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TimeLines of Liberty
Timelines of the individual united States |

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TimeLine
by
State Alpha:
Alabama to Georgia
Last updated January, 2005. |
States
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Page 1 -
AL AK
AZ
AR CA
CO CT
DE
FL GA
Page 2 -
HI
ID
IL
IN
IA
KS
KY
LA
ME
MD
Page 3 -
MA
MI
MN
MS
MO
MT
NE
NV
NH
NJ
Page 4 - NM
NY
NC
ND
OH
OK
OR
PA
RI
SC
Page 5 -
SD
TN
TX
UT
VT
VA
WA
WV
WI
WY
Page 6 - Territories
District of Columbia - American Soma -
Guam -
Northern Marianas -
Puerto Rico
- U.S. Virgin Islands |
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Time
Line |
AL |
- December 14, 1819 - Alabama
is the 22nd state admitted to the Union.
Alabama seceded from the Union Area - 52,237 sq.
miles Capital -
Montgomery (c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- It is believed that
Spanish explorers passed through the area of Mobile Bay in 1519.
- The territory was visited by explorer Hernando de Soto in
1540.
- Alabama's first permanent European settlement was at Fort
Louis de la Mobile in 1702 by the French.
- The 1763 Treaty of Paris gave control of the area to the
British.
- The British cede control of the region to the United States of
America after the American Revolution.
- In 1819 voters elect
William Wyatt Bibb as first Governor.
- Alabama becomes the 22nd state on December 14, 1819.
(c) Copyright 2005 Roger W
Hancock
- In 1854 the Alabama Public School Act creates the first
state-wide education system establishing an office of State
Superintendent of Education.
- In 1861 Alabama becomes the fourth state to secede from the
Union.
- Jefferson Davis becomes the President of the Confederate
States of America in 1861.
- Benjamin S.
Turner of Alabama was among 5 blacks elected to the 42nd U.S.
Congress in 1871.
- Blacks in Montgomery, Alabama begin a bus boycott in December,
1955 that continues through the next year, when Rosa Parks
refused to change seats to sit at the back of the bus.
- The United States Supreme Court outlaws bus segregation in
Montgomery in 1956.
- Lurleen Wallace was inaugurated as the state's first woman
governor in 1967.
- Richard Arrington is elected in 1979 as the first Black Mayor
of Birmingham.
One Vote Counts in Alabama.
Sources - http://www.shgresources.com
- http://www.galegroup.com/free_resources/bhm/timeline.htm -
http://www.theus50.com/alabama/
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| (c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock www.PoetPatriot.com |
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Time
Line |
AK |
- January 3, 1959 - Alaska
is the 49th state admitted to the Union as the first
new state since 1912.
Area - 615,230 sq.
miles Capital -
Juneau
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- The 1912 Alaska
territorial legislature gives women the right to vote.
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First bill for Alaska statehood is introduced in Congress in 1916.
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- In 1920 Anchorage citizens vote for incorporation, Then elect
Leopold David as first mayor of the city.
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- Tlingit William Paul, Sr. in 1924 becomes the first Native
American elected to the Alaska Legislature.
- Governor Gruening signs the Anti-Discrimination Act in 1945,
the first such legislation passed in the United States and its
possessions since post-Civil War
- Territorial voters adopt the State Constitution in 1956 and
send two senators and one representative to Washington under the
Tennessee Plan.
- Alaska becomes the 49th state in 1959.
- 1982 brings the changing of the voting age from 18 to 21.
- Becoming effective in 2002 students are required to pass exit
exams to earn high school diplomas.
One Vote Counts in Alaska.
Sources - http://www.shgresources.com
- http://www.suffragist.com/timeline.htm
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| (c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock www.PoetPatriot.com |
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Time
Line |
AZ |
- February 14, 1912 - Arizona
is the 48th state admitted to the Union.
Area - 114,006 sq. miles
Capital - Phoenix
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
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The capital was first established in Prescott, changed to Tucson
in 1867, and later in 1889 it was moved to Phoenix.
- On Valentines Day in 1912 Arizona becomes the 48th State of
the Union.
