Swann Daingerfield House | Swann-Daingerfield History
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Preserving The Past

The World In Which The Swann-Daingerfield House Prospered

Major Historical Events of 1802

PRESIDENT & HIS CABINET

The Thomas Swann Period 1802-1833

WHO WAS THOMAS SWANN?

There were two: The elder Thomas Swann was United States District Attorney for the District of Columbia from 1821-1823.  Interestingly enough, Swann came before Francis Scott Key. The search of the Gazette also revealed that Thomas the father dabbled in real estate.   Further searching revealed an ad in the paper from 1810.   Swann was looking for Dandridge, his “negro slave.”

Thomas Swann, Governor and Congressman from Maryland.
Thomas Swann, Governor and Congressman from Maryland.

The son: Thomas Swann (Jr.)

Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Maryland‘s 4th district

In office

March 4, 1873 – March 3, 1879

Preceded by John Ritchie
Succeeded by Robert Milligan McLane
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Maryland‘s 3rd district

In office

March 4, 1869 – March 3, 1873

Preceded by Charles E. Phelps
Succeeded by William J. O’Brien
33rd Governor of Maryland

In office

January 10, 1866 – January 13, 1869

Lieutenant Christopher C. Cox
Preceded by Augustus Bradford
Succeeded by Oden Bowie
Personal details
Born February 3, 1809 Alexandria, Virginia
Died July 24, 1883 (aged 74) Leesburg, Virginia
Political party

Know-Nothing

Democratic

Alma mater The George Washington University
Profession Politician
Signature  

Thomas Swann (February 3, 1809 – July 24, 1883) was an American politician. Initially a Know-Nothing, and later a Democrat, he served as mayor of Baltimore (1856–1860), as the 33rdGovernor of Maryland (1866–1869), and as U.S. Representative from Maryland’s 3rd congressional district and then 4th congressional district (1869–1879).

Thomas Swann took the oath of office on January 11 1865, however he did not actually assume the governors office until January 10th 1866.[1]

MAJOR HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE PERIOD

1801   Jefferson was elected President by the House of Representatives. Burr became Vice President.
  Adams appointed John Marshall as Chief Justice.
1803   The Supreme Court issued a decision in Marbury v. Madison which overturned the Judiciary Act of 1789.
  Louisiana Purchase: The purchase was made.
Mar 1 Ohio, formerly the Northwest Territory, became the 17th state.
1804   The Twelfth Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified.
  New Jersey abolished slavery.
July 11 Burr–Hamilton duel: Alexander Hamilton was fatally wounded.
  Lewis and Clark set out.
November 2 – December 5 U.S. presidential election, 1804: Jefferson was reelected President; George Clinton was elected Vice President.
1807   The Embargo Act of 1807 was passed.
  Robert Fulton invented the steamboat.
1808   The slave trade was ended.
November 4 – December 7 U.S. presidential election, 1808: James Madison was elected president. Clinton was reelected as Vice President.
1809   Madison was inaugurated.
March 1 The Non-Intercourse Act was passed.
1810   The Supreme Court issued a decision in Fletcher v. Peck which overturned a state law.
1811   The charter of the First Bank of the United States expired.
1812   War of 1812: The war began.
  Daniel Webster was elected to the United States Congress.
  Louisiana became the 18th state.
  U.S. presidential election, 1812: Madison was reelected President; Elbridge Gerry was elected United States Vice President.
1814 August 24 Burning of Washington: British troops burned Washington, D.C. but were forced back at Baltimore.
Dec 14 War of 1812: The Treaty of Ghent ended the war.
1815 Jan 8 War of 1812: Battle of New Orleans: The battle took place before notification of the Treaty of Ghent made it to the frontier.
1816   U.S. presidential election, 1816: James Monroe was elected President. Daniel D. Tompkins was elected Vice President.
  The Second Bank of the United States was chartered.
Dec 11 Indiana became the 19th state.
1817   Monroe was inaugurated.
  The Rush–Bagot Treaty was signed.
  Harvard Law School was founded.
Dec 10 Mississippi became the 20th state.
1818   Cumberland Road opened.
Dec 3 Illinois became the 21st state.
  The Jackson Purchase in Kentucky was obtained.
1819   Panic of 1819: The panic took place.
  The Adams–Onís Treaty, which provided for the acquisition of Florida, was signed.
  The decision in McCulloch v. Maryland prohibited state laws from infringing upon federal Constitutional authority.
  The decision in Dartmouth College v. Woodward protected the principle of honoring contracts and charters.
Dec 14 Alabama became the 22nd state.
1820   The Missouri Compromise was passed.
March 15 Maine became the 23rd state.
  U.S. presidential election, 1820: Monroe was reelected President, Tompkins Vice President.
1821 Aug 10 Missouri became the 24th state.
1823   The Monroe Doctrine was proclaimed.
1824   The decision in Gibbons v. Ogden affirmed federal over state authority in interstate commerce.
  U.S. presidential election, 1824: An election was held with inconclusive results.
1825   John Quincy Adams was elected President by the House of Representatives; John C. Calhoun was elected Vice President.
  The Erie Canal was completed
1826 July 4 Former Presidents Jefferson and John Adams died within hours of each other on Independence Day
1828   Nullification Crisis: The South Carolina Exposition and Protest was published.
  Construction began on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.
  U.S. presidential election, 1828: Andrew Jackson was elected President. Calhoun continued as Vice President.
1829   Jackson was inaugurated.
1830   Second Great Awakening: A religious revival movement took place.
  The Oregon Trail came into use by settlers migrating to the Pacific Northwest.
May 28 The Indian Removal Act was passed.
1831   A revolt led by Nat Turner occurred.
  Publication of The Liberator began.
  Cyrus McCormick invented the reaper.
  Petticoat affair: The affair took place.
1832   The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Cherokee Nation in Worcester v. State of Georgia.
  Black Hawk War: The war took place.
  The Tariff of 1832 was passed.
  The Ordinance of Nullification was passed by South Carolina.
  The Department of Indian Affairs was established.
  United States presidential election, 1832: Jackson was reelected President; Martin Van Buren was elected Vice President of the United States.
  Bank War: Jackson vetoed the charter renewal of the Second Bank of the United States.
  Calhoun resigned the Vice Presidency.
1833   The Force Bill, expanding Presidential powers, was passed.
  Jackson’s second inauguration was held.
1834   Slavery debates took place at Lane Theological Seminary.
1835   Texas Revolution: The revolution began.
  Alexis De Tocqueville‘s Democracy in America was published.
  Second Seminole War: A war began in Florida with Seminole resistance to relocation.

Around 1802, Thomas Swann, a prominent Alexandria attorney who also served as the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia, built a two-story house at the southeast corner of Prince and South Columbus streets. The brick home was built in the Federal style popular at that time.

Henry Daingerfield Period 1833-1898

Who Was Henry Daingerfield?

Henry Daingerfield was born into the prominent family of Bathurst and Eliza (Kay) Daingerfield in Alexandria, VA. He became a successful entrepreneur and business owner, starting as early as age 17 in the import/export business with his brothers John and Edward.

Henry married three times and fathered seven children.

With Susan J. B. Sewall (1803-1837), whom he married on October 21, 1823, there were four children:

  • Susan Sewall Daingerfield (c. 1828-1886), married John S. Barbour
  • Ellen C. Daingerfield (c. 1831-1912)
  • Mary Bathurst Daingerfield, died in infancy
  • Robert Daingerfield, died in infancy

The second marriage in November 1838 to Rosalie Taylor (1811-1841) was childless.

The third marriage (December 9, 1847) to Eliza Ridgley Johnson (1825-1897) bore three children:

  • Henry Daingerfield, Jr. (1850-1894), married Virginia Peyton Key (1853-1926)
  • Reverdy Daingerfield (1852-1896), married Effie Nicholson (1852-?)
  • Lorenzo Lewis Daingerfield, died in childhood

Summarizing Daingerfield’s business achievements, Harold Hurst states: “The city tax list for 1855 discloses that Henry Daingerfield was the highest assessed property holder in the community and the owner of stores, warehouses, wharves, a large private residence, a flourishing farm, and personal property whose total value exceeded $130,000.”1

Henry’s connections and success earned him positions on several company boards of directors. Two especially fitted his apparent interests in transportation and land investment. He was a member of the commission that planned the 7-mile canal between Alexandria, VA and Georgetown, D.C. The canal passed adjacent to property he owned, which still bears his name, Daingerfield Island on the Potomac River near Reagan National Airport.

