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The 1820s (pronounced "eighteen-twenties") was a decade of the Gregorian calendar that began on January 1, 1820, and ended on December 31, 1829. It saw the rise of the First Industrial Revolution.
The first football games, similar to modern soccer, are played at American colleges. The Underground Railroad is in operation. Free blacks and white abolitionists act as conductors, guiding slaves along a network of secret hiding places to freedom in the North. 1821. A colony of former American slaves is founded in Africa.
11 de mar. de 2020 · Updated on March 11, 2020. The decade of the 1820s in American history brought technological advances in transportation such as the Erie Canal and the Santa Fe Trail, early computing and hurricane studies, and a distinct souring of the way people in the United States saw their government. 1820.
21 de mar. de 2024 · Victorian era, in British history, the period between approximately 1820 and 1914, corresponding roughly but not exactly to the period of Queen Victoria ’s reign (1837–1901) and characterized by a class-based society, a growing number of people able to vote, a growing state and economy, and Britain’s status as the most powerful empire in the world.
- Susie Steinbach
1820 in U.S. states. States. Alabama. Connecticut. Delaware. Georgia. Illinois. Indiana. Kentucky. Louisiana. Maine. Maryland. Massachusetts. Mississippi. New Hampshire. New Jersey. New York. North Carolina. Ohio. Pennsylvania. Rhode Island. South Carolina. Tennessee. Vermont. Virginia. Washington, D.C.
2 de oct. de 2014 · How was life in 1820, and how has it improved since then? What are the long-term trends in global well-being? Views on social progress since the Industrial Revolution are largely based on historical national accounting in the tradition of Kuznets and Maddison.
Between the eve of the American Revolution and World War I, a group of modest British colonies became states; the frontier pushed westward to span the continent; a rural and agricultural society became urban and industrial; and the United States —reunified after the Civil War under an increasingly powerful federal government—emerged as a leading...