John Cabot, English Explorer
Travel the World through Poster Art!
Mayflower in Cape Cod Bay
Travel the World through Poster Art!
John Hancock, first governor of Massachusetts
Travel the World through Poster Art!
George H.W. Bush, 41st American President
Travel the World through Poster Art!
Contact Us | Privacy Statement

Copyrighted by Graphic Maps
All rights reserved!

All maps, graphics, flags and original descriptions created by Graphic Maps, a d/b/a of the Woolwine-Moen Group, unless otherwise noted and/or directly linked to the source, and use of same for any application whatsoever (with the exception of outline maps) requires written permission.

We make no copyright claim on any statistical data on this page, nor on any non-original graphics, and/or pictures not produced by us. Certain statistical data is gathered from the CIA World Factbook, as well as numerous public domain reference materials.

Every effort is made to be as accurate as possible when disseminating information on any worldwide destination. We are not responsible for unintentional data entry errors or omissions. If you would like to submit an addition, change or correction, or suggest a new link, please forward it to our map department and we will give it our immediate attention.

|
|
|
|
Timeline

(1498) English explorer, John Cabot, sailed along Massachusetts coast

(1602) Bartholomew Gosnold explored coast; named Cape Cod due to codfish found in bay

(1604) Samuel de Champlain mapped coast

(1607) Three ships arrived from England with 104 men and boys; settlers named river James after the king; established Jamestown settlement

(1614) Capt. John Smith mapped coast

(1620) Mayflower arrived at Cape Cod; Pilgrims established settlement named Plymouth

(1621) Pilgrims signed treaty with Wampanoag Indians; celebrated first Thanksgiving

(1628) John Endicott established settlement at Salem

(1629) Masssachusetts Bay Company chartered

(1630) Boston founded; later named capital of the Massachusetts Bay Colony

(1634) Boston Common first public park in U.S.

(1635) Roger Williams banished from Massachusetts due to religious disputes

(1636) Harvard College established

(1639) First Post Office in U. S. established in Boston at Richard Fairbanks' tavern; Mather School, first free public school founded

(1643) New England Confederation formed to oppose Indian and Dutch attacks

(1675) Settlers attacked by Indians during King Phillip's War

(1676) King Phillip's War ended

(1684) Massachusetts charter annulled

(1686) Oxford, first non-Puritan town established; Dominion of New England established

(1692) Massachusetts granted new charter, became royal colony with Maine and Plymouth; witchcraft trials held in Salem

(1716) First lighthouse in America, "The Boston Light" built in Boston Harbor

(1763) Indian wars ended

(1770) British troops fired on crowd at Custom House in Boston, killed five men

(1773) Boston Tea Party - Colonists threw tea into Boston Harbor in protest of high taxes

(1775) First battle of American Revolution fought at Lexington and Concord; Paul Revere made famous ride; first ship of U.S. Navy commissioned

(1776) British troops forced to evacuate from Boston by Colonial troops; first major victory of American Revolution; Massachusetts resident, John Hancock, first to sign Declaration of Independence

(1780) John Hancock became first elected governor; state constitution adopted

(1785) Rebellion of farmers led by Daniel Shay, protested excessive taxation, government systems, unfair treatment of working people

(1788) Massachusetts became sixth U S. state

(1796) John Adams, Quincy, became U. S. president

(1820) Massachusetts and Maine separated

(1824) John Quincy Adams, of Quincy, elected U. S. President

(1826) First American railroad built in Quincy

(1831) The Liberator, anti-slavery newspaper, published in Boston

(1833) Constitutional amendment separated church and state, Puritanism in government ended

(1837) Samuel Morse invented Morse Code

(1839) Charles Goodyear produced first vulcanized rubber in Woburn

(1840) Typewriter invented by Charles Thurber

(1845) Elias Howe invented sewing maching in Boston

(1846) Use of anesthesia surgery first demonstrated by dentist, Dr. William T. G. Morton, at Massachusetts General Hospital

(1850) First National Women's Rights Convention held in Worcester

(1860's) Massachusetts sent over 160,000 troops to battle in Civil War

(1876) Alexander Graham Bell demonstrated first telephone in Boston

(1877) Helen Magill White became first woman in U. S. to earn Ph.D. at Boston University

(1891) First basketball game played in Springfield; machine invented by James Henry Mitchell mass-produced first Fig Newton Cookies

(1897) First subway in America opened in Boston

(1903) First trans-Atlantic radio broadcast between President Theodore Roosevelt and King Edward VII of Great Britain at Marconi Station at Wellfleet

(1907) First motorized fire wagon developed by Knox Manufacturing Company

(1912) Textile workers went on strike in Lawrence

(1923) Calvin Coolidge became U. S. President

(1925) Edith Nourse Rogers first woman elected to U. S. House of Representatives; introduced GI Bill

(1942) Boston nightclub fire killed 492 people

(1947) Percy Spencer invented microwave oven; Edwin Land demonstrated Poloroid Land Camera; Dr. Sidney Farber introduced chemotherapy as cancer treatment

(1954) First medically successful kidney transplant was performed in Boston

(1957) Massachusetts Turnpike opened

(1960) John F. Kennedy became U. S. President

(1961) First nuclear-powered surface vessel launched at Quincy

(1963) President John F. Kennedy assassinated

(1966) Edward W. Brooke first black elected to U. S. Senate

(1974) Federal Court ordered integration of Boston schools; whites held boycotts and demonstrations against integrated busing program

(1985) Harvard University celebrated 350th anniversary

(1987) Construction began on "Big Dig" in Boston

(1988) George H.W. Bush became U. S. President

(2002) Roman Catholic Church sex abuse scandals made public; resignations and settlements followed

(2004) Same-sex marriage rights approved; Boston Red Sox won World Series

(2006) Legislature enacted first plan in U. S. for Massachusetts citizens to receive universal health insurance coverage

(2007) Water leaks in new tunnels of "Big Dig" caused ceiling collapse, killed one; Boston Red Sox won World Series
|
|
|

|
|
|
U.S. States

Alabama

Alaska

Arizona

Arkansas

California

Colorado

Connecticut

Delaware

Florida

Georgia

Hawaii

Idaho

Illinois

Indiana

Iowa

Kansas

Kentucky

Louisiana

Maine

Maryland

Massachusetts

Michigan

Minnesota

Mississippi

Missouri

Montana

Nebraska

Nevada

New Hampshire

New Jersey

New Mexico

New York

North Carolina

North Dakota

Ohio

Oklahoma

Oregon

Pennsylvania

Rhode Island

South Carolina

South Dakota

Tennessee

Texas

Utah

Vermont

Virginia

Washington

West Virginia

Wisconsin

Wyoming

Washington D.C.

USA PAGE

|