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| | | 1524 Verrazano explores NE coast |
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1614 John Smith maps New England | | | |
| | | 1614 Dutch explore the Connecticut River |
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1624 Pemaquid (Maine) established | | | |
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| | | 1634 Massachusetts immigrants settle Wethersfield and Windsor, Connecticut |
1634 John Endecott defaces King's colors | | | |
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| | | 1642 English Civil War begins |
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1646 Massachusetts begins to establish "praying towns" | | | |
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| | | 1647 Alice Young hung in Hartford |
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1648 Massachusetts executes Margaret Jones | | | |
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| | | 1649 Charles I executed |
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1654 Harvard establishes Indian College | | | |
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| | | 1656 First Quaker missionaries arrive in New England |
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1660 - 1725 A succession of conflicts transforms indigenous/ colonial relations. | | | |
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| | | 1662 Beginning of Hartford witch outbreak. |
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1671 Katherine Naylor, the wife of a Boston merchant, sues for divorce. | | | |
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| | | 1675 King Philip's War |
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1704 Deerfield Massacre | | | |
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| | | 1745 Pigwackets in exile in Massachusetts |
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1764 Thomas Hutchinson, "History of the Colony and Province of Massachusetts Bay" | | | |
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| | | 1774 First Continental Congress |
1774 John Malcolm tarred and feathered | | | |
| | | 1774 Intolerable Acts |
1774 In December, Paul Revere rides to Portsmouth, New Hampshire | | | |
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| | | 1783 Boston establishes annual July 4 oration |
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1791 Vermont joins the union as the 14th state | | | |
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| | | 1800 With 1,400,000 people N.E. contains 28 percent of the U.S. population |
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1804 Lewis and Clark Expedition begins | | | |
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| | | 1814 Washington Irving, "Philip of Pokanoket" |
1814 Hartford Convention considers secession | | | |
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| | | 1818 John Trumbull's painting of the signing of the Declaration of Independence displayed at Faneuil Hall |
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1824 Lydia Sigourney, "Sketches of Connecticut Forty Years Since" | | | |
| | | 1824 Pilgrim Hall museum opened in Plymouth |
1824 A Narrative of the Life of Mrs. Mary Jemison published | | | |
| | | 1824 Lydia Maria Child, "Hobomok: A Tale of Early Times" |
1824 Lafayette feted in America | | | |
| | | 1824 Bunker Hill monument begun |
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1828 Female textile workers strike at Dover, N.H. | | | |
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| | | 1830 New Hampshire legislature encourages sericulture |
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1834 Whittier publishes "The Slave Ship" | | | |
| | | 1834 Textile strikes at Lowell, Massachusetts and Dover, N.H. |
1834 James Hawkes, A Retrospect of the Boston Tea-Party, with a Memoir of George R.T. hewes" | | | |
| | | 1834 Shoebinders of Lynn, Massachusetts form a society "for the protection and promotion of Female Industry" |
1834 Burning of Ursuline convent in Charlestown | | | |
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| | | 1835 George Robert Twelves Hewes feted in Providence and Boston |
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1836 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow begins teaching modern languages at Harvard. | | | |
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| | | 1837 John Sibley publishes story of Washington Elm |
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1840 Agitation for Ten-hour Day | | | |
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| | | 1841 Catharine Williams, "The Neutral French, or the Exiles of Nova Scotia" |
1841 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, "The Skeleton in Armor" | | | |
| | | 1841 Catharine Beecher, "A Treatise on Domestic Economy" |
1841 Longfellow, "The Wreck of the Hesperus," in Ballads and Other Poems | | | |
| | | 1841 Amistad case argued before the Supreme Court |
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1842 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Poems on Slavery | | | |
| | | 1842 Dorr Rebellion in Rhode Island |
1842 Eleanor Field gives the Rhode Island Historical Society a basket purportedly made during King Philip's War. | | | |
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| | | 1842 With the encouragement of his friend Charles Sumner, Longfellow publishes "Poems on Slavery |
1842 Wadsworth Atheneum opens in Hartford | | | |
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| | | 1845 New England Historic Genealogical Society Founded |
1845 Frederick Douglas publishes his narrative. | | | |
| | | 1845 Beginning of Irish famine |
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1846 Mexican War begins | | | |
| | | 1846 Hawthorne, "Roger Malvyn's Burial" in Mosses From An Old Manse |
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1847 Sarah Hale, ed. of Godey's begins Thanksgiving campaign | | | |
| | | 1847 John Greenleaf Whittier, "Supernaturalism of New England" |
1847 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, "Evangeline" | | | |
| | | 1847 First edition of Frederick Douglass's North Star |
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1848 William Oakes, Scenery of the White Mountains | | | |
| | | 1848 Elizabeth Ellet. Women of the American Revolution |
1848 Thompkins Matteson's "Examination of a Witch" exhibited in New York | | | |
| | | 1848 James Russell Lowell, "The Courtin'" |
1848 Seneca Falls Women's Rights Convention | | | |
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| | | 1849 California Gold Rush |
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1850 45 out of 100 New Englanders live in Maine, NH, or Vermont | | | |
| | | 1850 Nathaniel Hawthorne, "The Great Stone Face" |
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1854 Lucy Larcom, "Hannah Binding Shoes" | | | |
| | | 1854 Anthony Burns arrested under the Fugitive Slave Act |
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1861 Oliver Wendell Holmes, "Under the Washington Elm" | | | |
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| | | 1864 U.S. Sanitary Commission sponsors "Colonial Kitchens" |
1864 Massachusetts Historical Society published Phillis Wheatley letters | | | |
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| | | 1866 John Greenleaf Whittier, "Snowbound" |
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1868 Winslow Homer illustrates life in Lowell Mills | | | |
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| | | 1873 Anne Whitney wins competition to create a sculpture of Samuel Adams for the United States Capitol. |
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1875 Custer defeated at the Battle of Little Bighorn | | | |
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| | | 1880 Memorial Hall dedicated in Deerfield |
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1888 Whittier supports women's suffrage. | | | |
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| | | 1894 Immigration Restriction League Founded at Harvard |
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1904 Wallace Nutting launches a career as a historical entrepreneur | | | |
| | | 1904 Henry James visits the supposed House of the Seven Gables. |
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1905 Paul Revere House saved from demolition | | | |
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| | | 1924 American Indians granted citizenship and the right to vote |
1924 Ku Klux Klan has 50,000 members in Maine | | | |
| | | 1924 Congress passes restrictive immigration laws |
1924 First of New England textile mills moves south | | | |
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| | | 1940 Civil leaders of Portuguese descent gather before a mural of the Pilgrim fathers. |
1940 World war II fuels new industries in New England | | | |
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| | | 1942 Farmer's Museum in Cooperstown, New York established |
1942 Touro Synagogue designated a National Historic Site | | | |
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| | | 1947 Old Sturbridge Village created |
1947 Plimoth Plantation founded | | | |
| | | 1947 Shelburne Museum established |
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1954 Brown v. Board of Education overturns "separate but equal" | | | |
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| | | 1964 Civil Rights Act targets race and sex |
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1972 Harvard dedicates the so-called "Bradstreet Gate" between the Science Center and the Yard. | | | |
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| | | 1974 Judge Garrity orders school busing in Boston |
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2004 Memorial Hall Museum launches new website on "The Many Stories of 1704 | | | |