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To see all events in all categories, click the "Entire Timeline" link at the top of the page. You can use the form to the left to search for sets of events by entering specific terms or to zoom in on a particular time period. View historical, literary, or commemorative events in New England's past by using the links in the legend below.
Legend: Literary Commemorative Historical

   

1805
Rock outcropping in Franconia Notch first noticed by road workers.

    

1810
Congress commissions a census on manufactures

   
    
   

1813
Agricultural fairs called "Cattle Shows" begin displaying household manufactures

    

1820
Witch of New England published

   
    
   

1826
Lowell, Massachusetts incorporated

    

1828
Female textile workers strike at Dover, N.H.

   
    
   

1830
New Hampshire legislature encourages sericulture

    

1832
Seth Luther, "An Address to the Working-Men of New England"

   
    
   

1834
Textile strikes at Lowell, Massachusetts and Dover, N.H.

1834
Shoebinders of Lynn, Massachusetts form a society "for the protection and promotion of Female Industry"

   
    
   

1837
For women, rural outwork is the dominant form of wage labor.

1837
Ralph Waldo Emerson, "The American Scholar"

   
   

1837
Sarah Grimke, "Letters on the Equality of the Sexes"

    

1839
Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, Algic Researches

   
    
   

1841
Catharine Beecher, "A Treatise on Domestic Economy"

    

1845
Frederick Douglas publishes his narrative.

   
    
   

1848
Seneca Falls Women's Rights Convention

    

1854
Lucy Larcom, "Hannah Binding Shoes"

   
    
   

1855
Herman Melville, "Tartarus of Maids"

    

1858
Winslow Homer illustrates rural New England life. .

   
    
   

1860
Shoe workers strike in Lynn, Massachusetts and neighboring towns.

    

1868
Winslow Homer illustrates life in Lowell Mills

   
    
   

1870
French-Canadian workers fill Northern N.E. mill towns

1870
Most female wage workers are employed in factories or as household servants.

   
    
   

1888
Whittier supports women's suffrage.

    

1912
Workers at Lowell live in ethnic communities

   
   

1912
Strike in Lawrence, Massachusetts

    

1931
Grant Wood paints :The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere

   
    
   

1997
"National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom program" established by the National Park Service.

    

2003
Boston Women's Memorial features Phillis Wheatley, Abigail Adams, and Lucy Stone

   

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