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- List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
37: *[[Andrew Adams|Adams, Andrew]], (1736-1797), U.S. poloitical leader from Connecticut
90: *[[George Ade|Ade, George]] (1866-1944), ''[[The Slim Princess]]'' - Sojourner Truth (2794 bytes)
3: ...er birth is uncertain, but is usually taken to be 1797.
5: ...] in [[1827]]; after [[New York]] state abolished slavery, she returned there in [[1829]], working as ...
10: ...], the ''Narrative of Sojourner Truth: A Northern Slave''.
13: ...ion Proclamation]] was issued to work with former slaves. She also met President [[Abraham Lincoln]].
17: ''See also:'' [[Slave narrative]] - Iris (plant) (13374 bytes)
21: ...aried and range from cold regions into the grassy slopes, meadowlands, stream banks and deserts of Eur...
25: ...ed and contain 1 or more symmetrical, six-lobed, slightly fragrant [[flower]]s. These grow on a pedic...
67: ...deep purplish flowers from Northern Italy and the Slovenian alps is called ''Iris cengialti''.
78: ...japonica'' <br />from Curtis's Botanical Magazine 1797]] - President of the United States (42878 bytes)
14: ...f State]] [[Madeleine Albright]], born in [[Czechoslovakia]]; and [[Michigan]] [[List of Governors of ...
16: ...should he have succeeded to the Presidency previously and served less than two years completing his pr...
19: ...ally elected officials in the United States. (Legislators are elected on a state-by-state basis; other...
27: ...|'''[[George Washington]]''', 1st President (1789-1797)]]
35: ...l. In addition, the president has important [[legislative]] and [[judicial]] powers. - George Washington (29551 bytes)
7: | date2=[[March 4]], [[1797]]
19: ...nder the [[U.S. Constitution]]. ([[1789]]–[[1797|97]]). He also served as President of the [[1787]...
26: ... the economic and cultural elite of the [[slavery|slave]]-owning planters of [[Virginia]]. His parents...
43: ...sive there. Washington lost the [[Battle of Long Island]] on [[August 22]] but managed to retreat, sav...
47: ...r 11]] and succeeded in his task. An attempt to dislodge the British, the [[Battle of Germantown]], fa... - John Adams (18716 bytes)
5: | date1=[[March 4]], [[1797]]
18: ...ident]] of the [[United States]], and the second (1797–[[1801]]) [[President of the United States]...
31: ... their representatives; in August 1765 he anonymously contributed four notable articles to the [[Bosto...
33: ...diers; but two soldiers were found guilty of [[manslaughter]]. These claimed benefit of [[clergy]] and...
48: ... had been authorized to execute the duties previously assigned to Laurens, and secured the recognition... - Thomas Jefferson (31127 bytes)
18: ...itect]], [[Archaeology|archaeologist]], [[slavery|slaveowner]], [[author]] and founder of the [[Univer...
25: ...t R. Livingston]]. The committee met and unanimously solicited Jefferson to prepare the draft of the ...
37: ...of the United States, under [[John Adams]] from [[1797]] until [[1801]], achieving that position after g...
68: *Abolition of the external [[slave trade]] in [[1808]]
123: ...-one-half inches (189 cm) in height, large-boned, slim, erect and sinewy. He had angular features, a v... - James Madison (15187 bytes)
23: ... strong central government with a [[bicameral legislature]]. When the issue arose of how states would ...
35: In [[1797]] Madison left Congress; in [[1801]] he became Je...
113: ...madisonmus.org/resources/will.htm] Madison was a slaveholder throughout his entire life.
120: ...s are more general. Charity is no part of the legislative duty of the government."
124: ...es kept up under the pretext of defending, have enslaved the people." -- Constitutional Convention [[J... - John Quincy Adams (11783 bytes)
24: ... a foreign-born wife, Adams wed Louisa Johnson in 1797. The couple named one of their sons after George ...
32: ...on]] remained the only American president unanimously chosen by the [[U.S. Electoral College|electoral...
80: ...nish ship where they were being held as illegal [[slave]]s, should not be returned to [[Spain]], but r... - Andrew Jackson (23546 bytes)
22: ...ophobia]] would be combined with a distrust and dislike of Eastern aristocrats stemming from his feeli...