Appointment to the Board of Directors of the Orange and Alexandria Railroad in May 1849 almost certainly motivated Daingerfield’s interest in purchasing the two Ravensworth parcels he acquired. Both parcels lay in the path of the railroad right of way. Jack Hiller, in his historical essay, “Henry Daingerfield and the Origin of Springfield.” states:

“The pattern of his land acquisitions suggests that Daingerfield was betting land values would increase in direct proportion to the proximity of the tracks. In fact, the majority of landowners permitted tracks to cross their property without charge in the hope that their land values would increase.”2

Much of the information in this brief summary was developed from Hiller’s essay. In it he credits Daingerfield as the early founder of the Springfield community, which grew up in one of the two Ravensworth parcels he bought (Parcel 1.2.1) and named “Springfield Farm.” Springfield Station was one of the original stops on the new railroad.

Additional information about Henry Daingerfield, his family and the founding and history of Springfield appear in Jack Hiller’s article:

 

MAJOR HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE PERIOD

1837   Van Buren was inaugurated.
  The United States recognized the Republic of Texas.
  Caroline Affair: The affair took place.
Jan 26 Michigan became the 26th state.
  Oberlin College began enrolling female students.
  Panic of 1837: The panic took place.
 

A decision in Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge reversed a decision in Dartmouth College v. Woodward

and affirmed that property rights can be overridden by public need.

1838  

The forced removal of the Cherokee Nation from the Southeastern United States along

the Trail of Tears led to over four thousand Native American deaths.

  Aroostook War: The war took place.
1840   United States presidential election, 1840: An election was held.
1841   William Henry Harrison became President.
  John Quincy Adams argued the case United States v. The Amistad before the Supreme Court.
  United States v. The Amistad was decided.
  President Harrison died after only a month in office.
  John Tyler became President.
1842 August 9 The Webster-Ashburton Treaty was signed.
  Dorr Rebellion: A civil war took place in Rhode Island.
1843   An attempt to impeach Tyler failed.
1844   U.S. presidential election, 1844: An election was held.
  The anti-suffragist Helen Kendrick Johnson was born.
1845   Texas Annexation: The annexation took place.
  James K. Polk became President of the United States.
Mar 3 Florida became the 27th state.
Dec 28 Texas became the 28th state.
1846   Mexican–American War: The war began.
Dec 28 Iowa became the 29th state.
  The Wilmot Proviso was introduced.
1848   U.S. presidential election, 1848: An election was held.
May 29 Wisconsin became the 30th state.
Feb 2 Mexican–American War: The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the war.
1849   Zachary Taylor became President.
  California Gold Rush: The gold rush began.
1850   Taylor threatened to veto the Compromise of 1850 even at the risk of civil war.
  Taylor died. Millard Fillmore became President.
  The Clayton–Bulwer Treaty was signed.
  The Compromise of 1850 was passed.
Sep 9 California became the 31st state.
1852   U.S. presidential election, 1852: An election was held.
1853   Franklin Pierce became President.
  Commodore Matthew Perry opened Japan.
1854   The Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed, nullifying the Missouri Compromise.
Jun 8 The Gadsden Purchase was finalized.
  The Ostend Manifesto was issued.
  The Convention of Kanagawa was signed.
  William Walker led an expedition.
1855   The Farmers’ High School, later Penn State University, was founded.
1856   Sacking of Lawrence: The sacking of Lawrence took place.
May 24–25 Pottawatomie Massacre: The massacre, led by John Brown, took place.
  Preston Brooks beat Charles Sumner with his walking stick in the Senate chamber.
  U.S. presidential election, 1856: An election was held.
1857   James Buchanan became President.
  A decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford declared that blacks were not citizens of the United States and could not sue.
May Utah War: The war started.
  The LeCompton Constitution was rejected in the Kansas Territory.
  Panic of 1857: The panic took place.
1858   The first transatlantic cable was laid.
May 11 Minnesota became the 32nd state.
  Lincoln-Douglas Debates: The debates were held.
  The United States became party to the Treaty of Tientsin.
1859   John Brown led a raid on Harper’s Ferry.
Feb 14 Oregon became the 33rd state.
  The Comstock Lode was discovered.
1860   The Pony Express was founded.
  The Crittenden Compromise was reached.
Nov 6 United States presidential election, 1860: Abraham Lincoln was elected President of the United States.
Dec 20 South Carolina seceded from the Union.
1861   Ten more states seceded from the Union and established the Confederate States of America.
Jan 29 Kansas became the 34th state.
  Jefferson Davis was elected President of the Confederacy.
  American Civil War: The war began at Fort Sumter.
  First Battle of Bull Run: The battle took place.
1862   Battle of Hampton Roads: A naval battle between the Monitor and Merrimack took place.
  The Homestead Act was passed.
  The Morrill Land-Grant Colleges Act was passed.
  General Robert E. Lee was placed in command of the Army of Northern Virginia.
  Second Battle of Bull Run: The battle took place.
  Battle of Antietam: The battle took place.
Aug–Dec Dakota War of 1862: The war was fought.
1863   Battle of Gettysburg: The battle took place.
Jan 1 Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation freeing slaves in the rebel states.
  Siege of Vicksburg: The siege took place.
  New York Draft Riots: Draft riots took place.
Jun 20 Pro-Union counties which had seceded from Virginia became the 35th state, West Virginia.
1864   General Ulysses S. Grant was put in command of all Union forces.
  The Wade–Davis Bill was passed.
  Sand Creek Massacre: The massacre took place.
Oct 31 Nevada became the 36th state.
  U.S. presidential election, 1864: An election was held.
  Sherman’s March to the Sea: The march took place.
1865   Lee was made commander-in-chief of all Confederate forces.
  Richmond, Virginia, the Confederate capital, was captured by a corps of black Union troops.
  Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox Court House.
April 15 Abraham Lincoln assassination: Lincoln was assassinated; Andrew Johnson became President.
  American Civil War: The war ended with the surrender of the last elements of the Confederacy.
 

The Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was passed, permanently

outlawing slavery.

  The Freedmen’s Bureau was established.
1866   The Civil Rights Act of 1866 was passed.
  The Ku Klux Klan was founded.
1867   The Tenure of Office Act (1867) was enacted.
Mar 1 Nebraska became the 37th state.
  The Alaska Purchase (also known as “Seward’s Folly”): The Alaskan territory was purchased from Russia.
1868   Impeachment of Andrew Johnson: The attempted impeachment ended in an acquittal by the Senate.
 

The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, second of

the Reconstruction Amendments, was ratified.

  Grant was elected President.
1869   The First Transcontinental Railroad was completed at Promontory Summit, Utah Territory.[61]
May 15

Women’s suffrage leaders Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton founded the

National Woman Suffrage Association.

1870   The Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was passed.
  The first graduate programs, at Yale University and Harvard, began.
  The Force Acts were passed.
1871   Great Chicago Fire: The fire occurred.
 

The Treaty of Washington, 1871 was signed with the British Empire regarding the

Dominion of Canada.

1872   Yellowstone National Park was created.
  Crédit Mobilier scandal: The scandal took place.
  The Amnesty Act was passed.
  The Alabama Claims were settled.
  U.S. presidential election, 1872: An election was held.
1873   Panic of 1873: The panic took place.
  Virginius Affair: The affair took place.
1874   Red River Indian War
1875   Kentucky Derby: Aristides (horse) won the first Kentucky Derby.
  The Resumption Act was passed.
  The Civil Rights Act of 1875 was passed.
  The Art Students League of New York was founded.
1876   The National League of baseball was founded.
  Centennial Exposition: The Exposition, in Philadelphia, was held.
  A decision in Munn v. Illinois established the public regulation of utilities.
  Colorado became the 38th state.
  Battle of Little Bighorn: The battle took place.
 

Wild Bill Hickok was killed by a shot to the back of the head by Jack McCall while

playing poker in Deadwood, South Dakota.

  Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone.
 

U.S. presidential election, 1876: The election produced an unclear, result with twenty

Electoral College votes disputed.

