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1700s 1800s 1900s Immigrants 1790: Naturalization Act Congress adopts rules that allow any free white person to apply for citizenship after two years of residency. 1798: Naturalization Act Alien and Sedition Acts. Requires 14 years residency before citizenship. Reduced to 5 in 1802. Also allows deportation of immigrants deemed “dangerous”. 1819: First federal legislation on immigration Reporting of immigration and rules for passengers from US ports bound for Europe 1846: Irish Immigrants Come to flee potato famine. 1849: Chinese Immigrants California Gold Rush attracts settlers 1862: Homestead Act Attracts foreigners to settle on western land. 1880’s: Wave #1 Old immigrants. England, Ireland, and Germany 1882: Chinese Exclusion Act Completely barred Chinese from entering U.S. until 1943. Also barred convicts and the insane. 1885: Alien Contract Labor Law Prevents foreigners from being brought into the U.S. for labor. 1892: Opening of Ellis Island Screened immigrants arriving on the East coast. 1900’s: Wave #2 New Immigrants. Mainly from southern/eastern Europe. (Italy, Poland, Russia) Influx of Russian immigrants after Bolshevik Revolution (Red Scare) 1921: Emergency Quota Act Established 3% national quota. Quota based on census of 1910, favoring southern Europeans. 1924: Immigration Act 2% national origin quota established. Census basis shifted to 1890, favoring northern Europeans. 1943: Chinese Exclusion Act Repealed No discrimination of Chinese 1952: Immigration and Nationality Act Eliminated race as a bar to immigration or citizenship. 1954: Operation Wetback Government roundup operation, thousands of illegal Mexican immigrants are forcibly deported. 1965: Hart-Celler Act Abolished national quotas set in place by the Immigration Act of 1921. Set separate standards for eastern hemisphere (170,000) and western hemisphere (120,000) 1970’s: Vietnam Thousands of South Vietnamese enter the U.S. after we pull out of Vietnam and the communist North takes control. 1986: Immigration Reform and Control Act Attempted to stop illegal entry by penalizing employers of undocumented aliens and granting amnesty to aliens already here. Women 1700s 1800s 1775-1783: “Remember the Ladies” Abigail Adams- wife of John Adams, spoke on behalf of women. Wrote a letter to John Adams, her husband, about women equality 1848: Seneca Falls Convention First women’s rights convention held in Seneca Falls, NY. Both men and women signed a Declaration of Sentiments, that outlined their grievances about the lack of women rights (Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, Susan b. Anthony, Sojourner Truth) 1908: Muller v Oregon Laws protecting female workers since factory work had harmful effects on their bodies (special protection) 1854: Uncle Tom’s Cabin Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote about the cruelties of slavery. 1920: Nineteenth Amendment Women the right to vote; gained after women contribution during WWl. 1861-1865: Civil War U.S. Sanitary Commission- organized by first female physician Elizabeth Blackwell to assist the Union on the field. Clara Barton & Dorothea Dix- superintendents of nurses for the Union army made nursing respectable. 1921: Sheppard- Towner Maternity Act Provided federal financial instruction in maternal and infant healthcare 1776-1790: Pursuit of Equality Republican motherhood- a Revolutionary ideal where women we elevated to being keepers of the nation’s conscience for civic virtue. 1868: Reconstruction 14th Amendment- national citizenship and required all states to provide equal protection to all people. Stanton and Anthony fought against this amendment when it used the word “male” when referring to the citizen’s right to vote 1874: Woman’s Christian Temperance Union Lobbied for local/state laws against alcohol (Carrie A. Nation). Played a major role during Prohibition Era during Progressive Era of early 1900s 1900s 1920s: The New Woman Flappers, Sex O’Clock in America 1921: American Birth Control League Promote education for pregnancy prevention (Margaret Sanger) 1923: Adkins v Children’s Hospital Court reversed Muller v Oregon decision ( no special protection and no minimum wage) 1941-1945: WWll 18 million in workforce by 1945 (women assumed roles in factories) 1972: Title lX Gender equality in federally- funded educational programs; more opportunities in women’s sports 1889: Jane Addams creates Hull House Was the first American settlement house; settlement houses became centers of women activism and reform 1972: Equal Rights Amendment “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the united States or by