49: ...ion to the Bank manifested as a strong personal dislike for its president, [[Nicholas Biddle (banker)|...
55: ...y" — declare illegal — the tariff legislation of 1828, and more generally the right of a s...
65: ...kees from the state of Georgia, although the famously defiant quote attributed to him ("[[John Marshal...
73: ...e male slave, and his daughter-in-law four female slaves, one of whom he had bought for her and the ot... - South Africa (40100 bytes)
24: ...r [[5th century]] (the [[Bantu expansion]]). They slowly moved south and the earliest ironworks in mod...
26: ...Madagascar]], and [[India]]. Descendants of these slaves, who often married with Dutch settlers, later...
30: ...tain]] seized the [[Cape of Good Hope]] area in [[1797]] during the [[Fourth Anglo-Dutch War]]. The Dutc...
40: ...ndela]] from prison after 27 years. Apartheid legislation was gradually removed from the statute books...
42: ...ive in [[poverty]]. A series of voluntary and legislative moves under the controversial [[Black Econom... - Eli Whitney (3270 bytes)
14: ...eve that this invention allowed for the African [[slavery]] system in the Southern United States to be...
16: ...at produced cotton gins went out of business in [[1797]]. - Timeline of invention (28171 bytes)
45: * [[sledges]] - [[Scandinavia]]
119: * [[1620]]: [[Slide rule]]: [[William Oughtred]]
162: * [[1797]]: [[Cast iron plow]]: [[Charles Newbold]]
281: * [[1877]]: [[Induction motor]]: [[Nikola Tesla]]
303: ...]) [[electric motor|induction motor]]: [[Nikola Tesla]] - List of people by name: Y (12717 bytes)
116: *[[Yoannis XVIII of Alexandria]], ([[1770]]-[[1797]]), Coptic Pope
178: ...Young, Simon]], (fl. mid 19th century), Pitcairn Isl. politician
207: ...[Tohir Yuldashev|Yuldashev, Tohir]], leader of [[Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan]] [[terrorist]] group - List of painters (54090 bytes)
125: *[[Zdzislaw Beksinski]] ([[1929]]-)
131: *[[George Wesley Bellows]] ([[1882]]-[[1925]])
302: *[[Boleslaw Cybis]] ([[1895]]-[[1957]])
305: *[[Wladyslaw Czachorski]] ([[1850]]-[[1911]])
324: *[[Stanislaw Debicki]] ([[1866]]-[[1924]]) - Timeline of United States history (1790-1819) (6951 bytes)
6: *[[1790]] - [[Rhode Island]] becomes a state
12: *[[1793]] - [[Fugitive Slave Law of 1793|Fugitive Slave Act]] passed
22: *[[1797]] - [[John Adams]] (Federalist) inaugurated, Jeff...
23: *[[1797]] - [[XYZ Affair]]
40: *[[1804]] - New Jersey abolishes slavery - New Year (5703 bytes)
28: ...f this is earlier each year. 2008 will see two Muslim New Years.
38: ...[[Republic of Venice]] until its destruction in [[1797]], and in [[Russia]] until the [[14th century]]. - January 1 (18244 bytes)
15: *[[1738]] - [[Bouvet Island]] is discovered by [[France|French]] explorer ...
16: ...dition of ''[[The Times]]'' of [[London]], previously ''The Daily Universal Register'', is published.
17: *[[1797]] - Albany replaces New York City as the capital ...
18: *[[1801]] - Legislative union of [[Kingdom of Great Britain]] and [[...
21: *[[1808]] - Importation of [[slave]]s into the [[United States]] is banned - Clock (10086 bytes)
53: ...[Vitreous enamel|enamel]]. On [[November 17]], [[1797]], [[Eli Terry]] received his first patent for a ...
128: ...ch Clocks the World Over. Part One and Two. Translated with the assistance of Alexander Ballantyne. ... - List of people associated with the French Revolution (16148 bytes)
9: ...- proto-[[socialism|socialist]], guillotined in [[1797]] after a ''[[coup d'etat|coup]]'' attempt
31: *[[Pierre Joseph Cambon]] - Member of the Legislative and the Convention, directed French financia...
67: ...ral in the early years of the Revolution, died in 1797 of [[tuberculosis]]
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