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i tried ask.com, wikipidi, dictionary .com and etc.
they'ar to long or not known

help me out if you want points

The nullification crises 1832:
Compromise of 1850:
Bleeding Kansas 1820:
Republican party July 1852:
The dread schott case:
Harpers ferry 1859:
The election of 1860:
Founding of the confederacy Dec. 1860:
The emancipation proclamation 1863:

2006-10-07 10:03:30 · 8 answers · asked by Wesley!!! 3 in Education & Reference Homework Help

cmon i need help to defign these please

they are events and people that dd something in america

2006-10-07 10:12:06 · update #1

1900?
where before that
know i know mt spelling is bad but please help rATHER THAN CHEW ME OUT!

info in any text book is to scatter out
this area is homework help

2006-10-07 16:47:39 · update #2

8 answers

The emancipation proclamation was when Abraham Lincoln gave a speech at the battle of Gettysburg of coarse after the battle. The other 8 you should look up at www.wikipedia.com which is a free encyclopedia

2006-10-07 10:10:48 · answer #1 · answered by chris 210 1 · 0 0

ex.?
The Nullification Crisis was a sectional crisis during the presidency of Andrew Jackson centered around the question of whether a state can refuse to recognize or to enforce a federal law passed by the United States Congress. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nullification_Crisis


do u need info about those events?
they're all over the inet or try history books..

2006-10-07 10:13:48 · answer #2 · answered by ♥☻karma☻♥ 2 · 0 0

in view that we now have entry to the the entire stuff that continues us working at scale back frequencies so we're less complicated to manipulate and paintings to make the wealthy get richer. the politicians and wall avenue pros attempt to maintain the ninety nine% sated with fabric as an alternative than trained and conscious. that means the employees consider the one targets in existence are to receive matters. they maintain acquiring matters like colossal residences and vehicles and holidays and houses with fancy perspectives and wealthy plastic-y false frame constituents and garments... and the sector thinks we now have all of it... however that stuff is solely MATERIAL and it does not honestly result in HAPPINESS... so without a doubt we want the prozac and the money and the dangerous meals and the we ought to maintain patting politicians at the backs and we quit wondering them and we bcome even less complicated to manipulate... we LOOK comfortable however we're UNDER a spell of low-vigor inducing parts, meals and routine (or lack there of) the humanities are suppressed so our youngsters aren't utilising the WHOLE brains anymore.. they're punished for wondering authority now rather of rewarded for instructing the academics... my rant. thank you :)

2016-08-29 06:26:37 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

If you actually looked you could find these things. I'm in college and I know I learned them in high school and middle school. Look them up yourself, I'm not giving you an easy out.

2006-10-07 10:15:21 · answer #4 · answered by bluecrystalsmile 2 · 0 0

you also need to check your spelling, The Dred Scott case for instance, the computer will not find it if you can't spell it.

2006-10-07 10:14:05 · answer #5 · answered by LatterDaySaint and loving it 6 · 0 0

Summary of event

1754 - The French and Indian War
1755 - Braddock defeated
1758 - British take Louisbourg
1759 - British take Quebec
1760 - British take Montreal
1763 - Treaty of Paris ends French and Indian War Pontiac attacks Detroit British issue Proclamation of 1763
1764 - The End of Salutary Neglect
1764 - Britain begins to enforce the Navigation Act Parliament passes the Sugar and Currency Acts
1765 - Parliament passes the Stamp and Quartering Acts Stamp Act Congress convenes in New York
1766 - Parliament repeals the Stamp Act, passes the Declaratory Act
1766 - Taxation Without Representation
1767 - Townshend Acts impose duties on goods, suspend the New York assembly
1768 - British troops occupy Boston
1770 - Parliament repeals all duties under the Townshend Acts except tax on tea Boston Massacre occurs
1773 - Boston Tea Party occurs
1774 - Parliament passes Coercive, or Intolerable, Acts Parliament passes Quebec Act
1775 - The First Continental Congress and Boycott
1775 - Lexington, Concord, and the Second Continental Congress
1776 - The Declaration of Independence
1775 - Battle of Lexington and Concord Second Continental Congress convenes
1776 - Jefferson writes Declaration of Independence
1777 - Battle of Saratoga
1778 - France and United States form Franco-American Alliance
1779 - Spain enters war against Britain
1781 - British forces under Cornwallis surrender to Washington at Yorktown
1783 - Peace of Paris signed to end war