- The State's first Governor, George W. P. Hunt begins serving
in 1912.
- Women are included as voters when Arizona territory becomes a
state in 1912.
- Wing F. Ong became the first Asian American elected to a
state office in Arizona in 1946. He was a State Representative.
- In 1957
Little Rock high school -
The capital was first established in Prescott, changed to Tucson
in 1867, and later in 1889 it was moved to Phoenix.
- On Valentines Day in 1912 Arizona becomes the 48th State of
the Union. The State's first Governor is George W. P. Hunt.
- Women are included as voters when Arizona territory becomes a
state in 1912.
- in 1964 Senator Barry M. Goldwater losses a bid for president.
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- Raul H. Castro becomes the first Mexican American Governor of
Arizona in 1975.
- In 1988 Governor Evan Mecham becomes the first U. S. Governor
in 59 years for an impeachment to conclude wth his removal from
office.
- Rose Mofford is sworn in as the 18th Governor on April 5,
1988. She is the first woman to hold the office of Arizona
Governor.
One Vote Counts in Arizona.
Sources - http://www.shgresources.com
- http://web.mit.edu/21h.153j/www/chrono.html
- http://www.suffragist.com/timeline.htm
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| (c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock www.PoetPatriot.com |
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Time
Line |
AR |
- June 15, 1836 - Arkansas
is the 25th state admitted to the Union. as
a new slave state despite opposition in Congress.
Arkansas joined the Confederacy in 1861 re-entering the
Union at War's end.
Area - 53,182 sq.
miles Capital -
Little Rock
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
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In 1821 the state capital moves from Arkansas Post to Little
Rock.
- Arkansas becomes the 25th state, June 15, 1836.
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- In 1859 legislation orders all free Negroes out of Arkansas by
the end of the year.
- Arkansas secedes from the Union to join the Confederacy in
1861.
- In 1866 ex-Confederates gain control of the legislature and
pass laws denying rights to blacks.
- 1868 Arkansas is readmitted to the Union.
- 1898 The Democratic party in control adopts whites-only
primary elections.
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- 1917 The Arkansas legislature grants women the right to vote
in primary elections but not in the general. Black women
still are not allowed to vote.
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- Hattie Caraway of Arkansas is the first
to be elected to the U.S. Senate in 1932 after having been
appointed in 1931 to fill the remainder of her deceased
husband's term.
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- The first Arkansas governor to be elected to six terms was
Orval E. Faubus, who served from 1955 to 1967.
- The first Republican governor since Reconstruction was
Winthrop Rockefeller; elected in 1967.
One Vote Counts in Arkansas.
Sources - http://www.shgresources.com
- http://www.suffragist.com/timeline.htm |
| (c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock www.PoetPatriot.com |
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Time
Line |
CA |
- September 9, 1850 - California
is the 31st state admitted to the Union. Congress
hesitated to admit a new free state, but considering
California's booming population and the discovery of gold,
granted admission.
Area - 158,869 sq. miles
Capital - Sacramento
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- In 1848 the Treaty of
Guadalupe makes California a U.S. holding, ending the Mexican
War.
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California was admitted into the Union in 1850 as the 31st state.
- California passes an 1858 law that bars immigration of
Chinese and "Mongolians."
- In 1862 California imposes a
"police tax" ($2.50 a month) on every Chinese.
- A 1870 law prohibits importation of Chinese, Japanese, &
"Mongolian" women for prostitution.
- In 1882 the Chinese Exclusion Law bars Chinese
immigration of
laborers for ten years and is renued two more times in 1892 and
1902. In 1892 the U.S. Court upholds the constitutionality
of the ban. In 1904 the exclusion is made indefinite and
applicable to U.S. insular possessions. All exclusion laws are
repealed in 1943.
- California
is the 31st state admitted to the Union in 1850.
- In 1875 the U.S. Congress bars entry of Chinese, Japanese, and
"Mongolian" prostitutes, felons, and contract
laborers.
- Senator A.A.
Sargeant, in 1878, introduces the first federal amendment to
grant women the right to vote.
- California revises adopting a new constitution (1879)
that bans cities and corporations from employing Chinese.
