Blair, F.P.

  Blockade of Confederate seaports.

  "Border States" in Civil War.

  Boston, founded; massacre at; destruction of tea at; closing of the port of; siege of; map of siege.

  Braddock, British general.

  Bragg, Confederate general.

  Brandy wine, battle of.

  Breckinridge, John C., Vice-President; defeated for Presidency.

  Brown, General Jacob, invades Canada.

  Brown, John, in Kansas; at Harper's Ferry; executed.

  Buchanan, James, President; comes out for the Union.

  Buell, General.

  Bull Run, battles of.

  Bunker Hill, battle of.

  Burgoyne's campaign.

  Burnside, General A.E.

  Cabot, John, discovers North America.

  Calhoun, John C., portrait; in Congress; Vice-President; his Exposition.

  California, Drake on the coast of; seized by Americans; discovery of gold in; seeks admission to the Union.

  Camden, battle of.

  Canada, conquest of; invasion of 1775; in War of 1812.

  Carolina, settlement of; rebellion in 1719; separated into two provinces.

  Cartier (kar'tia').

  Cass, Lewis, defeated for the Presidency.

  Cathay.

  Champlain, Samuel de.

  Champlain, Lake.

  Chancellorsville, battle of.

  Charles II, his colonial policy.

  Charleston, S.C., attacked; captured; in Civil War.

  Chattanooga, battle of.

  "Chesapeake," outrage on the.

  Chicago, growth of; great fire at.

  Columbian Exhibition.

  Chickamauga, battle of.

  Cipango.

  Civil Service under Washington and Adams; under Jefferson; "Spoils System" in the; reform of the.

  Clark, General G.R., conquers the Northwest.

  Clay, Henry, portrait; in Congress; and the Missouri Compromise; defeated for the Presidency; and the Compromise of 1850.

  Cleveland, Grover, portrait; President; reëlected President.

  Clinton, British general.

  Columbus discovers America.

  Committees of Correspondence.

  Compromises of the Constitution; of 1820; of 1850.

  Concord, battle of.

  Confederate States.

  Confederation of New England.

  Confederation of the United States, Articles of.

  Connecticut, settlement of; charter of.

  Constitution, formation of the; facsimile of first lines; first ten amendments; text of, Appendix.

  "Constitution," the frigate, chased by a British fleet; and the "Guerrière." Constitutional Union Party.

  Continental Congress, first; second.

  Coronade, in the Southwest.

  Cotton gin.

  Cowpens, battle of.

  Crawford, William H., defeated for the Presidency.

  Creek War.

  Critical Period.

  Crittenden Compromise.

  Cromwell, Oliver, and the colonies.

  Cuba, rebellions in (1867-77); (1894-98).

  Dale, Sir Thomas.

  Davis, Jefferson.

  Decatur, Stephen, portrait; in Algerine War.

  Declaration of Independence.

  Declaratory Act.

  Democratic Party.

  Detroit, surrender of.

  Dewey, Admiral.

  Dickinson, John.

  Douglas, Stephen A., Kansas-Nebraska Act; debate with Lincoln; defeated for Presidency; comes out for the Union.

  Draft Riots.

  Drake, Sir Francis, his great voyage.

  Dred Scott Decision.

  Duquesne, Fort.

  Dutch Colonies.

  Elections, presidential, of 1800; of 1824; of 1840; of 1844; of 1848; of 1852; of 1856; of 1860; of 1868; of 1872; of 1876; of 1880; of 1884; of 1888; of 1892; of 1896.

  Electoral Commission.

  Embargo, Jefferson's.

  Era of Good Feeling.

  Ericson, Leif (Life er'ik-son).

  Ericsson, John.

  Erie Canal.

  Farragut, Admiral D.G., portrait; at New Orleans.

  Federal Ratio.

  Federalist Party.

  Fifteenth Amendment.

  Fillmore, Millard, portrait; chosen Vice-President; becomes President.

  Florida, discovered; settled; purchased.

  Fourteenth Amendment.

  France, explorers and colonists of; colonists conquered by British; recognizes independence of the United States; influence of revolution in, on America; controversy.

  Franklin, Benjamin, portrait; early life of; examined by House of Commons; Minister to France; in Federal Convention.

  Fredericksburg, battle of.

  Free Soil Party.

  Freeman's Farm, battles of.

  Frémont, John C.; portrait; in California; defeated for the Presidency.

  Fugitive Slave Act.

  Fulton, Robert.

  Gadsden Purchase.

  Gag Resolutions.

  Gage, British general.

  Gama, da (dä gä'mä).

  Garfield, J. A.; elected President; murdered.

  Garrison, W. L.

