How to Use This Reference
Don't memorize dates in isolation — learn them in clusters. The significance column tells you why each date matters, which is what exam questions actually test. On APUSH, a date is rarely the answer; the cause, effect, or connection is.
Colonial Era (1607–1763)
| Year | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1607 | Jamestown founded | First permanent English settlement; tobacco economy established; indentured servitude introduced |
| 1619 | House of Burgesses; first Africans in Virginia | First representative assembly; origins of slavery in English North America |
| 1620 | Plymouth Colony; Mayflower Compact | Puritan separatists; first written framework for colonial self-government |
| 1630 | Massachusetts Bay Colony ("City on a Hill") | Puritan migration; theocratic government; Winthrop's vision of moral community |
| 1636 | Roger Williams founds Rhode Island | Religious tolerance; separation of church and state; early dissent from Puritan orthodoxy |
| 1676 | Bacon's Rebellion | Multiracial frontier uprising; leads planters to shift from indentured servants to enslaved Africans |
| 1692 | Salem Witch Trials | Mass hysteria in Puritan community; reveals social tensions; decline of Puritan religious authority |
| 1733 | Georgia founded (last original colony) | Buffer against Spanish Florida; originally prohibition on slavery; later reversed |
| 1735 | Zenger Trial | Precedent for freedom of the press; jury acquits Zenger of seditious libel |
| 1754–1763 | French and Indian War | Britain defeats France; massive debt leads to colonial taxation; Proclamation of 1763 |
Revolution and Constitution (1763–1800)
| Year | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1763 | Proclamation of 1763 | Britain bars colonists from settling west of Appalachians; colonists resent it |
| 1765 | Stamp Act | First direct internal tax; "No taxation without representation"; boycotts; Stamp Act Congress |
| 1770 | Boston Massacre | British soldiers kill 5 colonists; propaganda win for Patriots; escalates tensions |
| 1773 | Boston Tea Party | Colonists destroy East India Company tea; leads to Intolerable Acts |
| 1775 | Battles of Lexington and Concord | "The shot heard round the world"; Revolutionary War begins |
| 1776 | Declaration of Independence | Articulates natural rights and consent of governed; lists grievances against the Crown |
| 1781 | Articles of Confederation ratified | Weak federal government; Shays' Rebellion (1786) exposes its failures |
| 1783 | Treaty of Paris | British recognize American independence; U.S. gains territory to Mississippi River |
| 1787 | Constitutional Convention | Replaces Articles; three-fifths compromise; creates federal system with checks and balances |
| 1791 | Bill of Rights ratified | First 10 Amendments; guarantees individual liberties; condition for several states' ratification |
| 1793 | Neutrality Proclamation | Washington refuses to join French-British war; precedent for American neutrality |
| 1798 | Alien and Sedition Acts | Adams suppresses political dissent; Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions introduce nullification concept |
Early Republic and Expansion (1800–1848)
| Year | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1800 | Election of 1800 ("Revolution of 1800") | Peaceful transfer of power from Federalists to Democratic-Republicans; Jefferson wins |
| 1803 | Louisiana Purchase; Marbury v. Madison | Doubles U.S. territory; judicial review established — most important Supreme Court precedent |
| 1812–1815 | War of 1812 | Second war with Britain; ends in stalemate; "Era of Good Feelings"; rise of American nationalism |
| 1820 | Missouri Compromise | Missouri (slave) and Maine (free) admitted; 36°30' line; temporary sectional peace |
| 1823 | Monroe Doctrine | U.S. claims Western Hemisphere as sphere of influence; warns Europe against intervention |
| 1828 | Election of Andrew Jackson | Democratic Party founded; expanded white male suffrage; "common man" politics |
| 1830 | Indian Removal Act | Forces Five Civilized Tribes west; Trail of Tears (1838); ~4,000 Cherokee die |
| 1831 | Nat Turner's Rebellion; The Liberator founded | Largest slave revolt; Garrison begins abolitionist newspaper; Southern states restrict slave education |
| 1845 | Texas annexation; "Manifest Destiny" coined | Reignites slavery expansion debate; Mexican-American War follows |