1877   The Electoral Commission awarded Rutherford B. Hayes the Presidency.
  Reconstruction era of the United States: The era ended.
  Nez Perce War: The war took place.
1878   The Bland-Allison Act was passed.
  The first Morgan silver dollars were minted.
1879   Thomas Edison invented the light bulb.
  The Knights of Labor went public.
1880   The University of Southern California was founded.
  The Population of the United States passed fifty million.
1881   Gunfight at the O.K. Corral: A gunfight took place in Tombstone, Arizona Territory.
  James Garfield was inaugurated President of the United States.
  Garfield was assassinated.
  Chester A. Arthur was inaugurated President of the United States.
  Clara Barton created the Red Cross.
  The Tuskegee Institute was founded
  Billy the Kid was shot and killed by Sheriff Pat Garrett.
  A Century of Dishonor was written by Helen Hunt Jackson.
1882   The Chinese Exclusion Act was passed.
  Jesse James was shot and killed by Robert Ford and Charlie Ford.
1883   Buffalo Bill Cody debuted his Wild West Show.
  A decision in the Civil Rights Cases legalized the doctrine of racial segregation.
  The Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act was passed.
  The Brooklyn Bridge opened.
1885   Grover Cleveland was inaugurated as President.
  The Washington monument was completed.
1886   Haymarket Riot: The riot took place.
  The American Federation of Labor was founded in Columbus, Ohio.
1887   The United States Congress created the Interstate Commerce Commission.
  The Dawes Act was passed.
  The Hatch Act was passed.
1888   Looking Backward, by Edward Bellamy, was published.
  The National Geographic Society was founded.
1889   Benjamin Harrison becomes President
Nov 2 North Dakota, South Dakota became the 39th and 40th states.
Nov 8 Montana became the 41st state
Nov 11 Washington became the 42nd state.
  Johnstown flood: A flood occurred in Pennsylvania.
  Jane Addams founded Hull House.
April 22 Land Run of 1889: The land run began.
1890   The Sherman Antitrust Act was passed.
  Jacob Riis published How the Other Half Lives.
  The Sherman Silver Purchase Act was passed.
  The McKinley tariff was passed.
  Yosemite National Park was created.
Jul 3 Idaho became the 43rd state.
Jul 10 Wyoming became the 44th state.
  Wounded Knee Massacre: The massacre took place.
  The National American Woman Suffrage Association was founded.
1891   Baltimore Crisis: The crisis took place.
  James Naismith invented basketball.
1892   Homestead Strike: The strike took place.
  General Electric was founded.
  The Sierra Club was founded
1893   Cleveland was inaugurated President for a second term.
  Panic of 1893: The panic took place.
  The Sherman Silver Purchase Act was repealed.
1894   Coxey’s Army marched on Washington, D.C.
  Pullman strike: The strike took place.
  The Wilson-Gorman Tariff Act, including an income tax, was passed.
1895   Stagger Lee Shelton shot Billy Lyons.
 

Pollock v. Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company was decided, striking down part of

the Wilson-Gorman Tariff Act.

1896   A decision in Plessy v. Ferguson affirmed the legality of “separate but equal” facilities.
  William Jennings Bryan delivered his Cross of Gold speech.
  Gold was discovered in the Yukon‘s Klondike region.
Jan 4 Utah became the 45th state.
1897   William McKinley became President.
  The Boston subway was completed.
  The Dingley Act was passed.
1898   The USS Maine exploded in Havana harbor.
  The De Lôme Letter was published.
  Spanish–American War: The Treaty of Paris (1898) ended the war.
Jul 7 Republic of Hawaii was annexed.
  The Newlands Resolution was passed.
  The American Anti-Imperialist League was organized.
1899   The Teller Amendment was passed.
  American Samoa was occupied.
  The Open Door Policy was announced.

ARCHITECTURAL CHANGES TO THE BUILDING

In 1833, Henry Daingerfield purchased the property for $6,250. A successful importer and shipping merchant, Daingerfield was likely responsible for some of the remodeling that took place over the next 50 years. A third floor and a grand ballroom were added to the original structure, as were a mansard roof and Italianate elements typical of the Victorian period.

St. Mary’s Academy Period 1898-1943

Who Were The Sisters of The Holy Cross?

The Sisters of the Holy Cross arrived in Alexandria just after the Civil War. The first house, on North Fairfax Street, had been a hospital for Union soldiers. At Grant’s request, many of the sisters had served as nurses for both Union and Confederate soldiers and sailors during the war.

St. Mary’s Academy began on Prince Street and by 1870 there were 6 teaching sisters, 4 boarders and 86 elementary and high school students. Its reputation spread and its enrollment grew. In 1913 Mother Vincentia, Eleanor Fannon, was appointed principal of her alma mater. Her success was evidenced by the fact that she cancelled the debt, improved the plant, affiliated with Catholic University, won Virginia accreditation and increased enrollment.

When the Xaverian Brothers’ school closed, St. Mary’s became coed for 5 years. During WWII the government needed the Prince St. property for a nurses’ training center and St. Mary’s moved to Mt. Ida on Russell Road, the former estate of state Senator Floyd King. While the school was being built, the Baptist church across the street invited us to use their building for classes. The land on which the white house and school stood had extended to the Potomac River. It was part of a land grant the king of England had given Captain Joseph Alexander, the city’s founder. Bishop Peter Ireton officiated at its dedication.

In 1964 Bishop Ireton was opened, staffed by Salesian priests. The two schools collaborated when the girls participated in Gar Whaley’s excellent band and wind ensemble and the boys came to St. Mary’s to join Sister Rose Anthony’s choral group. Both schools have a tradition of excellence and have won many awards.

When Connie Southard and Steve Maczynski coached the Organization of American States competition, St. Mary’s won the best delegation every year. Parents were amazed at what they knew about remote places like St. Lucie’s and other South American countries. We were elated with them when they came running up the hill after a competition singing “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina.” They developed an interest in these countries similar to the enthusiasm Ireton students now have for Haiti.

In spite of its proud traditions, with the sisters going into more diversified ministries, and because the building was inadequate for current trends in education and athletics, we closed our doors reluctantly. Once the decision was made, however, everyone at Ireton and St. Mary’s threw themselves into the so-called “merger” with enthusiasm. When we went over to Ireton for joint meetings immediately after school, we weren’t surprised to find that the girls had already beat us over. Father Metzger, Marguerite Scafati and Sr. Anne Mae Golden skillfully facilitated the transition, and we could not have been welcomed with more genuine warmth and enthusiasm by the Ireton community.

MAJOR HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE ST. MARY’S ACADEMY PERIOD

1901 September 14 President William McKinley was assassinated by Leon Czolgosz in Buffalo, New York.
September 14 Vice President Theodore Roosevelt was sworn in as president, after the assassination of President McKinley.
November 18 The Hay–Pauncefote Treaty was signed.
1902 January 1 The first Rose Bowl Game was played between the University of Michigan and Stanford University.
February 19 The Elkins Act was signed into law.
  The Drago Doctrine was announced.
June 17 The Newlands Reclamation Act was signed into law.
1903 January 22 The Hay–Herrán Treaty was passed.
June 16 The Ford Motor Company was formed.
February 14 The Department of Commerce and Labor was created.
October 1 The first World Series was played between the Boston Americans and Pittsburgh Pirates.
November 18 The Hay–Bunau-Varilla Treaty was signed.
December 1 The movie The Great Train Robbery opened.
December 17 The Wright brothers made their first powered flight in the Wright Flyer.
1904   The Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine was issued.
May 4 The Panama Canal Zone was acquired by the United States from France for $40 million.
November 8

United States presidential election, 1904: President Theodore Roosevelt was reelected to a second term,

defeating New York Appeals Court Judge Alton B. Parker.

1905 July 11–14 The Niagara Falls conference was held.
September 5

The Treaty of Portsmouth, negotiated by President Theodore Roosevelt, was signed, ending the

 Russo-Japanese War .

1906 March 13 Women’s suffrage and civil rights activist Susan B. Anthony died.
April 18

The 1906 San Francisco earthquake killed over 3,400 people and destroyed over 80% of San Francisco;

being the deadliest earthquake in American history.

June 29 The Hepburn Act was signed into law.
June 30

The Pure Food and Drug Act and Meat Inspection Act were signed; establishing

 the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

December 10

President Theodore Roosevelt was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his role in negotiating

the end of the Russo-Japanese war; becoming the first statesman to win a Nobel Prize.

1907 January 26 The Tillman Act was signed into law.
February 26 The Gentlemen’s Agreement of 1907 was signed.
November 17 Oklahoma was admitted to the Union, becoming the 46th state.
December 6 Monongah Mining Disaster: A coal mine exploded in Monongah, West Virginia, killing at least 361.
1908 May 30 The Aldrich–Vreeland Act was signed into law.
July 26 The Bureau of Investigation (later the FBI) was established.
October 1 The Ford Model T appeared on the market.
November 3

United States presidential election, 1908: U.S. Secretary of War William Howard Taft was

elected President, defeating former Nebraska Representative William Jennings Bryan.