  Gates, General; in Burgoyne's campaign; defeated at Camden.

  Genet, French Minister.

  Georgia, settlement of.

  Gettysburg, battle of.

  Ghent, Treaty of.

  Grant, General U.S.; portrait; seizes Cairo; captures Fort Donelson; at Shiloh; captures Vicksburg; at Chattanooga; Lieutenant-General; his Virginia Campaign; elected President; reëlected President.

  Great Britain; Treaty of 1783; Jay's Treaty; Treaty of Ghent; Treaty of 1842; Oregon Treaty; Alabama claims.

  Greeley, Horace; portrait; on secession; defeated for Presidency.

  Greene, General, his Southern Campaigns.

  Grenville, George.

  Guilford, battle of.

  Hamilton, Alexander; Secretary of the Treasury; his financial policy; his constitutional ideas; intrigues against Adams.

  Harrison, Benjamin, elected President.

  Harrison, General W.H.; at Tippecanoe; elected President; his death.

  Hartford Convention.

  Harvester, the.

  Hawaii annexed.

  Hawkins, Sir John.

  Hayes, R.B., elected President.

  Henry, Patrick; portrait; Parson's Cause; his Stamp Act Resolutions; in Continental Congress; opposes Constitution.

  Hood, Confederate general.

  Hooker, General Joseph.

  Hudson, Henry.

  Impressment.

  Iroquois.

  Jackson, General Andrew; portrait; a Creek War; defends New Orleans; candidate for Presidency; elected President; his administration.

  Jamestown, founded.

  Jay, John.

  Jay's Treaty.

  Jefferson, Thomas; portrait; writes Declaration of Independence; Secretary of State; his constitutional ideas; Vice-President; writes Kentucky R
esolutions; elected President; his administrations.

  Johnson, Andrew; portrait; President; his reconstruction policy; impeached.

  Johnston, Confederate general.

  Judiciary Act of 1801.

  Kansas, struggle for.

  Kansas-Nebraska Act.

  Kentucky Resolutions.

  Kieft, Dutch governor.

  King Philip's War.

  King's Mountain, battle of.

  Lake Erie, battle of.

  La Salle, his explorations.

  Lee, R. E., Confederate general.

  Lee, R. H.

  Leon, Ponce de.

  Lewis and Clark.

  Lexington, battle of.

  "Liberty," the, seized.

  Lincoln, Abraham; portrait; early life; Debate with Douglas; elected President; first inaugural; Emancipation Proclamation; murdered; reconstruction policy.

  Livingston, R. R.; portrait; negotiates Louisiana Purchase.

  Locomotive invented.

  Louisiana; settlement of; ceded to Spain; returned to France; purchased by United States.

  Loyalists.

  Lundy's Lane, battle of.

  Madison, James; portrait; in Federal convention; writes Virginia Resolutions; President; his war message.

  Magellan, his great voyage.

  "Maine," destruction of the.

  Manhattan Island.

  Manila Bay, battle of.

  Manila, captured.

  Maryland Toleration Act.

  Mason and Dixon's Line.

  Massachusetts Circular Letter.

  Mayflower compact.

  McClellan, General G.B.; portrait; Peninsular Campaign; at Antietam.

  McCormick, C.H., invents horse reaper.

  McKinley, William; portrait; President.

  Meade, General G.G.

  Menendez (mä-nen'deth).

  Mexico; War with; the French in.

  Missouri Compromise.

  "Monitor" and "Merrimac." Monmouth, battle of.

  Monroe Doctrine.

  Monroe, James; portrait; negotiates Louisiana Purchase; President.

  Morgan, General D..

  Morse, S.F.B.

  Moultrie, General.

  Murfreesboro', battle of.

  Nashville, battle of.

  National debt; origin of; Jefferson and the.

  Neutral commerce.

  Neutrality Proclamation.

  New Amsterdam.

  New England colonies, settlement of.

  New England Confederation.

  New Jersey.

  New Netherland.

  New Orleans; defended by Jackson; captured by Farragut.

  New Sweden.

  New York City; in 1800; in 1830; in 1860.

  Non-Conformists.

  Non-Importation agreements.

  Non-Intercourse Act.

  North Carolina.

  Nullification.

  Oglethorpe, General.

  Ordinance of 1787.

  Oregon; claims to; divided.

  Oriskany, battle of.

  Otis, James.

  Pacific Ocean, discovered.

  Panic; of 1837; of 1873.

  Paris; Peace of (1763); (1783).

  Parson's cause.

  Parties, political, formation of.

  Peninsular Campaign.

  Penn, William.

  Pennsylvania, settlement of.

  Pequod War.

