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  1. U.S. President Harry Truman signing into law the Luce–Celler Act in 1946 [74] In 1945, the War Brides Act allowed foreign-born wives of U.S. citizens who had served in the U.S. Armed Forces to immigrate to the United States. In 1946, the War Brides Act was extended to include the fiancés of American soldiers.

  2. 1830s strikes in the United States ‎ (2 P) 1831 in the United States ‎ (8 C, 6 P) 1832 in the United States ‎ (8 C, 24 P) 1833 in the United States ‎ (8 C, 5 P) 1834 in the United States ‎ (7 C, 3 P) 1835 in the United States ‎ (8 C, 5 P) 1836 in the United States ‎ (8 C, 11 P) 1837 in the United States ‎ (9 C, 8 P) 1838 in the ...

  3. Beginning on July 7, 1834, New York City was torn by a huge antiabolitionist riot (also called Farren Riot or Tappan Riot) that lasted for nearly a week until it was put down by military force. "At times the rioters controlled whole sections of the city while they attacked the homes, businesses, and churches of abolitionist leaders and ...

  4. Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1830s ships. Transport portal. This category is for ships launched in the decade 1830s . 1780s. 1790s. 1800s.

  5. Ireland was part of the United Kingdom from 1801 to 1922. For almost all of this period, the island was governed by the UK Parliament in London through its Dublin Castle administration in Ireland. Ireland underwent considerable difficulties in the 19th century, especially the Great Famine of the 1840s which started a population decline that ...

  6. The Indian removal was the United States government policy of ethnic cleansing through forced displacement of self-governing tribes of American Indians from their ancestral homelands in the eastern United States to lands west of the Mississippi River —specifically, to a designated Indian Territory (roughly, present-day Oklahoma ), which many ...

  7. United States portal. v. t. e. The Whig Party was a conservative [13] political party that existed in the United States during the mid-19th century. [13] Alongside the slightly larger Democratic Party, it was one of the two major parties in the United States between the late 1830s and the early 1850s as part of the Second Party System. [14]

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