Artifacts and DNA time dating put the earliest People in North America some 33,000 years ago.
1492
Christopher Columbus
Columbus lands in America seeking a western spice trade route to the profitable West Indies.
1526
African Slaves in America
Spanish brought 100 slaves to a settlement near what is now called South Carolina. In a matter of weeks, the enslaved Africans revolted, and disappeared.
1619
First official slaves in America date of record
Most of American history has the beginning of slavery when a Dutch ship brings 20 Angolans, kidnapped by the Portuguese, to the English colony in Jamestown, VA.
1664
Maryland Passes First Law Banning Interracial Marriage.
Maryland passed a law that banned interracial marriage. This meant that people from different races were not allowed to marry each other. It was a discriminatory law that treated people unfairly based on their race.
1739
The Stono Rebellion
One of the earliest slave revolts takes happened in Stono, South Carolina, not far from Charleston.
1770
Boston Massacre
Crispus Attacks, 1st American and African Amrican killed in Revolutionary War.
1775
Thomas Paine Publishes Anti-Slavery Tract, 1775.
Although Paine was not the first to advocate the aboliton of slavery in Amerca, he was certainly one of the earliest and most influential.
1776
Declaration of Independence .
Blacks fought for both the British and the American side during the Revolutionary War, depending on who was offering freedom for doing so.
1779
Battle of Trenton, December 25, 1779.
African American soldier Prince Whipple, a black man, crossed the Delaware with General Washington on December 25, 1779, on the eve of the Revolutionary War`s famous Battle of Trenton
1780
Massachusetts Grants African-Americans Right to Vote
In 1780, Massachusetts granted African Americans the right to vote. This was a significant step towards equality. Captain Paul Cuffe and six other African-American residents of Massachusetts petitioned the state legislature for this right. It was a milestone in the journey towards equal rights for all.
1787
Northwest Ordinance.
In addition to laying out the procedure for future states to be created in western territories, the Northwest Ordinace forbade slavery in the Northwest Territory, where the future state of Michigan would be created.
1789
U.S. Constitution Adopted.
The U.S. Constitution was adopted in 1789, but unfortunately, it counted slaves as only three-fifths of a person for representation purposes. This meant that slaves were not given the same rights and recognition as free individuals.
1793
First Fugitive Slave Act.
Congress passes the first Fugitive Slave Act, which makes it a crime to harbor an escaped slave.
1800
Gabriel`s Conspiracy
On August 30, 1800, a tremendous storm dropped heavy rain on central Virginia, swelling creeks and turning Richmond`s dirt streets into quagmires.
1811
Slave Revolt in Louisiana
More than a century before the civil rights marches we know today, a slave revolt took place in Louisiana in 1811. Enslaved people bravely stood up against their oppressors, demanding their rights and freedom.
1818
Frederick Douglass.
In 1845 publishes Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave, Written by Himself, one of the enduring classics of American literature.
1820
The Missouri Compromise
This legislation admitted Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a non-slave state at the same time, so as not to upset the balance between slave and free states in the nation.
1822
The Vesey Conspiracy
In response to the closure of their church in Charleston, Denmark Vesey and others planned a rebellion in 1822. They aimed to fight against slavery and gain their freedom, but unfortunately, their plans were discovered before they could be put into action.
1827
Freedom`s Journal
Samuel Cornish and John Russwurm publish Freedom`s Journal, the first African American newspaper in America.
1831
Nat Turner Slave Revolt
In late summer 1831 a free man of color named Billy Artis, a celebrated slave known as Gen.
1839
Amistad Case
Slaves being transported aboard the Spanish ship Amistad take it over and sail it to Long Island.
1846
Dred Scott vs Sanford.
In 1846 a slave named Dred Scott and his wife, Harriet, sued for their freedom in a St Louis city court.
1850
The Compromise of 1850.
The Compromise of 1850 was actually a series of bills passed mainly to address issues related to slavery.
1851
Sojourner Truth
Electrifies Women`s Rights Conference, 1851.
1851
Uncle Tom`s Cabin Published.
Angered by the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act, Harriet Beecher Stowe publishes the first of 41 installments of Uncle Tom`s Cabin.
1859
Last Known Slave Ship Arrives in United States.
August 22, 1859, Captain Foster guided the slaver Clotilde into Mobile, Alabama, under a veil of secrecy.
1861
Nicholas Biddle.
First African-American Soldier Wounded in Civil War.
1861
Lincoln Backtracks slave freedom
Union Gen John C Fremont instituted martial law in Missouri and declared slaves there to be free, countermanded by President Abraham Lincoln.
1862
Robert Smalls
Commandeers Confederate Ship, and Delivers It to the Union, May 13, 1862.