APUSH Unit 3 TimeLine
APUSH Unit 3 TimeLine
UNIT 3 1750-1800
1750s 1760s 1770s 1780s 1790s
Work, Exchange, & American & National
Identity (NAT)
Patrick Henry publishes 2nd Continental Thomas Paine published
Albany Plan of Union the Virginia Resolves, Phyllis Wheatley publishes Congress (1775) Common Sense (1776)
attempts to unite colonies rejecting Parliamentary Poems on Various Subjects,
(1754) taxation (1765) Religious and Moral (1773) 1st Continental Declaration of Independence
Congress (1774) (1776)
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Environment (GEO) Technology (WXT)
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Settlement (MIG)
Settlement (MIG)
Naturalization Act of 1790 limits citizenship to “free Whiskey Rebellion highlights tensions over the
Migraiton &
Migraiton &
white persons” residing in the US for at least 2 years power of the federal government (1791-1794)
America in the
Treaty of Fort
World (WOR)
World (WOR)
Parliament’s Boston Tea Party Mississippi River (1795)
British goods (1773) Continental Army wins Stanwix forces
authority to tax Battle of Saratoga (1777)
(1765) (1767) Iroquois to cede XYZ Affair heightens
Coercive Acts punish land in Ohio River tensions between the US and
Franco-American Treaty Valley (1784)
Massachusetts for Boston secures alliance with France (1797-1798)
Tea Party (1774) French (1778)
Haitian Revolution, inspired in part by the American
Revolution, established first black republic, sparking
fears about enslaved insurrections (1791-1804)
Culture (ARC)
First African Baptist Hector St. John de
Church becomes Crèvecoeur publishes
first official Black Letters from an
congregation in North American Farmer
America (1777) (1782)
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Abigail Adams Vermont Pennsylvania Noah Webster New York
encourages abolishes abolishes publishes The Manumission Society
John Adams to slavery slavery American forms to advocate for
(1777) (1780) Spelling Book abolition and Black
Social Structures
Social Structures
“remember the
ladies” (1776) to promote rights (1785)
an American
(SOC)
(SOC)
Free and enslaved Africans petition education
system (1783) Young Ladies’ Academy
colonial governments for freedom of Philadelphia is first
(1773-1800) school for women’s
education in the US
(1787)