| 1848 | Seneca Falls Convention | First women's rights convention; Declaration of Sentiments modeled on Declaration of Independence |
Civil War and Reconstruction (1848–1877)
| Year | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1850 | Compromise of 1850; Fugitive Slave Act | California free; North required to return escaped slaves; inflames antislavery sentiment |
| 1852 | Uncle Tom's Cabin published | Stowe's novel humanizes enslaved people; sells 300,000 copies; Lincoln calls her "the little woman who started this big war" |
| 1854 | Kansas-Nebraska Act | Popular sovereignty repeals Missouri Compromise; "Bleeding Kansas"; creates Republican Party |
| 1857 | Dred Scott decision | Scott has no rights; Congress cannot ban slavery in territories; inflames North |
| 1859 | John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry | Abolitionist seizes federal arsenal; executed; becomes martyr in North, terrorist in South |
| 1861 | Confederate States formed; Civil War begins | South secedes after Lincoln's election; Fort Sumter attacked; 11 states leave Union |
| 1863 | Emancipation Proclamation; Gettysburg | Frees enslaved in Confederate states; 180,000 Black soldiers; Gettysburg turns the war |
| 1865 | Civil War ends; Lincoln assassinated; 13th Amendment | Union preserved; slavery abolished; Lincoln killed; Johnson takes office |
| 1868 | 14th Amendment ratified | Citizenship and equal protection; overturns Dred Scott; basis for most 20th-century civil rights law |
| 1870 | 15th Amendment; Hiram Revels elected | Black male suffrage; first African American senator (Mississippi) |
| 1875 | Civil Rights Act of 1875 | Bans racial discrimination in public accommodations; struck down by Supreme Court in 1883 |
| 1877 | Compromise of 1877; end of Reconstruction | Hayes becomes president; federal troops leave South; Jim Crow era begins |
Gilded Age and Progressive Era (1877–1920)
| Year | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1879 | Edison invents practical lightbulb | Symbolizes Second Industrial Revolution; electricity transforms manufacturing and daily life |
| 1886 | Haymarket Affair; American Federation of Labor founded | Labor movement violence; AFL focuses on skilled workers and collective bargaining |
| 1887 | Dawes Act | Breaks up tribal lands; destroys Native American culture and land base; 86 million acres lost |
| 1890 | Sherman Antitrust Act; Battle of Wounded Knee | First federal anti-monopoly law; last major massacre of Native Americans |
| 1896 | Plessy v. Ferguson | "Separate but equal" upholds Jim Crow segregation; overturned in Brown v. Board, 1954 |
| 1898 | Spanish-American War | U.S. acquires Philippines, Guam, Puerto Rico; becomes imperial power; Philippine-American War follows |
| 1906 | Pure Food and Drug Act; Jungle published | Upton Sinclair exposes meatpacking industry; federal food safety regulation begins |
| 1909 | NAACP founded | Du Bois co-founds organization to fight racial discrimination through legal challenges |
| 1913 | 16th and 17th Amendments | Federal income tax; direct election of senators — major Progressive Era democratic reforms |
| 1920 | 19th Amendment; Prohibition begins | Women's suffrage nationwide; Volstead Act bans alcohol — repealed 1933 |
WWI and Interwar Period (1914–1941)
| Year | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1914 | WWI begins in Europe | U.S. initially neutral; Wilson's 14 Points; preparedness debate |
| 1917 | U.S. enters WWI; Espionage Act | Zimmermann Telegram; 2 million troops to Europe; suppression of dissent under Sedition Act |
| 1919 | Treaty of Versailles; Red Scare | Senate rejects League of Nations; fear of communist revolution; Palmer Raids |
| 1920s | Harlem Renaissance; Great Migration | African American cultural flowering; 1.6 million Black Southerners move North 1910–1930 |
| 1929 | Stock Market Crash; Great Depression begins | Bank failures; 25% unemployment; Hoover's austerity worsens depression |
| 1933 | FDR's New Deal begins | Hundred Days legislation; FDIC, CCC, TVA, AAA; transforms federal government's economic role |
| 1935 | Social Security Act; Wagner Act | Old age insurance; federal labor relations board; strengthens union organizing rights |
| 1938 | Fair Labor Standards Act | Minimum wage, 40-hour work week, end of child labor — foundation of modern labor law |
| 1939 | WWII begins in Europe; Neutrality Acts | U.S. isolationism; Lend-Lease (1941) helps Britain before U.S. enters war |
