Colonial Times

  • Jan 1, 1215

    The Magna Carta

    The Magna Carta
    King John is forced by English nobles to sign the Magna Carta. The Magna Carta was a "great charter" that limited the right of the monarchy to levy taxes, protected the right to own property, and guaranteed trial by jury. The Magna Carta placed restrictions on English ruler's power.
  • Oct 12, 1492

    Columbus First Voyage

    Columbus First Voyage
    Columbus sailed to the West Indies, then he had three other voyages afterwards. He died thinking where he landed had been Asia.
  • Jan 1, 1497

    John Cabot

    John Cabot
    John Cabot left England and explores the New foundland. He wanted to find the northwest passsage, a sea route from the Atlantic to Pacific that passed through or around North America.
  • Jan 1, 1500

    Spanish explorers reach Florida

    Spanish explorers reach Florida,
  • Jan 1, 1510

    Vasco Nunez Balboa sees Pacific

    Vasco Nunez Balboa sees Pacific
    Vasco Nunez de Balboa was the first to set eyes on the Pacific Ocean.
  • Jan 1, 1510

    Ferdinand Magellan

    Ferdinand Magellan
    Ferdinand Magellan set out to find Atlantic-Pacific passage.He circumnavigated the world, except for Europe. He had also found a strait that today is known as the Strait of Magellan.
  • Jan 1, 1513

    Juan Ponce de Leon

    Juan Ponce de Leon
    Juan Ponce de Leon was the first Spaniard to set foot in the U.S. He sailed from Puerto Rico to investigate reports and lands in Florida.
  • Jan 1, 1519

    Hernando Cortes

    Hernando Cortes
    Hernando Cortes sails from Cuba to Mexico and then conquers the Aztecs.
  • Jan 1, 1524

    Giovanni da Verrazano

    Giovanni da Verrazano
    Giovanni da Verrazano explored the Atlantic coast from North Carolina to the Newfoudland. He also discovered the mouth over the Hudson River, and New York Bay.
  • Jan 1, 1524

    Jacques Cartier

    Jacques Cartier
    Jacques Ccartier made three trips to North America to find the northwest passgae. He then discovers the St.lawrence River and as far as present day Montreal.
  • Jan 1, 1531

    Franciso Pizarro

    Franciso Pizarro
    Franciso Pizarro lands in Peru searching for the Incas who had much gold, or so was said.
  • Jan 1, 1539

    Hernando De Soto

     Hernando De Soto
    De Soto traveled as far north as the Carolinas, and as far west as Oklahoma. Dieing in Louisiana in 1542, he had found the Mississippi River.
  • Jan 1, 1540

    Franciso Coronado

    Franciso Coronado
    Franciso Coronado wanted to find the "golden city", but then explores New Mexico, Arizona, Texas, and Kansas.
  • Jan 1, 1565

    St. Augustine

    St. Augustine
    Spanish build the fort St. Augustine. This occured because the Spanish feared France might take over the area. The fort was in northern Florida. Later on the Spanish borderlands were made, meaning lands along the frontier. The borderlands main function was to protect Mexico from other European powers.
  • Roanoke Island

    Roanoke Island
    Roanoke Island is the first colony established by the English in North America on the coast of North Carolina. It was abandoned one year later.
  • Second English Colony

    Second English Colony
    The second English colony established is a mystery.
  • Juan de Onate in New Mexico

    Juan de Onate in New Mexico
    Juan de Onate led an expedition to Mexico. He wanted to find gold, convert Native Americans in to Christianity, and establish a permanent colony. He established Santa Fe in 1598, which became the first permanent settlement in Spain.
  • The Enlightenment

    The Enlightenment
    The Enlightenment thinkers were people who believed that all problems could be solved by human reason. In 1690, John Locke argued that people have natural rights, or rights that every human has at birth. He also believed in a divine right. A divine right is the belief that monarchs get their authority to rule directly from God. A French, the Baron de Montesquieu, helped form U.S goverement by the thought of separation of powers. It was the division of powers into separate branches.
  • Samuel de Champlain explores land around St.Lawrence

    Samuel de Champlain explores land around St.Lawrence
    Samuel de Champlain makes the first eleven voyage to explore the map lands along the St.Lawerence River.
  • Nova Scotia

    Nova Scotia
    Champlain establishes the settlement Noa Scotia.
  • Virginia Company of London granted a charter, and Virginia is established

    Virginia Company of London granted a charter, and Virginia is established
    The Virginia Company of London got a charter, a document issued by the goverment granting specific rights, from King James the I. It gave the Virginia Company authority over the North America coastline. One hundred men came to Virginia in Chesapeake Bay and built the first permanent settlement by England in North America called Jamestown.
  • Separatists in Holland

