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  1. Long Term Economic Growth – 1860–1965: A Statistical Compendium. Business Booms and Depressions since 1775, a chart of the past trend of price inflation, federal debt, business, national income, stocks and bond yields for the United States from 1775 to 1943. Budget of the United States Government.

  2. Colonial era and 18th century. The economic history of the United States began with British settlements along the Eastern seaboard in the 17th and 18th centuries. After 1700, the United States gained population rapidly, and imports as well as exports grew along with it.

    • Colonial Era
    • Independent Entities Later Joined to The Union
    • Regions Purchased from Foreign Powers
    • Regions Annexed from Or Ceded by Foreign Powers
    • Ceded Or Purchased Native American Regions
    • Interstate, Territorial, and Federal Cessions
    • Former Organized Territories
    • Internal Land Grants, Cessions, Districts, Departments, Claims and Settlements
    • Federal Military Districts and Departments
    • Retroceded Possessions and Overseas Territories

    Thirteen Colonies

    1. Connecticut Colony 2. Delaware Colony 3. Province of Georgia 4. Province of Maryland 5. Province of Massachusetts Bay 6. Province of New Hampshire 7. Province of New Jersey 8. Province of New York 9. Province of North Carolina 10. Province of Pennsylvania 11. Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations 12. Province of South Carolina 13. Colony and Dominion of Virginia

    Pre-Revolutionary War regions

    † - indicates failed legal entities

    Colonies settled but unrecognized

    1. Transylvania† 2. Watauga Republic

    Republic of Hawaii, 1898 (after U.S. immigrant and military involvement in the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom)
    Louisiana Purchase, 1803, from France, for $15,000,000
    Florida Purchase (or the Spanish Cession), 1819 (effective 1821), from Spain, for $5,000,000; included: East Florida, West Florida, and Sabine Free State or Neutral Ground
    Gadsden Purchase, 1853, from Mexico, for $10,000,000
    Alaska Purchase (also called "Seward's Folly"), 1867, from Russia, for $7,200,000
    Pembina Region, formerly part of Rupert's Land and the Red River Colony; (often referred to as the British Cession of 1818) to U.S. in an exchange for the unorganized territory of the original Loui...
    The Aroostook War Compromise Lands; 1842, split jointly claimed areas with the UK
    Oregon Country (U.S.); the 1846 Oregon Treaty finally split the jointly governed region (called Columbia by the English) between the U.S. and United Kingdom at the 49th parallel
    Black Hawk Purchase; $640,000; purchased 1832; Michigan Territory(eventually Iowa)
    Cherokee Outlet; $7,000,000; purchased 1893; Oklahoma Territory(eventually Oklahoma)
    Cherokee Strip; a disputed two-mile wide tract of land between the Cherokee Nation and Kansasthat was eventually ceded to Kansas in 1866

    The following are state cessionsmade during the building of the U.S. 1. The Delaware Wedge, dispute with Pennsylvania settled in 1921; now a part of the state of Delaware. 2. Washington, D.C.; to the Federal Government from Virginia and Maryland, 1790. 3. District of Columbia retrocession; the return to Virginia of the District of Columbia lands wh...

    The following is a list of the 31 U.S. territories that have become states, in the order of the date organized. (All were considered incorporated.) 1. Northwest Territory (1787–1803), became the state of Ohio, and the Territory of Indiana. 2. Territory South of the River Ohio (also known as the Southwest Territory) (1790–1796) became the State of T...

    The following are land grants, cessions, defined districts (official or otherwise) or named settlements made within an area that was already part of a U.S. state or territory that did not involve international treaties or Native Americancessions or land purchases. 1. Cumberland District, North Carolina(also called the District of Miro); Tennessee. ...

    These entities were sometimes the only governmental authority in the listed areas, although they often co-existed with civil governments in scarcely populated states and territories. Civilian administered "military" tracts, districts, departments, etc., will be listed elsewhere.

    The Milk River and Poplar River cessions to the United Kingdom (Treaty of 1818)
    Commonwealth of the Philippines to Republic of the Philippines(1946)
    Chamizal, Texas, to Mexico(1964)
    Swan Islands to Honduras(1971)
  3. May 14, 2020 · Readers may consider the example of Afghanistan in December 1979 as a grey-zone intervention, although in my opinion it is a more complicated case, given that the communist government in Afghanistan had repeatedly called for (and received) Soviet military assistance against the mujahideen rebels.

  4. Summary. The economy of territory that became the United States evolved dramatically from ca. 1000 ce to 1776. Before Europeans arrived, the spread of maize agriculture shifted economic practices in Indigenous communities. The arrival of Europeans, starting with the Spanish in the West Indies in 1492, brought wide-ranging change, including the ...

  5. Jun 3, 2021 · In 1700 about 250,000 European colonists and enslaved Africans lived in North America, primarily along a thin strip of land bordering the Atlantic Ocean. By 1870 these scattered colonial settlements had been consolidated into two continental nations – the United States and Canada – with a combined population of more than 40 million.

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  7. Dec 8, 2022 · The United States and its allies are examples of status quo powers, while Russia, China, and Iran are examples of revisionist powers. On this view, the United States considers Russia, China, and Iran as revisionist states that employ gray zone warfare in various domains to challenge the U.S.-led world order.

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