| 1941 | Pearl Harbor; U.S. enters WWII | Japanese attack kills 2,403; U.S. declares war; ends isolationism permanently |
WWII and Early Cold War (1941–1960)
| Year | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1942 | Japanese American internment; Battle of Midway | EO 9066; 120,000 incarcerated; Midway turns Pacific War |
| 1944 | D-Day invasion; GI Bill | Allied landings in Normandy; GI Bill creates middle class — education, mortgages, business loans |
| 1945 | VE Day; atomic bombs; VJ Day | Germany surrenders; Hiroshima (Aug 6) and Nagasaki (Aug 9); Japan surrenders |
| 1947 | Truman Doctrine; Marshall Plan; containment | U.S. commits to stopping Soviet expansion; $13B to rebuild Western Europe |
| 1948 | Berlin Airlift; State of Israel declared | Soviet blockade; Western allies supply Berlin by air for 11 months |
| 1950–1953 | Korean War | First hot war of Cold War; ends in armistice at 38th parallel — no peace treaty |
| 1950–1954 | McCarthyism; Red Scare | Senator McCarthy's unsubstantiated charges destroy careers; Army-McCarthy hearings end his power |
| 1954 | Brown v. Board of Education | Overturns Plessy v. Ferguson; unanimous Court rules segregated schools unconstitutional |
| 1955 | Montgomery Bus Boycott | 381-day boycott after Rosa Parks' arrest; MLK Jr. emerges as leader; Supreme Court desegregates buses |
| 1957 | Little Rock Crisis; Sputnik | Eisenhower federalizes National Guard; Soviet satellite launches space race |
Civil Rights and Vietnam Era (1955–1975)
| Year | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1960 | Sit-ins; SNCC founded; Kennedy elected | Students challenge segregated lunch counters; Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee |
| 1961 | Freedom Rides; Bay of Pigs | Biracial protesters test desegregation on buses; CIA-backed Cuba invasion fails |
| 1962 | Cuban Missile Crisis | 13-day nuclear standoff; Kennedy's blockade; Soviets remove missiles; closest point to nuclear war |
| 1963 | March on Washington; JFK assassinated | MLK's "I Have a Dream"; Kennedy killed in Dallas; LBJ takes office |
| 1964 | Civil Rights Act; Gulf of Tonkin | Bans racial discrimination; Tonkin Resolution gives LBJ blank check for Vietnam |
| 1965 | Voting Rights Act; Selma; Great Society | Federal enforcement of 15th Amendment; Medicare/Medicaid; major immigration reform |
| 1968 | Tet Offensive; MLK assassinated; RFK killed | Tet shatters public confidence in Vietnam War; King and Kennedy killed; Nixon wins |
| 1969 | Moon landing; Stonewall riots | Apollo 11; Stonewall marks birth of modern LGBTQ+ rights movement |
| 1972–1974 | Watergate scandal | Nixon's cover-up of DNC break-in; Saturday Night Massacre; Nixon resigns August 1974 |
| 1975 | Fall of Saigon; Vietnam War ends | U.S. evacuation; North Vietnam wins; 58,000 Americans dead; war reshapes foreign policy |
Modern Era (1980–Present)
| Year | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1980 | Reagan elected; "Reagan Revolution" | Conservative realignment; supply-side economics; Cold War escalation; deregulation |
| 1989 | Fall of Berlin Wall | Soviet bloc collapses; Cold War ends; German reunification 1990 |
| 1991 | Gulf War; Soviet Union dissolved | U.S.-led coalition liberates Kuwait; USSR collapses — 15 independent states |
| 1993 | NAFTA ratified | Free trade agreement with Canada and Mexico; shifts manufacturing; contested legacy |
| 2001 | September 11 attacks | Nearly 3,000 killed; War on Terror; Afghanistan invasion; Patriot Act; surveillance state expands |
| 2003 | Iraq War begins | WMD justification; overthrow of Hussein; prolonged occupation; 4,500 U.S. deaths |
| 2008 | Financial crisis; Obama elected | Greatest recession since 1929; first Black president; Tea Party backlash; ACA (2010) |
| 2020 | COVID-19 pandemic; George Floyd protests | 600,000+ U.S. deaths; largest racial justice protests in U.S. history |
✅ Key Takeaways
- Dates are only useful when linked to significance — always ask "why does this matter?" not just "when did this happen?"
- The four most consequential pivot points: Constitution (1787), Civil War/Reconstruction (1861–77), New Deal (1933–38), and Civil Rights Acts (1964–65).
- Many key dates come in clusters (1776/1783/1787/1791; 1861/1863/1865/1868) — learn them as interconnected events.
- For APUSH, the periods with the most exam weight are Periods 3–8 — weight your memorization accordingly.
- Test yourself by covering the significance column and trying to explain why each event matters — that's the skill the exam tests.