    Separatists in Holland
    Several groups of Separatists settle in Holland, separating from the Church of England.
  • Champlain establishes Quebec

    Champlain establishes Quebec
    Samuel de Champlain establishes the settlement Quebec along the St.Lawrence River.
  • John Smith

    John Smith
    John Smith becomes the leader of Virginia with a hard working policy and leads Virginia well.
  • Champlian Lake

    Champlian Lake
    Champlain explores a lake on the border of present day Vermont, and New York. The Lake is now Champlain Lake.
  • Henry Hudson reaches New York

    Henry Hudson reaches New York
    Henry Hudson reaches New York and explores up what is now the Hudson River.
  • Henry Hudson sails to Artic

    Henry Hudson sails to Artic
    Henry Hhudson sails the Artic and finds what is now the Hudson Bay.
  • Dutch establish New Netherlands

    Dutch establish New Netherlands
    The Dutch trade with the Native Americans in Hudson River Valley. The trade became so profitable that the Dutch India Company established New Netherlands.
  • House of Burgesses

    House of Burgesses
    Virginias House of Burgesses, represenative goverment, meets for the first time.
  • Separatists in Virginia, then 100 men leaving on the Mayflower signing the Mayflower Compact

    Separatists in Virginia, then 100 men leaving on the Mayflower signing the Mayflower Compact
    The Separatists leave Holland, then settling in Virginia. These people are known as the piligrims, people who take a religious journey. One hundred piligrim men leave Virginia boarding the Mayflower, then the Mayflower is blown off course. These men land in Massachusetts calling their home Plymouth after a port city in England. Fourty-one men sign the Mayflower Compact of "just and equal laws."
  • First Thanksgiving

    First Thanksgiving
    The first Thanksgiving is held to set aside a day for the Piligrims to give thanks, especially to Cheif Squanto, who showed them skills to survive, and gave and planted them seeds.
  • Fort Orange

    Fort Orange
    Many settlers arrive in New Netherlands.Fort Orange then becomes Albany.
  • New Amsterdam

    New Amsterdam
    Settlers arrive in the Hudson River Valley. Colonists then name it New Amsterdam. Later on, New Amsterdam became New York City.
  • Massachusetts Bay Colony

    Massachusetts Bay Colony
    The Puratins leave England and form the Massachusetts Bay colony. Then, the Puratins recieve a charter, making settlements in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Tthe Puratins are led by John Winthrop who established Boston, Massachusetts.
  • Maryland becomes a colony

    Maryland becomes a colony
    King Charles I granted a charter for a new colony to George Calvert, a Catholic, who then founded the colony Maryland, which lay across from Chesapeake Bay. In his colony Catholics could live safely. When he died, his son, Lord Baltimore, made the Act of Toleration in 1649. It welcomed all Christians and gave male Christians the right to vote and hold in office.
  • Roger Williams founds Providence

    Roger Williams founds Providence
    Roger Williams is forced to leave Massachusetts Bay colony and then founded Providence, Rhode Island.
  • Thomas Hooker

    Thomas Hooker
    Thomas Hooker settles in Connecticut and founded Hartford, Connecticut.
  • Anne Hutchinson

    Anne Hutchinson
    Anne Hutchinson is expelled from Massachusetts because she questioned some Puratin teachings and then established a settlement on an island that is now part of Rhode Island.
  • John Wheelright

    John Wheelright
    John Wheelright moved to New Hampshire and founded the town Exeter.
  • Colleges beginning with Harvard

    Colleges beginning with Harvard
    Harvard was the first college in the English colonies. In 1639, colonists in Virginia founded the College of William and Mary, the first college in the south.
  • Baptism

    Baptism
    Maryland passed a law that Baptism did not lead to liberty. It meant that people could be enslaved for life.
  • The Navigation Acts

    The Navigation Acts were made by the English Parliament to support mercantilism. By these laws shipments from Europe to English colonies had to go through England first, any imports to England had to come on ships built and owned by British subjects, and colonies could sell key products such as tobacco and sugar, only to England. This helped create jobs for English workers.
  • Carolina established

    Carolina established
    King Charles II granted a charter to establish a colony south of Virgina. The area was called Carolina. There were also two parts; the southern and the north.
  • Slave Birth

    The Virginia Court held that any child born to a slave was a slave too.
  • Slaves Revolt

    Slaves Revolt
    The first serious slave revolt took place in Gloucester, Virginia. The uprising had failed, but other revolts took place in Connecticut and Virginia. Slave codes were made to restrict the rights and activities of slaves.
  • New Netherlands becomes New York