any state on account of sex” 1890: National American Women Suffrage Association (NAWSA) formed Waged campaigns for women to obtain voting rights (Carrie Chapman Catt) 1973: Roe v Wade Legalized abortion protecting privacy rights of women 1700s 1800s 1900s African Americans Colonial Slavery: Atlantic Slave Trade Slave Codes American Revolution: Many slaves fought for both the Patriots and the British Road to the Civil War: Slave Auctions Compromise of 1850 Fugitive Slave Law Civil War and Reconstruction: 54th Massachusetts Emancipation Proclamation (1863) Freemen’s Bureau (1865) Black Codes 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendment Ku Klux Klan Jim Crow Laws Gilded Age: Civil Rights Act of 1875 Grandfather Clause Plessy v. Ferguson American’s Move to the City (1865-1900): WEB DuBois Booker T. Washington Roaring Twenties: Harlem Renaissance Jazz Age Louis Armstrong, Langston Hughes, Marcus Gravey, Claude McKay, Zora Neale Hurston United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) World War II: Congress of Racial Equality (CORE, 1942) Tuskegee Airmen Cold War and Eisenhower Era: Levittown’s Brown v. Board of Education (1954) Montgomery Bus Boycott Southern Christian Leadership Conference Great African American Migration Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Rosa Parks, MLK Southern Resistance Civil Rights Act of 1957 Sixties: Freedom Riders March on Washington MLK, Malcolm X Civil Rights Act of 1964 Voting Rights Act of 1965 Selma, Montgomery, Greenville Black Panthers Black Power Seventies: Milliken v. Bradbury (1974) Bakke v. California (1978) 1700s Native Americans Colonial Era: Columbian Exchange Thanksgiving Pocahontas Cultural Clashes: As more colonists arrive in New World, Native American resist removal: Anglo-Powhatan Wars, French and Indian War, Battle of Tippecanoe, Battle of Fallen Timbers 1800s Louisiana Purchase (1803): Sacagawea Colonists subdue Natives: Indian Removal Act of 1830 Worcester v. Georgia (1832) Trail of Tears (1838) Native American Resistance: Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull v. Custer (1876) Wounded Knee Massacre (1890) Advocacy and Forced Assimilation: Carlisle Indian School (1879) A Century of Dishonor (1881) Helen Hunt Jackson Dawes-Severalty Act (1887) 1900s Advocacy and Forced Assimilation: Society of American Indians (1911) Indian Reorganization Act (1934) 1700s 1800s 1900s Industrialization As Americas private economy began to flourish, many Americans sought power through profits as opposed to politics Reconstruction: With the Civil War resulting in the abolition of slavery, the American South underwent Industrialization, similar to the North 1870s: Agriculture was the nation’s biggest business; by 1900, it accounted for less than half. Republican Presidents: With Republican Presidents being in charge of government, laissez-faire tactics allowed for business to flourish Progressive Era Journalists, known as Muckrackers, began to reveal the corrupt practices done by large corporations in an attempt to rally support for regulation Some famous Muckrackers: Include Upton Sinclair, Jacob Riis, John Spargo, and Ida Tarbell Labor Unions: Began to emerge as a result of poor working Conditions. AF of L, Knights of Labor, IWW, etc. President Theodore Roosevelt: Began a practice known as Trust-Busting Industrial Revolution: Railroad building marked the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. Due to its price and risk, railroad builders required for the government to provide them with land subsidies. Cornelius Vanderbilt led the charge for the unity of the Western and Eastern Railroads. He helped with popularizing the steel rail Sherman Antitrust Act (1890) and Clayton Antitrust Act T.R, along with Taft would sue corporations for creating large trusts, in an attempt to break down monopolies. Led to the dissolution of Standard Oil in 1911 Scandals: Scandals such as Credit Mobilier and cases such as Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railroad Company vs. Illinois emerged as a result of corruption Industrialization Overall: Had a positive impact on the economy. Led to the emergence of the United States as a global power, this being cemented after both of the World Wars. Led to the Interstate Commerce Act: Regulated monopolistic railroad buildings John D. Rockefeller: Created the Standard Oil Empire through his notorious tactic of horizontal integration Andrew Carnegie: Established the Carnegie Steel Corporation, using vertical integration. With the emergence of big corporations, labor unions began to emerge It did however, lead to overproduction, a major cause for the Great Depression