Now, jumping to post world war II
1947 - Containment doctrine begins to influence U.S. foreign policy
1948 - USSR blockades Berlin; United States responds with Berlin airlift
1949 - USSR conducts first successful atomic bomb test China falls to Communist rebels under Mao Zedong
1954 - Eisenhower articulates domino theory
1955 - U.S.-backed Ngo Dinh Diem ousts Bao Dai from power in South Vietnam
1955 - Diem initiates ARVN-enforced land redistribution
1959 - Diem regime passes Law 10/59 to root out Communists
1960 - South Vietnamese Communists form National Liberation Front
1960 - USSR begins airlifting to Communist Pathet Lao forces in Laos
1961 - Kennedy takes office
1962 - United States (MACV); sends first “military advisors” to Vietnam Cuban Missile Crisis increases Cold War tensions
1963 - Battle of Ap Bac sees Viet Cong forces rout ARVN Buddhist monk immolates himself in protest of Diem’s policies Diem overthrown in U.S.-backed coup Kennedy assassinated; Johnson becomes president
August 1964 - U.S. destroyers in Gulf of Tonkin report North Vietnamese attacks U.S. Congress passes Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
November 1964 - Johnson wins presidential election
February 1965 - Pleiku Raid kills eight U.S. soldiers U.S. forces begin Operation Rolling Thunder bombing campaign
June 1965 - United States reaches 75,000 troops in Vietnam
July 1965 - Johnson authorizes an additional 100,000 troops, allocates 100,000 more for 1966
November 1965 - Battle of Ia Drang
January 1967 - United States reaches nearly 400,000 troops in Vietnam
June 1967 - CIA initiates Phoenix Program
January 1968 - NVA attacks U.S. Marine base at Khe Sanh North Vietnamese launch Tet Offensive
February 1968 - McNamara resigns as secretary of defense
March 1968 - Westmoreland causes uproar by requesting 200,000 more troops U.S. soldiers kill 500 Vietnamese civilians in My Lai Massacre
1959 - Students for a Democratic Society is founded
1965 - First draft riots occur on college campuses
1966 - Fulbright publishes The Arrogance of Power
1967 - Johnson authorizes CIA to investigate antiwar activists 35,000 protesters demonstrate outside the Pentagon
1968 - Protest outside Democratic National Convention turns violent
1970 - National Guard kills four protesters at Kent State University
1969 - Nixon announces policy of Vietnamization and Nixon Doctrine Ho Chi Minh dies
1970 - United States bombs Viet Cong sites in Cambodia Student protests in United States turn violent
1971 - Nixon sends forces into Laos My Lai court-martial begins New York Times publishes Pentagon Papers
1972 - Kissinger begins secret negotiations with North Vietnam Nixon visits China, USSR Last U.S. combat troops leave Vietnam Nixon wins reelection Nixon authorizes Christmas Bombing in North Vietnam
1973 - Cease-fire declared in Vietnam; Last U.S. military personnel leave Watergate scandal escalates Congress passes War Powers Resolution
1974 - Nixon resigns; Ford becomes president
1975 - Saigon falls to North Vietnamese

The list is too long, you have to state which part of American History you need.

2006-10-07 10:24:23 · answer #6 · answered by antunxxx 4 · 0 0

i would look in your history book's index.

2006-10-07 10:12:22 · answer #7 · answered by el duderado 2 · 0 0

I don't understand what you need to know...

? ? ?

2006-10-07 10:07:40 · answer #8 · answered by Amaya 3 · 0 0

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