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C O N T E N T
Introduction
Early America
Colonial Period
Road to Independence
Revolution
Formation of a National Government
Early Years, Westward Expansion, and Regional Differences
Sectional Conflict
Civil War and Post-War Reconstruction
Growth and Transformation
Discontent and Reform
World War I, 1920s Prosperity, the Great Depression
The New Deal and World War II
The Cold War, Korean Conflict, and Vietnam
Cultural Change: 1950-1980
End of the 20th Century
RELATED ITEM
Outline of U.S. History
 
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Executive Editor—
George Clack
Managing Editor—
Mildred Solá Neely
Writer—
Christine Johnson
Art Director/Design—
Min-Chih Yao
Photo Research—
Maggie Johnson Sliker
 
(Posted March 2007)

INTRODUCTION

The history of the United States has been an experiment in democracy for more than 200 years. Issues that were addressed in the early years continue to be addressed and resolved today: big government versus small government, individual rights versus group rights, unfettered capitalism versus regulated commerce and labor, engagement with the world versus isolationism. The expectations for American democracy have always been high, and the reality has sometimes been disappointing. Yet the nation has grown and prospered, through a continual process of adaptation and compromise.
 

George Washington addressing the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, 1787.
 George Washington addressing the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, 1787.
 (Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond. Gift of Edgar William and Bernice Chrysler Garbisch.)
 
 
Early America >>>>
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