November 30 The Root–Takahira Agreement was reached.
1909   William Howard Taft implemented Dollar Diplomacy.
February 12 The NAACP was founded by W. E. B. Du Bois.
April 7 Robert Peary became the first person to reach the North Pole.
August 2 The first redesigned Lincoln Penny was released to the public.
1910 February 8 The Boy Scouts of America was created.
June 18 The Mann–Elkins Act was signed into law.
The Mann Act was signed into law.
August 6 The Payne–Aldrich Tariff Act was signed into law.
1911 May 15

Standard Oil Company v. United States: The Supreme Court found Standard Oil guilty of

 monopolizing the petroleum industry; subsequently dividing

 Standard Oil into several geographically separate firms.

May 30 The first Indianapolis 500 was held; being won by Ray Harroun.
1912 January 6 New Mexico was admitted to the Union, becoming the 47th.
February 14 Arizona was admitted to the Union, becoming the 48th state.
March 12 Girl Scouts of the USA was created by Juliette Gordon Low.
April 14–15

The RMS Titanic crashed into an iceberg in the northern Atlantic Ocean,

sinking the ship entirely less than three hours the initial collision,

killing over 1,500 of the 2,224 passengers aboard.

October 14

Former President Theodore Roosevelt was shot, but not killed, while campaigning

for President as the candidate for the progressive Bull Moose Party.

November 5

United States presidential election, 1912: New Jersey Governor Woodrow Wilson defeated

 incumbent President William Howard Taft, former President Theodore Roosevelt and

union leader Eugene V. Debs.

1913 February 3 The Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, establishing an income tax, was ratified.
February 17

The Armory Show opened in New York City, introducing American

and European modern art to the American public.

May 31

The Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, establishing direct election of Senators,

was ratified.

June 15

After mass civilian casualties in the Battle of Bud Bagsak, the Moro‘s surrendered their rebellion,

ending the Philippine–American War.

October 4 The Underwood Tariff was signed into law.
December 1 Henry Ford developed the modern assembly line.
December 23 The Federal Reserve Act was signed into law; establishing the Federal Reserve System.
1914 April 20

Ludlow Massacre: The camps of striking coal miners were attacked by the Colorado National Guard;

killing 25, including 11 children.

July 28

World War I: Austria-Hungary invaded the Kingdom of Serbia after the assassination of

 Archduke Franz Ferdinand; triggering the start of World War I.

May 9 The first Mother’s Day was observed.
September 26 The Federal Trade Commission was established.
October 15 The Clayton Antitrust Act was signed into law.
1915 February 8 The controversial movie The Birth of a Nation opened in Los Angeles, becoming the largest-grossing movie at the time.
May 7 The RMS Lusitania was sunk by a German torpedo, killing 1,198 passengers; partially contributing to the U.S.’s later involvement in World War I.
1916 November 7 Jeannette Rankin of Montana became the first woman elected to the United States Congress.
  The Adamson Railway Labor Act was signed into law.
July 17 The Federal Farm Loan Act was signed into law.
August 29 The Jones Act was signed into law.
November 7

United States presidential election, 1916: President Woodrow Wilson was reelected to

 a second term, defeating Associate Supreme Court Justice Charles Evans Hughes of New York.

1917 March 31 The United States acquired the Virgin Islands from Denmark for $25,000,000.
March 1

The Zimmermann telegram was published, helping shift public opinion in favor of U.S.

involvement in World War I.

April 6 The United States declared war on Germany, beginning the U.S.’s involvement in World War I.
June 15 The Espionage Act was signed into law.
November 2 The Lansing–Ishii Agreement was signed.
  First Red Scare: The scare, marked by a widespread fear of Bolshevism and anarchism, began.
1918 January 8

World War I: President Woodrow Wilson‘s Fourteen Points, which assured citizens that the

war was being fought for a moral cause and for postwar peace in Europe, was issued.

May 16

The Sedition Act of 1918 was signed into law; forbidding the “disloyal, profane, scurrilous,

or abusive language” against the United States government during a time of war.

1919  

Red Summer: Heightened racial scrutinization of African-Americans during the Red Scare prompted

 mass racial riots among Whites in Bisbee, Arizona, Longview, Texas, Washington D.C., Chicago,

Knoxville, Omaha, and Elaine, Arkansas.

 

Inflation from the Post–World War I recession lead to the strike of 4 million workers;

prompting the Boston Police Strike, Seattle General Strike, Steel Strike of 1919 and Coal Strike of 1919.

June 28 World War I: The Treaty of Versailles ended the war.
October 2 The Black Sox Scandal, involving the fixing of the 1919 World Series, occurred.
October 28

President Woodrow Wilson’s veto of the Volstead Act was overridden by the Senate,

establishing the Eighteenth Amendment.

November 19 The United States Senate rejected the Treaty of Versailles and the League of Nations, becoming the first time in U.S. history the Senate rejected a peace treaty.
1920 January 17

The Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, establishing prohibition in the United States,

was ratified.

  The first radio broadcasts were made, in Pittsburgh and Detroit.
August 18 The Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, granting women the right to vote, was ratified.
September 16 Wall Street Bombing: Wall Street, the financial district of the United States, was bombed, killing 38 people.
November 2

United States presidential election, 1920: Ohio Senator Warren G. Harding was elected President,

defeating Ohio Governor James M. Cox.

1921 May 19 The Emergency Quota Act was signed into law.
May 31 – June 1

The Tulsa Race Riot occurred; resulting in the deaths of up to 300 African-Americans and

 leaving more than 8,000 homeless.

November 12 The first meeting of the Washington Disarmament Conference of 1921 was held.
1922 September 21 The Fordney–McCumber Tariff was signed into law.
1923 August 2 President Warren G. Harding died of a heart attack at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco.
August 3 Vice President Calvin Coolidge was sworn in as President, the day following the death of President Harding.
November 22 Teapot Dome scandal: Secretary of the Interior Albert B. Fall resigned as a result of the scandal.
December 10 The Equal Rights Amendment, written by women’s suffragist leader Alice Paul, was first introduced in the Senate.
1924 May 10 J. Edgar Hoover was appointed director of the Bureau of Investigation.
May 26 The Immigration Act Basic Law was signed into law.
November 4

United States presidential election, 1924: President Calvin Coolidge defeated

former Solicitor General John W. Davis and Wisconsin Senator Robert M. La Follette.

1925 July 21

Scopes Trial: High school teacher John T. Scopes was found guilty of violating Tennessee’s Butler Act,

 for teaching human evolution in the classroom.

November 4 Nellie Tayloe Ross was elected Governor of Wyoming, becoming the first woman elected governor of a U.S. State.
November 28 WSM first broadcast the Grand Ole Opry.
1926 November 15 The broadcast network NBC was founded.
1927 January 27 The radio network Columbia Broadcasting System (later CBS) was founded.
May 18

Bath School disaster: Andrew Kehoe detonated over 500 pounds of dynamite and incendiary pyrotol

which he planted in an elementary school in Bath Township, Michigan, where he later detonated the

first ever car bomb in the U.S. in a suicide attack at the scene of the bombing; killing a total of 44 people

 and being the deadliest mass murder at a school in U.S. History.

May 21 Charles Lindbergh made the first trans-Atlantic flight.
August 23 Sacco and Vanzetti were executed.
October 6 The Jazz Singer, the first motion picture with sound, was released.
1928 August 27 The Kellogg–Briand Pact was signed.
November 6

United States presidential election, 1928: U.S. Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover was elected

 President, defeating New York Governor Al Smith.

November 18 Disney’s animated feature Steamboat Willie, featuring Mickey Mouse, opened.
1929 February 14

The St. Valentine’s Day Massacre became one of the most infamous slaying between rival gangs of the

 Prohibition era; resulting in the deaths of 7.

October 29 Wall Street Crash of 1929: The Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted a record 68 points.
November 7 The Museum of Modern Art opened to the public in New York City.
February 20 American Samoa officially became a United States territory.
1930 June 17 The Smoot–Hawley Tariff Act was signed into law.
1931 May 1 The Empire State Building opened in New York City.
1932 January 7 The Stimson Doctrine was published.
January 22 The Reconstruction Finance Corporation was established.
March 23  agood r
May The Bonus Army protests began in Washington, D.C.
May 20 Amelia Earhart flew solo across the Atlantic Ocean.
November 8

United States presidential election, 1932: New York Governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt

is elected President, defeating incumbent Herbert Hoover.

1933 January 23

The Twentieth Amendment to the United States Constitution, moving the beginning and end

of the terms of elected federal officials to January 20, was ratified.

