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- Timeline of United States revolutionary history (1760-1789) (5450 bytes)
3: ...s history]] concerns events from '''[[1760]] to [[1789]]'''.
10: *[[1764]] - [[Currency Act]], passed by [[Parliament]]
54: *[[1789]] - [[Constitution]] ratified
55: *[[1789]] - [[George Washington]] becomes President
56: ...ed States)#Judiciary Act of 1789|Judiciary Act of 1789]] - History of the United States (1776-1789) (19792 bytes)
17: In 1789, the [[Constitution of the United States]] was pu...
60: ...ferson]], who was serving as [[Ambassador (diplomacy)|Ambassador]] to [[France]] at the time, was neit...
66: ...nment was put into operation in March and April [[1789]].
68: ...apital, where Washington was inaugurated in April 1789 at Federal Hall in lower Manhattan.
Page text matches
- List of people by name: Ac (3800 bytes)
48: ...Heinrich Ackermann|Ackermann, Wilhelm Heinrich]] (1789-1848) - Catherine II of Russia (9308 bytes)
5: ..., Catherine's lover at the time, headed a conspiracy in which Catherine led a group of troops to the p...
25: ...tory losses. After [[Denmark]] declared war in [[1789]], things looked bleak for the Swedes. However, ...
33: ...n le Rond d'Alembert|D'Alembert]], all French [[encyclopedist]]s who later cemented her reputation in ... - Marie Antoinette (40871 bytes)
28: ...ge in [[1770]] until the siege of the palace in [[1789]]]]
34: ...g spied upon by her mother's ambassador, Comte Mercy d'Argenteau, who reported with great frustration ...
61: ...ntire country was standing on the edge of bankruptcy. [[Louis XIV]]'s wars with [[William III of Engla...
97: ...all a meeting of the Estates-General in [[May]] [[1789]]. The [[Estates-General]] was the main represent...
105: ... Prison and seized control of it on 14 [[July]] [[1789]]. The Governor of the Prison was lynched and so ... - President of the United States (42878 bytes)
14: ...public officials that are barred from the presidency because they were not born U.S. citizens include ...
16: ...in office should he have succeeded to the Presidency previously and served less than two years complet...
27: ...thumb|'''[[George Washington]]''', 1st President (1789-1797)]]
38: ...fficials to serve or act as President upon a vacancy in the office due to death, resignation, or remov...
68: || [[1789]]|| [[1797]] || ''No party'' || [[John Adams]] - George Washington (29551 bytes)
6: | date1=[[April 30]], [[1789]]
19: ...ited States]] under the [[U.S. Constitution]]. ([[1789]]–[[1797|97]]). He also served as President...
21: ...an important precedent of [[republic]]an [[democracy]] that served as an example around the world.
26: ...743]]) and Mary Ball ([[1708]] - [[August 25]], [[1789]]) were of [[England|English]] descent. He spent ...
51: ... out an offensive against the [[Iroquois Confederacy]], which had allied with the British and attacked... - John Adams (18716 bytes)
13: | place of death=[[Quincy]], [[Massachusetts]]
18: ...ident of the United States]]. His son, [[John Quincy Adams]], was the sixth President of the United St...
26: ... [[Weymouth]], Massachusetts. Their son, John Quincy Adams, was born in [[1767]].
33: ...tts|Boston]]. In [[1770]], he joined [[Josiah Quincy]], Jr. in defending the British soldiers that wer...
52: ... he was declared vice-president. His vice-presidency was colored by the suspicion of many of his colle... - Thomas Jefferson (31127 bytes)
20: ...fferson dined alone." Achievements of his presidency include the [[Louisiana Purchase]] and the [[Lewi...
30: ...ed [[archaeology]], a discipline then in its infancy. He has sometimes been called the ''"[[List of pe...
32: ... his [[ambassador]]ship to [[France]] ([[1784]]-[[1789]]) he took extensive trips through [[France|Frenc...
37: ...y of State]] of the United States, serving from [[1789]] until [[1795]]. He was also the second vice pre...
