America’s industrial age (1865-1900)After the Civil War, the American landscape, once dominated by farms and villages, became increasingly industrialized. Factories and mills churned out products on a huge scale.New inventions created new businesses and helped improve everyday life. Many business leaders drove out competitors, forming monopolies and amassing great fortunes.
Settling the West (1869-1900)Americans have always been a frontier people, living on the edge of the unknown. In the late 19th century, the frontier was the area that had been bypassed in the rush to the Pacific earlier in the century. Ranchers and cowboys moved north into the frontier from
The Union Shattered (1850-1876)“In your hands… and not in mine is the momentous issue of civil war.” With those words of warning to the leaders of the South, President Abraham Lincoln took the oath of office in 1861. Southerners insisted that slavery be allowed in new territories in the West;
People are naturally curious about each other, and when we meet people from different countries we want to know many things: What is life like in their country? What kind of houses do they live in? What kind of food do they eat? What are their customs? If we visit
The Decision to Declare Independence By the spring of 1776, the Americans had been in the war for a year. A growing number were convinced that they were fighting to be permanently free of Britain’s rule, and that the time had come to issue a declaration of independence. In January,
CREATING A NEW NATION (1763-1800) The cordial relationship between Great Britain and the American colonies soured shortly after the French and Indian War. The English king needed to raise money to pay for the war and offset the cost of protecting and governing Britain’s huge empire. The decision to tax
Slavery Emerges! As colonial farms and industries thrived, the need for workers grew. Slavery had existed around the world throughout history; in the 1600s, Europeans introduced it to the New World to provide cheap labor. Wrenched from their homes in faraway Africa, slaves were shipped to the Americas then sold
Colonial America (1607-1763) By the early 1600s, Europeans had established colonies along the waterways of North America. These settlements struggled to survive their first winter but soon prospered. Settlers came to the New World for religious freedom or economic opportunity, or to acquire great fortune for the “mother country.” Many
Two Worlds Meet (1000-1607) The first Europeans traveled to North America in about 1000 CE, when Leif Eriksson and his Viking crew discovered a land they called Vinland, after the grapes that grew there. The Vikings eventually abandoned their settlements in eastern Canada and returned to their homes in Greenland.