    New Netherlands becomes New York
    King Charles the II granted all the rights to Dutch lands in North America to his brother James. James had to conquer the territory. The Dutch surrendered, and New Netherlands was renamed after James, the Duke of York, to New York. New Amsterdam became its capital, New York City.
  • New Jersey

    New Jersey
    New Jersey was established. It was first a proprietary colony, which was ruled by an indvidual or family. Then, it became a royal colony, which was ruled by an English King.
  • Jacques Marquette

    Jacques Marquette
    Jacques Mmarquette founded two missions along the Great Lakes and Michigan.
  • Father Marquette and Louis Joliet

    Father Marquette and Louis Joliet
    Father Marquette and Louis Joliet canoe along the shores of Lake Michigan, and Green Bay Wisconsin. They reach the Mississippi River and in the Mississippi junction, the Arkansas River.
  • Bacon's Rebelion

    Bacon's Rebelion
    Nathaniel Bacon, the leader of the frontier settlers, organized a force of one thousand westerners. They began killing and attacking the Native Americans and burned Jamestown to the ground. It forced the govenor to run away. This is known as Bacon's Rebelion.
  • New Hampshire

    After fighting with Massachusetts, New Hampshire becomes a separate colony from a charter.
  • The Quaker William Penn establishes Pennsylvania

    The Quaker William Penn establishes Pennsylvania
    William Penn, a Quaker, recieved a land almsot as large as England which is now mainly Pennsylvania.
  • Rene Robert Cavelier (LaSalle)

    Rene Robert Cavelier (LaSalle)
    La Salle reached the Gulf of Mexico, and the Mississippi Valley. He founded Louisiana after King Louis XIV.
  • The Holy Expierment

    The Holy Expierment
    William Penn arrives in his colony, wrote a Frame of Goverement for Pennsylvania, and had a "holy expierment." The "holy expierment" was that people from different religious backrounds could live peacefully together in his colony.
  • The Bill of Rights

    The Bill of Rights
    King William and Queen Mary sign the English Bill of Rights. It is a written list of freedoms that a goverment promises to protect.
  • Spanish Missions

    Spanish Missions
    Spanish missionairies were made, such as San Francisco, San Diego, and San Antonio. A mission is a religious settlement. A number of other U.S. missions were made as well.
  • The Tidewater Region

    The Tidewater Region
    In the Tidewater Region, there were many platations, or large farms. The plantations led to economy domination. Crops were planted such as sugar, rice, and cotton. The Tidewater Region was mostly a white community and was full of the wealthy.
  • Triangular Trade

    Triangular Trade
    Slave traders had developed a regular routine, and it was known as the triangular trade. It was a three-way trade between colonies, the islands of the Caribbean, and Africa.
  • The Backcountry

    The Backcountry
    Immigrants were settling in the Backcountry, a frontier region extending from Pennsylvania to Georgia. The people were not usually English, but German, Scotch-Irish, and Pennsylvania Dutch. In the backcountry were mostly poor and unwealthy people. Few families had a servant or enslaved person. Everyone basically worked in the plantaions. Most people lived in one-room shacks.
  • General Assembly

    Penn is forced to agree that only the General Assembly could make laws. The king could overturn laws,
  • Delaware

    Delaware
    Delaware becomes a separate colony.
  • The Great Awakening

    The Great Awakening
    An emotion-packed movement went through the colonies. It was the time of religious revival none as the Great Awakening. Christians saw it as a decline in religion.
  • Georgia established and James Oglethrope

    Georgia established and James Oglethrope
    Geogia was founded because the English feared that Spain would expand its colony northward to Florida, and a colony south of the Carolina's would keep the Spanish bottled up in Florida. James Oglethrope wanted a colony to protect English debtors, or people who owed money.
  • Benjamin Franklin

    Benjamin Franklin
    Benjamin Franklin publishes his most popular work "Poor Richard's Almanack." He becomes a loved writer from the age of 17. He started the newspaper "Pennsylvania Gazette." He discovered things about electricity, founded a library, fire department, and invented the bifocal eyeglasses and a stove.
  • Freedom of the Press

    Freedom of the Press
    A notable court case, the Zenger trial, helped establish an important right. This right was freedom of the press, the right of journalists to publish the truth without restriction or penalty.
  • The Mason Dixon Line

    The Mason Dixon Line
    Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon were hired to settle boundaries between Maryland and Pennsylvania. The boundary is called the Mason Dixon Line.
  • California missions

    California missions
    Junipero Serra establishes mission becoming San Diego. Serra then later on establishes other missions in California which are now San Francisco and Los Angeles.
  • End to Slavery

    Slavery ends after much chaos of trade, revolts, etc.