February 15

Giuseppe Zangara assassinated Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak in an attempt on President-elect

 Franklin Delano Roosevelt‘s life.

March 4

President Franklin Delano Roosevelt appointed Frances Perkins United States Secretary of Labor,

becoming the first woman to hold a cabinet level position.

 

New Deal: The Agricultural Adjustment Act, Civil Works Administration, Civilian Conservation Corps,

 Farm Credit Administration, Home Owners Loan Corporation, Tennessee Valley Authority,

Public Works Administration, National Industrial Recovery Act were all established or brought into force.

December 5 The Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution, ending prohibition, was ratified.

The Alexandria Hospital School of Nursing [Alexandria Hospital] 1943-1975

The Alexandria Hospital School of Nursing began on November 1, 1894, when Marjorie Adamson established a small training school at the Alexandria Hospital. It was the fourth school of nursing to be established in the Commonwealth of Virginia. The original two-year program began with two “pupil nurses,” who received their diplomas on December 1, 1896. As a graduate of the Glasgow Royal Infirmary in Scotland, Marjorie Adamson was both a physician and a nurse, and her professional background inspired her to establish a school that would promote excellence. The Board of Lady Managers was the governing board of the Hospital and the School and Marjorie Adamson proposed to the Board that the School offer general training for nurses using a curriculum that was the same as that used in the leading training schools in the South. 

The Alexandria Hospital School of Nursing quickly established a reputation for excellence, and the course of study included lectures from physicians, and clinical experience in community nursing in the homes of Alexandria residents. In 1911 under the leadership of Naomi Simmons, the School increased the length of training to three years, became affiliated with the Episcopal Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital in Washington D.C., and required graduates to take the State Board examination to obtain licensure. The curriculum covered such subjects as anatomy, symptomatology, EENT, dietetics, materia medica, physiology, hygiene, surgical technique and emergency, obstetrics, gynecology, children’s diseases, anesthetics, urinalysis, bacteriology, massage, and practical nursing. 

When an entering student successfully completed the two-month probationary period, she was given a cap to signify acceptance as a student nurse. Upon graduation, the cap was decorated with a black band. In 1916, Fannie Carter, a graduate of George Washington University, became the Superintendent of Nursing and Director of the School, a position she held for 21 years. During her tenure, admission requirements were raised, classes were held for four hours a day, a full-time instructor was hired, and History of Nursing was added to the curriculum. In 1928, an arrangement was made with the University of Virginia Hospital for an affiliation in pediatrics. The School closed from 1933 to 1936 due to financial difficulties incurred as a result of the Depression. 

In 1943, Alexandria Hospital received approval to provide training for Cadet Nurses to help during World War II. The program continued until 1945. In 1944 the affiliation in Pediatric Nursing was switched to Children’s Hospital in Washington D.C. and an affiliation in Psychiatric Nursing was established with St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in Washington, D.C. In 1956 the Medical Nursing Library was established and in 1958 the School received full accreditation from the National League for Nursing. Also in 1958 married students were allowed at the School, and it became the first school in the State of Virginia to admit male nursing students. 

Throughout the 1960’s the number of faculty increased, and in 1968, the School of Nursing became a separate department in the Alexandria Hospital organization. In 1974, the entire hospital moved from Duke Street to Seminary Road, student dormitories closed, and the School became a commuter facility.

(After the school closed, 17 boxes of material were sent to the University of Virginia. There’s a guide to the AHSN Collection, including a history of the school, on the Virginia Heritage website.)

The Swann-Daingerfield House was sold to a private developer in 1976 who converted it to a private residence

http://m.connectionnewspapers.com/news/2016/sep/22/alexandria-swann-daingerfield-hosts-nursing-school/?templates=mobile

MAJOR HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE ALEXANDRIA HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSING PERIOD

1933 January 23

The Twentieth Amendment to the United States Constitution, moving the beginning and end of the terms

 of elected federal officials to January 20, was ratified.

February 15

Giuseppe Zangara assassinated Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak in an attempt on President-elect

 Franklin Delano Roosevelt‘s life.

March 4

President Franklin Delano Roosevelt appointed Frances Perkins United States Secretary of Labor,

becoming the first woman to hold a cabinet level position.

 

New Deal: The Agricultural Adjustment Act, Civil Works Administration, Civilian Conservation Corps,

Farm Credit Administration, Home Owners Loan Corporation, Tennessee Valley Authority,

Public Works Administration, National Industrial Recovery Act were all established or brought into force.

December 5 The Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution, ending prohibition, was ratified.
1934   Dust Bowl: The Dust Bowl, characterized by severe drought and heat waves in the Great Plains, began.
March 24 The Tydings–McDuffie Act was signed into law, establishing the Philippine Commonwealth.
June 6 The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission was established.
June 12 The Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act was signed into law.
June 16 The Glass–Steagall Act was signed into law.
June 18 The Indian Reorganization Act was signed into law.
June 22 John Dillinger was killed.
June 28 The Federal Housing Administration was established.
1935 March 22 The FBI was established, with J. Edgar Hoover as its first director.
April 8 The Works Progress Administration was established.
May 14 The Social Security Act was signed into law; establishing the Social Security Administration.
August 9 The Motor Carrier Act was signed into law.
May 27

Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States: The Supreme Court ruled that the National Industrial Recovery Act,

a central piece of President Roosevelt’s New Deal program, was unconstitutional.

July 5 The National Labor Relations Act was signed into law.
August 9 The Motor Carrier Act was signed into law.
August 30 The Revenue Act of 1935 was signed into law.
August 31 The Neutrality Act of 1935 was signed into law.
September 10 Louisiana Senator Huey Long was assassinated.
November 9 The Congress of Industrial Organizations was founded.
1936 January 6

United States v. Butler: The Supreme Court ruled that the processing taxes instituted under the 1933

 Agricultural Adjustment Act were unconstitutional.

March 25 The Second London Naval Treaty was signed.
June 19 The Robinson-Patman Act was signed into law.
November 3

United States presidential election, 1936: President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was reelected

to a second term, defeating Kansas Governor Alf Landon.

December 30 The Flint Sit-Down Strike began.
1937 May 1 The Neutrality Act of 1937 was signed into law.
May 6

Hindenburg disaster: The LZ 129 Hindenburg caught fire, crashing at the Lakehurst Naval Air Station

in Lakehurst, New Jersey after departing from Frankfurt, Germany; killing thirty-five passengers

and one ground crewman.

May 27 The Golden Gate Bridge opened in San Francisco.
December 12

Panay incident: A Japanese attack was made on the United States Navy gunboat USS Panay while

it was anchored in the Yangtze River outside of Nanjing; killing three Americans.

1938 June 25 The Fair Labor Standards Act was signed into law; establishing a federal minimum wage.
October 30 Orson Welles performed a broadcast of The War of the Worlds.
1939 February 4 Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs became the first full length animated film.
August 2

The Hatch Act, aimed at corrupt political practices, was signed into law, preventing federal civil

servants from campaigning.

September 1 Invasion of Poland (1939): Nazi Germany invaded Poland.
September 21

In response to the Poland Campaign, President Roosevelt requested a cash and carry policy to

 replace the Neutrality Acts.

1940 June 29 The Smith Act was signed into law.
  The cartoon characters Bugs Bunny and Tom and Jerry debuted.
July 20 Billboard publishes its first music popularity chart.
September 16 The Selective Training and Service Act of 1940, reinstating the U.S. military draft, was signed into law.
November 5

U.S. presidential election, 1940: President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was reelected to a third term,

defeating corporate lawyer Wendell Willkie of Indiana.

1941 February 23

American Nuclear chemist Glenn T. Seaborg, with fellow U.C. Berkeley researchers,

discovered the chemical element plutonium.

March 11

World War II: Lend-Lease, which supplied the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union, China, France

and other Allied nations with vast amounts of war material, began.

June 25 President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 8802, prohibiting racial discrimination in the defense industry.
August 14

World War II: The Atlantic Charter was drafted by Britain and the United States to serve as a

 blueprint for the postwar world.

December 7

Attack on Pearl Harbor: The Empire of Japan declares war on the United States and Britain,

attacking the U.S. Naval Base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Sinking six U.S. ships, including the USS Arizona,

and destroying 188 aircraft, the attack on Pearl Harbor resulted in the deaths of 2,402 Americans, leaving

1,247 wounded.