- The State Legislature passes an 1879 law requiring all municipalities
to remove Chinese outside their city limits. The U.S. circuit
court strikes down the law as unconstitutional.
- Chinese
laundrymen win case in Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 1886. It declares a
law with unequal impact on different groups is discriminatory.
(c) Copyright 2005 Roger W
Hancock
- The California suffrage amendment is defeated statewide in
1896. It passed in Los Angeles.
- 1898 Wong Kim Ark v. U.S., 1898, rules that Chinese born
in the U.S. can not be stripped of citizenship.
- Women's Socialist Union of California forms in 1902
- Angel Island opened in 1910. Angel Island, for 30 years,
served as a point of entry to the United States for many
immigrants.
- In 1911 California passes amendment to give women the right to
vote.
- Richard M Nixon is born in Yorba
Linda in 1913.
He became the 37th president of the United States (1968-1974)
and the first President to resign from office.
- The ACLU is founded in 1920, (American Civil Liberties Union)
- The Supreme Court reaffirms Asian immigrants were not eligible
for naturalization, in Ozawa v. U.S., 1924.
- The 1924 Immigration Act denies immigration to all
Asians.
- California, in 1956, repeals alien land laws.
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- In 1964, Jul 15, The Republican National Convention was
held in San Francisco.
- Free Speech movement at Berkeley begins in 1964.
- The Black
Panther Party is founded in Oakland in 1965.
- A 1965 Immigration Law abolishes "national
origins" as basis to allocate immigration quotas.
- In 1966 Ronald Reagan defeats Pat Brown becoming
governor. Reagan had defeated George Christopher, former San
Francisco Mayor, in the primary.
- California enacts the nations first no fault divorce
law in 1969, allowing divorce by mutual consent.
California Gov. Reagan won a 2nd term in 1970, defeating Jesse
Unruh.
- Thomas
Bradley is first Black elected mayor of Los Angeles in 1973.
- State ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment fails in
1982.
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- The first Mexican-American woman, Lucille Roybal-Allard,
democrat, becomes a member of the U.S. House of Representatives
in 1992.
- In 1992 Riots break out In Los Angeles after the
verdict in the Rodney King case.
- Madeleine Albright becomes the first woman Secretary of
State in 1997.
One Vote Counts in California.
Sources -
http://www.freedombaptistnc.com/social.htm
- http://web.mit.edu/21h.153j/www/chrono.html
- http://www.cetel.org/timeline.html
- http://www.shgresources.com
- http://www.legacy98.org/timeline.html
- http://www.amazoncastle.com/feminism/sufftime.shtml
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| (c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock www.PoetPatriot.com |
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Time
Line |
CO |
- August 1, 1870 - After
three attempts Colorado was made the 38th state
admitted to the Union.
Area - 104,100 sq.
miles Capital -
Denver (c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
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Colorado is admitted to Union as 38th State in 1876.
- John L.
Routt is elected first governor in 1876.
- Colorado
becomes the first to adopt a state amendment that gives the vote
to women.
- Colorado became the second state in the nation to extend the
vote to women in 1893.
- During a political fight in 1905 Colorado had 3 governors in
one day; first, Alva Adams, then James H. Peabody, and last
Jesse F. McDonald.
- In 1922 Colorado voters approve $6,000,000 in bonds for
highway construction.
- 1924, Colorado becomes the second state to ratify the child
labor amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
- A Republican Governor (Bill Owens) is elected in 1998, the first
in 24 years.
One Vote Counts in Colorado.
Sources - http://www.shgresources.com
- http://www.amazoncastle.com/feminism/sufftime.shtml
- http://www.suffragist.com/timeline.htm |
| (c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock www.PoetPatriot.com |
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Time
Line |
CT |
- January 9, 1788 - Connecticut becomes the 5th state
when it voted to ratify the U.S. Constitution.
Area - 5,544 sq. miles
Capital
- Hartford (c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- The First Continental
Congress met in Philadelphia in 1774 to begin defining the
rights of the colonies. Connecticut is represented by
Silas Deane, Eliphalet Dyer and Roger Sherman.