  Perry, Commodore.

  Petersburg, blockade of.

  Petition, right of.

  Philadelphia.

  Pierce, Franklin; portrait; President; comes out for the Union.

  Pilgrims.

  Pitt, William.

  Plattsburg, battle of.

  Plymouth, settlement of.

  Polk, James K.; portrait; President.

  Polo, Marco.

  Pope, General John.

  Porto Rico, occupied.

  President, how chosen.

  Princeton, battle of.

  Proclamation of 1763.

  Providence, founded.

  Puritans, the.

  Quakers.

  Quebec Act.

  Quebec; founded; captured.

  Railroads, growth of.

  Ralegh, Sir Walter.

  Reaper, the horse.

  Reconstruction Acts.

  Religion.

  Republican Party; of Jefferson; of Lincoln.

  Revolutionary War, campaigns of.

  Rhode Island, settlement of.

  Ribault (re'bo'), French explorer.

  Rockingham Ministry.

  Rosecrans, General.

  St. Augustine, founded.

  Sampson, Admiral.

  Sandys, Sir Edwin.

  Santiago.

  Saratoga, Burgoyne's surrender at.

  Schuyler. General.

  Scott, General Winfield; his Mexican campaign; defeated for Presidency; views on secession.

  Secession.

  Separatists.

  Seward, W.H.; portrait; on Kansas.

  Shays's Rebellion.

  Sheridan, General Philip; portrait; at Chickamauga; in Virginia; his Valley Campaigns.

  Sherman, General W.T.; portrait; at Chattanooga; captures Atlanta; the march through Georgia; the march through the Carolinas.

  Shiloh, battle of.

  Slavery; in Virginia; compromises; Missouri Compromise; petitions in Congress; Compromise of 1850; abolished.

  Soto, de (dä so'to) in the Southeast.

  South Carolina; settlement of; nullification in; secession of.

  Spain; pioneers of; Treaty with (1795); War with.

  Spotsylvania, battle of.

  "Squatter Sovereignty." Stamp Act.

  Stamp Act Congress.

  Stark, General.

  Steamboat, the.

  Stephen, A. H.

  Steuben, Baron.

  Stowe, Mrs. H.B.

  Stuart Tyranny in the colonies.

  Stuyvesant, Dutch governor.

  Sumter, fall of Fort.

  Tariffs; 1789; of 1816, 1824, 1828; the Compromise; McKinley; Dingley.

  Taylor, General Zachary; portrait; his Mexican Campaign; President; death.

  Tea Tax.

  Tecumseh or Tecumthe.

  Telegraph, the.

  Tenure of Office Acts; Crawford's; of 1867.

  Texas; Republic of; admitted to the Union.

  Thirteenth Amendment.

  Thomas, General George H.; portrait; his services.

  Ticonderoga.

  Tippecanoe, battle of.

  Townshend Acts, the.

  Treaties; 1778 (with France); 1783 (with Great Britain); Jay's Treaty; 1795 (with Spain); 1800 (with France); Louisiana Purchase; of Ghent; Florida Purchase; 1842 (with Great Britain); Oregon Treaty; 1848 (with Mexico); Gadsden Purchase; 1898 (with Spain).

  Trent Affair.

  Trenton, battle of.

  Twelfth Amendment.

  Tyler, John; portrait; Vice-President; President.

  United States, area and population of; in 1800; in 1830; in 1860.

  Van Buren, Martin; President; defeated for Presidency.

  Verrazano (ver-rä-tsä'no).

  Vespucius, Americus; portrait; his voyages.

  Vicksburg, Campaign of.

  Vinland.

  Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions.

  Virginia Resolves of 1769.

  Virginia, settlement of.

  War of 1812.

  Washington, George; portrait; his early life; first campaign; on the Boston Post Act; in Continental Congress; in Revolutionary War; in Federal Convention; President; his neutrality proclamation; farewell address; death.

  Washington City.

  Webster, Daniel; portrait; his reply to Hayne.

  Webster, Noah, portrait; his Dictionary.

  Whig Party, the.

  Whiskey Insurrection.

  Whitney.

  Wilderness, battle of the.

  Williams, Roger.

  Wilmot Pr
oviso.

  Wolfe, General.

  Writs of Assistance.

  X.Y.Z. Affair.

  Yorktown, capture of.

  DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE

  In Congress, July 4, 1776,

  THE UNANIMOUS DECLARATION OF THE THIRTEEN UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

  When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the Powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

  We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.--Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world.

  He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.

  He has forbidden his Governors to pass Laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his Assent should be obtained; and when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them.

  He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.

  He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their Public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.

  He has dissolved Representative Houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people.

 

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