December 8 The United States declares war on the Empire of Japan, beginning the U.S. entry into World War II.
December 11 The United States declares war on Germany and Italy, after both nations declared war with United States.
1942   The Congress of Racial Equality was established.
January 20 The Office of Price Administration was established.
February 9 Automobile production in the United States for private consumers is halted by the War Production Board.
February 19

Japanese American internment: Internment and seizure of property began, per Executive Order 9066 issued by

President Roosevelt.

April 9

The U.S. surrenders to Japan in the Battle of Bataan, beginning the three year occupation of the

Commonwealth of the Philippines by Japanese forces.

April 11 President Roosevelt signed Executive order 8734; establishing the Office of Price Administration.
April 18 Pacific Theater of Operations: The Doolittle Raid begins the first U.S. bombing of Japanese archipelago.
June 3 The Aleutian Islands Campaign begins the Japanese occupation of Alaska Territory.
June 4–7 The Battle of Midway was fought.
August 7 The Guadalcanal Campaign begins in the Solomon Islands.
August 13 The Manhattan Project, leading to the development of the first atomic bomb, began.
October 21 The Revenue Act of 1942 was signed into law.
November 28 The Cocoanut Grove fire, the deadliest nightclub fire in U.S. History, killed 492 people in Boston.
1943 January 14–24 The Casablanca Conference was held.
March 31 The Broadway musical Oklahoma! opened.
June 20–22

The Detroit Race Riot occurred; resulting in the deaths of 34 Whites and African-Americans and

 leaving 670 injured.

September 8

Armistice of Cassibile: General Dwight Eisenhower publicly announces the surrender of Italy

to the Allied Powers; with Italy later declaring war on Germany one month later.

November 22–26 The Cairo Conference was held.
November 28 The Tehran Conference was held between the “Big Three” Allied leaders of World War II.
1944 June 6 Normandy Landings (D-Day): The Invasion of Normandy, one of the largest amphibious military assaults in history, began in the Allied Powers broader Operation Overlord; leading to the Liberation of Paris.
June 22 The G.I. Bill was signed into law.
July 1–22

United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference: Delegates from 44 nations met to discuss

a new post-WWII monetary policy.

August 21

The Dumbarton Oaks Conference began, starting the first talks between world

leaders on the establishment of the United Nations.

November 7

U.S. presidential election, 1944: President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was reelected to a fourth term,

defeating New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey.

December 16

The Battle of the Bulge, Germany’s final major offensive of World War II, began;

being the deadliest military battle for the United States during World War II.

1945 February 4–11 The Yalta Conference was held in Ukraine.
February 19 The Battle of Iwo Jima began.
March 19 The Western Allied invasion of Germany began.
April 1 The Battle of Okinawa began, being the deadliest battle of the Pacific War.
April 12

President Franklin D. Roosevelt died of a cerebral hemorrhage in Warm Springs, Georgia; with

Vice President Harry S. Truman succeeding him, becoming the 33rd President.

April 30 German Chancellor Adolf Hitler committed suicide alongside wife Eva Braun in Berlin.
May 7 Germany surrenders to the Allied Powers, leading to the End of World War II in Europe.
June 26 United Nations Charter: The United Nations was founded, replacing the League of Nations.

July 17 –

August 2

The Potsdam Conference was held in Occupied Germany.
August 6 & 9

Operation Downfall: The United States conducted the only two atomic bombings during a war on

 Hiroshima and Nagasaki; killing between an estimated 150,000-246,000 people.

August 15 Surrender of Japan: In a broadcast to the Japanese public, Emperor Hirohito announced that Japan had accepted the Potsdam Declaration, surrendering to the Allied Powers.
September 2

The Japanese Instrument of Surrender was signed between the Empire of Japan, the

United States, United Kingdom, Soviet Union, Republic of China, France, Netherlands, Canada,

Australia and New Zealand, on the deck of the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay; marking the end of World War II.

November 20 Nuremberg Trials: The military tribunals against Nazi Germany leadership began.
  Strike Wave of 1945–1946: Nationwide labor strikes were held, with over 4.6 million workers striking.
1946   Automobile production in the United States for private consumers resumed.
February 20 The Employment Act was signed into law; establishing the Council of Economic Advisers.
July 4 The Philippines regained independence from the United States.
July 14 Benjamin Spock‘s The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care was published.
August 1

The United States Atomic Energy Act of 1946 was signed into law; establishing the

 United States Atomic Energy Commission.

December 5 President Truman signed Executive Order 9808; establishing the President’s Committee on Civil Rights.
1947 March 12

The Truman Doctrine was declared, establishing “the policy of the United States to support

 free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures.”

March 21

President Truman signed executive order 9835; establishing the

 

Federal Employee Loyalty Program to search out the “infiltration of disloyal persons” in the U.S. Government.

April 15 Jackie Robinson of the Brooklyn Dodgers broke the color line in Major League Baseball.
June 5 The Marshall Plan was announced by U.S. Secretary of State George Marshall.
June 23 The Taft Hartley Act was enacted, with the House and Senate overriding President Truman’s veto of the bill.
July 7 The Roswell UFO incident occurred near Roswell, New Mexico.
July 18 The Presidential Succession Act was signed into law.
July 26 The National Security Act of 1947 was signed into law, establishing the Central Intelligence Agency.
October 30 The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade was signed in Geneva.
1948 April 30 The Charter of the Organization of American States was adopted.
June 8 Texaco Star Theater, the first top-rated United States network television show, debuted on television.
June 24 The Berlin Blockade, the first major crisis of the Cold War, took place.
The Selective Service Act of 1948 was signed into law.
July 26 President Truman signed Executive Order 9981, leading to the desegregating the United States Armed Forces.
November 2

U.S. presidential election, 1948: President Harry S. Truman was reelected to a second term, defeating

New York Governor and 1944 Presidential nominee Thomas E. Dewey, and

 South Carolina Governor Strom Thurmond, in what is regarded as one of the

 biggest upsets in American political history.

November 26 The Polaroid camera was first offered for sale.
1949 January 5

In the 1949 State of the Union Address, President Truman proposed

the unsuccessful Fair Deal; his administration’s agenda for economic and domestic policy.

  Allied-occupied Germany was divided into East and West Germany.
April 4 North Atlantic Treaty: The North Atlantic Treaty Organization was founded.
April 13 The Nuremberg Trials ended, with the convictions of 24 major Nazi political and military leaders, among others.
August 10

The National Security Amendments of 1949 was signed into law by President Truman, renaming

the Department of War the Department of Defense.

August 29 First Lightning: The Soviet Union tested its first atomic bomb.
1950  

Second Red Scare: McCarthyism, the term to describe “the practice of making unfair allegations or

using unfair investigative techniques, especially of pro-Communist activity” of Senator Joseph McCarthy,[317]

began after heightened fears of Communist influence in America.

January 21

A grand jury found former State Department official and President of the

 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Alger Hiss guilty on two

counts of perjury in connection with charges that he was a Soviet spy.

February 9

Senator McCarthy came to national prominence after claiming to have a list

of 205 State Department employees who were members of the Communist Party

and “helping to shape [the U.S.’s] foreign policy.”

June 25 Korean War: The North Korean military began the Communist lead invasion of South Korea.
June 27

President Truman ordered U.S. air and naval support to aid South Korea against the Northern

lead invasion; prompting the beginning of the U.S. involvement in the Korean War.

September 22

The McCarran Internal Security Act was enacted, with the House and Senate overriding

President Truman’s veto of the bill.

October 2 The comic strip Peanuts, by Charles M. Schulz, was first published.
November 1

Truman assassination attempt: Two Puerto Rican nationals attempted to assassinate

President Harry S. Truman while he stayed at Blair House.

1951 February 27

The Twenty-second Amendment to the United States Constitution, establishing term

limits for President, was ratified.

April 11

President Truman relieved General Douglas MacArthur of his commands after criticizing

the limited war efforts of the Truman administration, and starting unauthorized talks with China in the

 Korean war.

September 1 The ANZUS Treaty was signed.
September 8 The Japanese Peace Treaty Conference was held San Francisco.
October 10 The Mutual Security Act was signed into law.
1952 June 27

The McCarran–Walter Act was enacted, with the House and Senate overriding

President Truman’s veto of the bill.

November 4

United States presidential election, 1952: Five-Star General and former

Chief of Staff of the United States Army Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected

 President, defeating Illinois Governor Adlai Stevenson II.

1953 April 25

Molecular biologists James Watson and Francis Crick published their paper on the discovery

of the molecular structure of DNA.