39: ...as the only Vice President elected to the Presidency to serve two full terms as of [[2005]]. - James Madison (15187 bytes)
37: ==Presidency==
144: ...re=''(none)''| after=''(district system)''| years=1789-1791}} - United States (58223 bytes)
2: (poetically) '''Columbia'''—is a [[democracy|democratic]] [[federal republic]] of fifty [[U.S....
9: national_motto = <br>''[[E Pluribus Unum]]'' ([[1789]]–present)<br>([[Latin]]: "Out of Many, One...
37: ...[1787]]<br>[[May 23]], [[1788]]<br>[[March 4]], [[1789]]|
38: currency = [[United States dollar|US dollar]] ([[$]]) |
39: currency_code = USD | - U.S. state (14432 bytes)
5: ...f its provisions have changed. The general tendency has been toward centralization, with the federal ...
92: ...o be rectangles in a [[Map projection#Cylindrical|cylindrical map projection]].
106: ...he [[United States Constitution]], beginning in [[1789]]. - North Carolina (18268 bytes)
25: AdmittanceDate = [[November 21]], [[1789]] |
46: On [[November 21]], [[1789]], North Carolina ratified the Constitution to be...
48: ... State did provide 125,000 troops to the Confederacy, more than any other Confederate state. Approxim...
79: [[Image:NCMMPpic.jpg|250px|thumb|right|Cypress Swamp in [[Merchants Millpond State Park]]]] - Hawaii (34434 bytes)
136: ...Board of Education sets statewide educational policy and hires the state superintendent of schools, wh...
140: However, policy initiatives have been made in recent years toward...
184: ...trading ships disembarked and settled starting in 1789. In 1820 the first American missionaries arrived... - Maryland (22654 bytes)
111: ** [[Environmental Protection Agency]] (EPA)
120: ** [[National Security Agency]] (NSA)
171: .... Nevertheless, the Crown later reversed that policy and discouraged the practice of Catholicism in Ma...
181: ...ocation of the first Catholic bishop in the USA ( 1789) and Emmitsburg, the home and burial place of the...
300: ...://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09755b.htm Catholic Encyclopedia article] - Washington (20186 bytes)
49: ...]], but the straits would not be explored until [[1789]] by Captain [[Charles W. Barkley]]. Further expl...
53: ...[[Fifty-Four Forty or Fight|disputed joint-occupancy]] by Britain and the U.S. that lasted until [[Jun... - Vermont (39851 bytes)
82: ... acted as President of Vermont from [[1778]] to [[1789]] and from [[1790]] to [[1791]]. In [[1791]], Ver...
212: ... state's population. The 2001 ''Shengold Jewish Encyclopedia'' reported that the state has 5,000 [[Jew...
326: ... legislators actually favored the [[blue jay]] (''Cyanocitta cristata'') or the [[crow]]. The [[Clover... - New Jersey (35646 bytes)
61: On [[November 20]], [[1789]] the state became the first in the newly-formed ... - Thirteen Colonies (4707 bytes)
63: ...can Revolution|History of the United States (1776-1789): Independence and the American Revolution]] - History of the United States (21226 bytes)
12: ...avery and indentured servitude, and a British policy of benign neglect which permitted the development...
14: ==History of the United States (1776-1789)==
15: ...see the main [[History of the United States (1776-1789)]] article.''
19: ==History of the United States (1789-1849)==
20: ...ils, see the main [[History of the United States (1789-1849)]] article.'' - List of painters (54090 bytes)
72: *[[Jules Robert Auguste]] ([[1789]]-[[1850]])
302: *[[Boleslaw Cybis]] ([[1895]]-[[1957]])
303: *[[Jan Cybis]] ([[1897]]-[[1972]])
304: *[[Cydney]] ([[1909]]-[?])
484: *[[Maurycy Gottlieb]] ([[1856]]-[[1879]]) - American Revolution (17069 bytes)
4: ...the first [[President of the United States]] in [[1789]]. Beyond that, interpretations vary. At one end ...
30: ... [[George Grenville]]'s [[Sugar Act]] and [[Currency Act]] created economic hardship in the colonies. ...
62: ...d during the [[French and Indian War]], but was recycled to encourage the American colonies to unite a...
87: ==Legacy and interpretations==
95: ...line of United States revolutionary history (1760-1789)]]
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