- In 1776 on behalf of Connecticut Samuel Huntington, Roger
Sherman, William Williams and Oliver Wolcott signed the
Declaration of Independence.ibuted
to the new constitution by proposing the "Connecticut
Compromise" in 1787. That compromise still today defines
the number of Senators and Representatives each state has.
- Connecticut becomes the 5th state of the Union when it
ratifies the Constitution in 1788.
- The US
Constitutional Convention of 1787 gives the states the right to
set voting qualifications. Women lose the right to vote in
Connecticut.
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- in
2000 Vice President Al Gore as democratic presidential
candidate selects Connecticut Senator Joseph Lieberman as his
running mate. Lieberman becomes the first Jew on a major partys
presidential ticket.
One Vote Counts in Connecticut.
Sources - http://www.shgresources.com
- http://www.dpsinfo.com/women/history/timeline.html
- http://www.amazoncastle.com/feminism/sufftime.shtml
- http://timelines.ws/subjects/PRESIDENTS_B.HTML |
| (c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock www.PoetPatriot.com |
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Time
Line |
DE |
- December 7, 1787 - Delaware
is the 1st state to
ratify the Constitution gaining
its distinction as the "First State".
Area - 2,397 sq. miles
Capital - Dover
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- Caesar Rodney,
Thomas McKean, and George Read represent Delaware at the First
Continental Congress in 1774.
- Three lower counties of Pennsylvania, in 1776, break away
adopting a constitution becoming the Delaware State. Delaware
was the first of the colonies to call themselves a state.
- 1776, Delaware Assembly declares its independence from
England.
- New Castle is replaced by Dover as state capital in 1777.
- Delaware Assembly, in 1779, ratifies Articles of
Confederation.
- The US
Constitutional Convention of 1787 gives the states the right to
set voting qualifications. Women lose the right to vote in
Delaware.
- Delaware
is the 1st state to
ratify the Constitution in 1787, gaining
its distinction as the "First State".
- Delaware Free School Act passed in 1829 by the legislature
created the first public schools in the state.
- Delaware legislature rejects President Lincoln's offer to buy
its slaves in 1862.
- In 1865 The Delaware legislature votes against the abolishment
of slavery (Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution).
(c) Copyright 2005 Roger W
Hancock
- In 1868 the Delaware legislature votes against the 14th
Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which guarantees equal
protection for all races under the law.
- In 1870 the Delaware legislature votes against the Fifteenth
Amendment to guarantee blacks the right to vote.
- State legislature in 1875 creates separate school funding for
white children and African American children.
- A law passes in 1889 to prohibit punishment of women at
whipping post or pillory.
- In 1901 the Delaware Legislature ratifies the 13th,
14th, and 15th Amendments to the United
States Constitution.
- Delaware General Assembly outlaws racial segregation in public
accommodations in 1963.
- Herman Holloway, Sr. in 1964 becomes the first black elected
to Delaware's State Senate.
- S.B. Woo is elected lieutenant governor. He becomes the
highest-ranking Asian-American official in the U. S.
- 2000 sees the election of Delaware's first woman governor,
Ruth Ann Minner.
One Vote Counts in Delaware.
Sources - www.shgresources.com
- www.dpsinfo.com/women/history/timeline.html
- www.udel.edu/BlackHistory/diamonds.html
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| (c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock www.PoetPatriot.com |
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Time
Line |
FL |
- March 3, 1845 - Delayed
by the reluctance of Congress to admit another slave state, Florida
becomes the 27th state admitted to the Union.
Florida joined the Confederacy in 1861 and re-entering the
Union at war's end.
Area - 59,988 sq.
miles Capital -
Tallahassee
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- Joseph Marion Hernαndez
Is the first Hispanic to serve in Congress (1822). He was
also the first Delegate from the territory of Florida.
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Florida was the 27th state admitted to the Union in 1845. The
first state governor was William D. Moseley.
- Florida seceded from the Union on January 10, 1861.
- Florida was readmitted to the Union in 1868.
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- Blacks were given the right to vote and guaranteed civil
rights by the adoption of a new state constitution in 1868.