June 19 Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed on conspiracy to commit espionage after they were found guilty of giving U.S. atomic secrets to the Soviet Union.
July 19 The Korean Armistice Agreement was signed, ending the Korean War.
August 15 Operation Ajax: Mohammad Reza Pahlavi returned to power after the CIA conducted a coup d’état in Iran.
1954 January 1 Tournament of Roses Parade: The parade was the first national color television broadcast.

April 26 –

July 20

Geneva Conference (1954): A conference was held where the United States attempted

to find a way to unify Korea and restore peace in Indochina.

May 17

Brown v. Board of Education: The Supreme Court declared that state laws establishing

separate public schools for black and white students, and denying black children equal

educational opportunities, were unconstitutional.

June 9

Army-McCarthy hearings: Senator McCarthy was nationally discredited after failing to provide

credible evidence supporting accusations of communist activity in the U.S. government

amid the two months of televised hearings.

June 18–27

Operation PBSUCCESS: The CIA organized the overthrow of Guatemala‘s democratically

elected President Jacobo Arbenz Guzmán.

September 8 The United States became a member of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO).
November 23

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at an all-time high of 382.74, the first time it

closed above its peak set before the Wall Street Crash of 1929.

December 2

The United States and the Republic of China signed the Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty,

amid the First Taiwan Strait Crisis.

December 23 The first successful kidney transplant on a human was performed in Boston.
1955   The African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955–1968) began.
April 12

The announcement that the polio vaccine developed by Jonas Salk was found to be

 “safe, effective and potent” was made by the University of Michigan.

April 15 Ray Kroc opened the first McDonald’s fast food restaurant in Des Plaines, Illinois.
May 14

The Warsaw Pact was signed, establishing a mutual defense arrangement subscribed

 to by eight Communist states in Eastern Europe, including the Soviet Union.

July 17 Disneyland opened at Anaheim, California.
August 28

Emmett Till was kidnapped, beaten and murdered in Money, Mississippi after

reportedly flirting with a white woman; with the pictures of his open casket funeral,

and the acquittal of his captors, the public reaction of Till’s death helped spark the Civil Rights Movement.

September 30 Actor James Dean was killed in a highway collision in Salinas, California.
November 1

Vietnam War: President Eisenhower deploys the first American personnel from the

 Military Assistance Advisory Group to South Vietnam after the First Indochina War.

December 1

Rosa Parks was arrested in Montgomery, Alabama after refusing to give up her bus

 seat to a white passenger, inciting the 386-day Montgomery Bus Boycott led

by Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

December 5

The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations merged

 into the AFL-CIO, becoming the largest labor union in the United States.

1956 June 29

The Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956, authorizing the construction of 41,000 miles of

the Interstate Highway System over a 20-year period, was signed into law.

  Hungarian Revolution of 1956: The United States refused to support the revolution.
November 6

United States presidential election, 1956: President Dwight D. Eisenhower was reelected to

 a second term, defeating 1952 Democratic presidential nominee Adlai Stevenson II in the rematch election.

1957 January 5

The Eisenhower Doctrine, wherein a country could request American economic

assistance or military aid if threatened by outside armed aggression, was proclaimed.

January 10

Dr. King, Rustin, Lowrey, Shuttlesworth and Abernathy founded the

 Southern Christian Leadership Council (SCLC).

September 4

Little Rock Integration Crisis: Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus deployed members

 of the Arkansas National Guard to prevent African-American students from

integrating in the Little Rock Central High School.

September 9 The Civil Rights Act of 1957, primarily a voting rights bill, was signed into law.
September 23

President Eisenhower federalized the Arkansas National Guard and sent members

of the 101st Airborne Division to escort the Little Rock Nine to their classrooms in

 response to Governor Faubus’ efforts preventing school desegregation.

October 4 Space race: The Soviet Union launched Sputnik.
December 2

Atoms for Peace: The Shippingport Atomic Power Station, the first commercial

nuclear power plant, went into service.

1958 January 31 Explorer 1: The first U.S. satellite was launched into space.
July 29

The National Aeronautics and Space Act was signed into law; establishing

the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

  Jack Kilby invented the integrated circuit.
September 2 The National Defense Education Act was signed into law.
1959 January 3 Alaska was admitted to the Union, becoming the 49th state.
February 4

The Day the Music Died: Musicians Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens,

J. P. “The Big Bopper” Richardson, and pilot, Roger Peterson, were killed in a plane accident.

May 4 The First Grammy Awards was held.
July 8

U.S. Army Master Sargent Chester Ovnand and Major Dale M. Buis were killed in South Vietnam,

being the first two official American casualties of the Vietnam War.

August 21 Hawaii was admitted to the Union, becoming the 50th state.
1960 February 1

The Greensboro sit-ins, sparked by the refusal of four African American college students to move

from a segregated lunch counter, began similar widespread acts of civil disobedience to protest Jim Crow laws.

  The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee was founded.
May 1 U-2 incident: A CIA U-2 spy plane was shot down while flying a reconnaissance mission over Soviet airspace.
May 6

The Civil Rights Act of 1960, establishing federal inspection of local voter

registration polls and penalties for those attempting to obstruct the right to vote, was signed into law.

September 26

The first ever general election debate between presidential candidates was held between

Democratic nominee John F. Kennedy and Republican nominee Richard M. Nixon.

November 8

United States presidential election, 1960: Massachusetts Senator John F. Kennedy was elected President,

 defeating Vice President Richard M. Nixon and becoming the youngest person

to be elected to the office of the Presidency.

December 5

Boynton v. Virginia: In a 7-2 ruling, the Supreme Court ruled that African-Americans

 were protected from racial segregation on buses by the Interstate Commerce Act.

December 20 The National Front for the Liberation of Vietnam was formed.
1961 January 3 The United States broke diplomatic relations with Cuba.
January 17 President Eisenhower gave his farewell address which warned of the “military–industrial complex“.
February 7 The United States embargo against Cuba came into force.
March 1 President Kennedy signed Executive Order 10924, establishing the Peace Corps.
March 29

The Twenty-third Amendment to the United States Constitution, which

granted electors to the District of Columbia, was ratified.

April 17 –

19

Bay of Pigs Invasion: The failed U.S. led invasion and attempted coup

 d’état of Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro took place.

May 4

The Freedom Rides began in Washington D.C. after the failure of to enforce

 the Supreme Court’s ruling in Boynton.

May 5 Alan Shepard piloted the Freedom 7 capsule to become the first American in space.
May 25

President Kennedy proposed the Apollo program, with the goal

 of “landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth.”

June 16

Vietnam War: President Kennedy deployed an additional 400

U.S. military advisors (900 total) to South Vietnam; totaling 3,200 American troops

by 1963, and more than 11,000 by mid-1964.

1962 February 20 John Glenn orbited the Earth.
March 26 A decision was reached in Baker v. Carr which enabled federal courts to intervene in and to decide reapportionment cases.
June 25 A decision in Engel v. Vitale determined that it was unconstitutional for state officials to compose an official school prayer and require its recitation in public schools.
August 5 Marilyn Monroe died of an apparent overdose from acute barbiturate poisoning at age thirty-six.
October 14–27 Cuban missile crisis: A nuclear confrontation took place between the United States and the Soviet Union.
1963 February 19 Betty Friedan‘s The Feminine Mystique, attributed to sparking Second-wave feminism, was published.
March 18 Gideon v. Wainwright: In a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court ruled that the right to counsel is protected under the Sixth Amendment.
April 3

Birmingham campaign: The nonviolent led protests

against racial segregation in Birmingham, Alabama was launched by the SCLC.

April 16

Letter from a Birmingham Jail: Dr. King was arrested amid the Birmingham campaign,

writing an open letter defending the strategy nonviolent protest.

June 10 The Equal Pay Act of 1963 was signed into law.
June 12

NAACP field secretary Medgar Evers was assassinated at his home in Mississippi by white

supremacists, hours after President Kennedy gave his Civil Rights Address.

August 28

March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., among other notable civil

rights leaders, spoke on the Lincoln Memorial, giving his historic “I Have a Dream” speech at the

march that drew over 200,000 demonstrators.

September 15

The 16th Street Baptist Church bombing, carried out by a KKK splinter group, killed four

African-Americans girls in what was seen as a turning point for the Civil Rights Movement.

October 7 The Atomic Test Ban Treaty was signed.
November 22

President John F. Kennedy was assassinated by a sniper in Dallas, Texas while traveling in an open

 presidential motorcade with Texas Governor John Connally, who was injured in the incident.

Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson was sworn in as President, hours after the assassination of

President John F. Kennedy.