- Josiah T.
Walls of Florida was among 5 blacks elected to the 42nd U.S.
Congress in 1871.
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- Claude R. Kirk, Jr. is elected the 36th governor of Florida in
1966. He was the first Republican governor since Reconstruction.
- Democrat Reubin Askew becomes Florida's 37th governor,
defeating incumbent Republican Governor Claude Kirk in
1970. Reubin is re-elected in 1974 becoming the first
governor to be elected to a successive four-year term.
- Ileana Ros-Lehtinen is first Hispanic woman elected to
Florida's State legislature in 1982.the U. S. House in 1986 filling
the position vacated by the death of Claude D. Pepper. Becoming
the Chair of the Africa Subcommittee makes Ros-Lehtinen the
first Hispanic woman to chair a House subcommittee.
- In 1987 Bob Martinez becomes the first Hispanic governor of
Florida.
One Vote Counts in Florida.
Sources - http://www.shgresources.com
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- http://www.loc.gov/rr/hispanic/congress/chron.html |
| (c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock www.PoetPatriot.com |
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Time
Line |
GA |
- January 2, 1788 - Georgia is the 4th state to
ratify the Constitution. Georgia
joined the Confederacy on January 19, 1861, and re-entered
the Union after the Civil War.
Area - 58,977 sq. miles
Capital - Atlanta
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- In 1777 John Adam
Treutlen elected governor by the First House of Assembly.
- The only state in 1776-77 that did not declare independence is
Georgia.
- In 1787 Georgia becomes the fourth state to ratify the United
States Constitution.
- The US
Constitutional Convention of 1787 gives the states the right to
set voting qualifications. Women lose the right to vote in
Georgia.
- The Georgia becomes the fourth state when her delegates
formally sign the United States Constitution at Augusta in 1788.
- Georgia forbids further importation of slaves in 1798.
- In 1865 the Legislature ratifies 13th amendment.
(c) Copyright 2005
Roger W Hancock
- Georgia rejects the 14th amendment in 1866.
- In 1867 the Constitutional Convention convenes in Atlanta. Out
of 169 delegates 37 were Negro.
- Georgia's re admission to the United States is approved by
Congress in 1868 but adjourns before seating Georgia's Senators.
- State Legislature in 1868 expels 28 Negro members.
- Georgia is permanently readmitted to the Union in 1870.
- Jefferson Long of Macon was the first and only Negro congressman to the
U.S. Congress in 1871.
- In 1877 Atlanta is voted to be capital
of Georgia. (99,147 to 55,201).
- Rebecca Latimer Felton was appointed the first woman United
States. Senator to fill the position left vacant by her deceased
husband.
- In 1923 before the House Ways and Means Committee George
Washington Carver testifies on the value of peanuts.
Peanuts were being planted in quantity by Georgia and South
Carolina farmers.
- Georgia allows 18 year olds to vote in 1943.
- Maynard H. Jackson is the first Black to be elected mayor of
Atlanta in 1973.
- In 1966, Black state legislators are seated for the first time in
58 years.
- C. Jack Ellis becomes Macon's first black mayor in 1999.
One Vote Counts in Georgia.
Sources - http://www.shgresources.com
- http://www.dpsinfo.com/women/history/timeline.html
- http://www.galegroup.com/free_resources/bhm/timeline.htm -
http://www.scafam-hist.org/timeline.asp |
| All rights reserved (c) Copyright 2005,
2006
Roger W Hancock - PoetPatriot.com |
Index |
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States
-
Page 1 -
AL AK
AZ
AR CA
CO CT
DE
FL GA
Page 2 -
HI
ID
IL
IN
IA
KS
KY
LA
ME
MD
Page 3 -
MA
MI
MN
MS
MO
MT
NE
NV
NH
NJ
Page 4 - NM
NY
NC
ND
OH
OK
OR
PA
RI
SC
Page 5 -
SD
TN
TX
UT
VT
VA
WA
WV
WI
WY
Page 6 - Territories
District of Columbia - American Soma -
Guam -
Northern Marianas -
Puerto Rico
- U.S. Virgin Islands |
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