November 24

Lee Harvey Oswald, the sniper who assassinated President Kennedy,

was killed after being fatally shot by Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby.

November 29

The Warren Commission was established by President Johnson to investigate

the assassination of President Kennedy.

December 17 The Clean Air Act was signed into law.
1964 January 23

The Twenty-fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, prohibiting both Congress

and the states from conditioning the right to vote in federal elections on payment of a poll tax or

other types of tax, was ratified.

February 7 British Invasion: The Beatles arrived in the United States.
May 22

President Johnson proposed the Great Society, a set of social reforms aimed at the elimination

of poverty and racial injustice.

  The Freedom Summer began, aimed to increase voter registration for African Americans.
July 2

The Civil Rights Act of 1964, outlawing both segregation and major forms of discrimination

 against blacks and women, was signed into law.

August 2

Tonkin Gulf incident, a false flag operation with ‘deliberately skewed’ intelligence

to expand U.S. military involvement in Vietnam, occurred.

August 4

Mississippi civil rights workers’ murders: The bodies of three missing civil

rights activists, working to register voters as a part of the Freedom Summer, were found near Philadelphia, Mississippi.

August 10 The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, the formal declaration of war in Vietnam, was signed by President Johnson
August 20 The Economic Opportunity Act was signed into law.
November 3 United States presidential election, 1964: President Lyndon B. Johnson defeated Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater.
December 10

Dr. King became the youngest person ever to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, for his

‘nonviolent campaign against racism’.

1965  

Vietnam War: Johnson escalates United States military involvement in the war,

with the number of U.S. troops totaling more than 184,000.

February 21

African American Muslim minister and human rights activist Malcolm X was assassinated

at the Audubon Ballroom in Harlem, New York.

March 2 Operation Rolling Thunder began in the Vietnam War.
March 7

The Selma to Montgomery marches, known as “Bloody Sunday”, drew national

outrage after Alabama State Troopers severely beat and used tear gas against the nonviolent demonstrators.

March 25

In a third attempt to march from Selma to Montgomery, 3,200 civil rights

demonstrators reached the Alabama State Capitol, where they were joined with a crowd

 of 25,000, after four days of marching.

April 17

March Against the Vietnam War: The Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and the SNCC

led the first major anti-war demonstration against the Vietnam War in Washington, D.C.,

with over 25,000 protesters.

July 30

The Social Security Amendments of 1965 was signed into law,

establishing Medicaid and Medicare in the United States.

August 6 The Voting Rights Act was signed into law.

August 11 –

17

The Watts Riot began in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles, resulting in the deaths of 34 people.
September 9

The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) was established,

after the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965 was signed into law by President Johnson.

October 3 The Immigration Act of 1965 was signed into law, abolishing the National Origins Formula.
November 8 The Higher Education Act of 1965 was passed.
1966 January 18

Robert C. Weaver was sworn in as the first United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development,

becoming the first African American to hold a cabinet-level position.

June 13

Miranda v. Arizona: The Supreme Court ruled that not informing suspects held in custody

 on their right to counsel and silence violated protection against self incrimination, establishing

what later became known as “Miranda Rights“.

June 30 The feminist group the National Organization for Women (NOW) was formed.
July 4 The Freedom of Information Act was signed into law.
September 9 The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act was passed.
1967 January 3

Jack Ruby died of a pulmonary embolism at Parkland Hospital, where Oswald had died

 and where President Kennedy had been pronounced dead after his assassination.

January 8

Operation Cedar Falls, the largest ground operation of the Vietnam War,

began; with over 500,000 with the number of U.S. troops totaling more than 500,000 by the end of 1967.

January 15 Super Bowl I: In the first Super Bowl took place between the Green Bay Packers and the Kansas City Chiefs.
February 23 The Twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, establishing succession to the Presidency and procedures for filling a vacancy in the office of the Vice President, was ratified.
April 1 The United States Department of Transportation was established.
April 15 National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam: 400,000 demonstrators march in New York City from Central Park to the United Nations Headquarters against the Vietnam War; with 100,000 protesting the war in San Fransciso, being one of the largest demonstrations against the Vietnam War.
  The Summer of Love took place, marking a defining period for the counterculture movement in the U.S.
June 12 Loving v. Virginia: The Supreme Court overruled the prohibition of interracial marriage.
July 1 American Samoa became self-governing under a new Constitution.
October 2 Thurgood Marshall was sworn in as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court; becoming the first African-American Justice to serve on the court.
1968 January 30 The Tet Offensive, a campaign of surprise attacks by the Viet Cong, began.
April 4

Civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated by a sniper at the

 Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee.

April 4 –

May 29

King assassination riots: The assassination of Dr. King prompted mass

riots in Chicago, Washington D.C., Baltimore, Kansas City and Louisville; leaving 36 people dead.

April 11 The Civil Rights Act of 1968, providing equal housing protection, was signed into law.
June 5

Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles

 by Sirhan Sirhan, after winning the California primary while campaigning for President.

July 1 The United States signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
August 25–29 Chicago City Police clashed with anti-war protesters at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
October 22 The Gun Control Act of 1968 was signed into law.
November 5

United States presidential election, 1968: Former Vice President Richard Nixon was elected

President, defeating incumbent Vice President Hubert Humphrey and Alabama Governor George Wallace.

Shirley Chisholm of New York became the first African-American woman elected to Congress.
December 21 Apollo 8: The first manned spacecraft to leave Earth’s orbit occurred.
1969 March 18

Operation Menu: The United States began its covert bombings of North Vietnamese positions in

Cambodia and Laos.

June 29

The Stonewall riots took place, beginning after police raided the Stonewall Inn in New York City,

which would mark the start of the modern gay liberation movement in the United States.

July 18

Chappaquiddick incident: Senator Edward M. Kennedy drove off a bridge on his way home from a

 party on Chappaquiddick Island, killing his passenger, Mary Jo Kopechne.

July 20

Apollo 11: Americans astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins became the first

 men to land on the moon, with Armstrong becoming the first man to walk on the moon’s surface.

August 15–19 The Woodstock Festival took place in White Lake, New York, proclaimed as “three days of peace and music”, it became one of the defining events representing counterculture movement.
November 3 Vietnamization: President Nixon outlaid his administration’s Vietnam policy in response to the Tet Offensive.
November 10 Sesame Street premiered on National Educational Television.
November 15

Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam: Over 500,000 peaceful demonstrators protested the

Vietnam War in Washington D.C., being the largest anti-war protest in U.S. history.

December 15

President Nixon announces the withdrawal of 50,000 U.S. troops from Vietnam; reaching

the peak level of U.S. troops in Vietnam at 541,000.

1970 January 1 The National Environmental Policy Act was signed into law.
May 4

Kent State shootings: Shootings occurred during anti-war, student protests that grew violent,

resulting in the deaths of four demonstrators by the Ohio National Guard.

April 20 President Nixon announces the further withdrawal of 150,000 troops in Vietnam.
April 30 President Nixon announces the beginning of the Cambodian Campaign.
April 22 The first Earth Day was observed.
July 4 American Top 40, hosted by radio personality Casey Kasem, which featured a weekly countdown, premiered.
October 5 The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) began operations, succeeding National Educational Television (NET).
December 2 The United States Environmental Protection Agency was established.
December 29 The Occupational Safety and Health Act was signed into law, establishing OSHA.
1971 January 25

Charles Manson is sentenced to death (with his sentence later commuted to life in prison)

 for his involvement in the Tate-LaBianca murders.

April 1

The Public Health Cigarette Smoking Act was signed into law, banning cigarette

advertisements on radio and television and issuing a Surgeon General‘s warning on tobacco products.

June 13

Pentagon Papers: The New York Times publishes its first story on the classified 7,000 page Department of

Defense study, leaked by study participant Daniel Ellsberg, on the U.S.’s political-military involvement

 in Vietnam since 1945.

June 17 President Nixon declares a “War on Drugs“, stating that drug use in the U.S. is “public enemy number one.”
June 30

New York Times Co. v. United States: The Supreme Court ruled that the

 Pentagon Papers may be published, rejecting government injunctions as unconstitutional prior restraint.

July 1

The Twenty-sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution,

lowering the voting age from 21 to 18, was ratified.

August 15 Nixon Shock: Nixon ended the gold standard in the United States.
September 13

Attica Prison riot: After four days of holding 39 prison staff members hostage,

a raid that led to a riot at the Attica Correctional Facility was launched by

New York State Police; leaving 43 staff and prisoners dead and being the deadliest prison riot in U.S. history.