Timeline from 1800 to 1810
Decade By Decade:Timelines of the 1800s
1800:
- The second federal census was taken in 1800, and determined the population to be 5,308,483. Of that number, 896,849, about 17 percent, were slaves.
- April 24, 1800: Congress chartered the Library of Congress and allocated $5,000 to purchase books.
- November 1, 1800: President John Adams moved into the unfinished Executive Mansion, which will later be known as the White House.
- December 3, 1800: The United States electoral congress convened to decide the winner of the election of 1800. The election was disputed, and after a series of votes in the U.S. House of Representatives Thomas Jefferson was declared the winner over Aaron Burr and the incumbent John Adams.
- November 17, 1800: US Congress held its first session in Washington, D.C.
1801:
- January 1, 1801: President John Adams began a tradition of White House receptions on New Year's Day. Any citizen could stand on line, enter the mansion, and shake hands with the president.
- January 21, 1801: President John Adams nominated John Marshall as Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Marshall would go on to define the role of the court.
- February 19, 1801: Thomas Jefferson won the election of 1800, which was finally resolved in the U.S. House of Representatives
- March 4, 1801: Thomas Jefferson was inaugurated as president and delivered an eloquent inaugural address in the Senate chamber of the unfinished U.S. Capitol.
- March 10, 1801: The first census taken in Britain determines the population of England, Scotland, and Wales to be about 10.5 million.
- April 2, 1801: At the Battle of Copenhagen, the British Navy defeated a Danish and Norwegian fleet in action related to the Napoleonic Wars. Admiral Horatio Nelson was the hero of the battle.
- May 1801: The Pasha of Tripoli declared war on the United States. President Thomas Jefferson responded by dispatching a naval squadron to fight the Barbary pirates.
- June 14, 1801: Benedict Arnold, famous traitor in the American Revolutionary War, died in England at the age of 60.
1802:
- Summer 1802: President Thomas Jefferson read a book by explorer Alexander Mackenzie, who had traveled across Canada to the Pacific Ocean and back. The book helped inspire what would become the Lewis and Clark Expedition.
- July 4, 1802: The U.S. Military Academy opened at West Point, New York.
- November 1802: Washington Irving published his first article, a political satire signed with the pseudonym "Jonathan Oldstyle."
1803:
- February 24, 1803: The U.S. Supreme Court decided Marbury v. Madison, a landmark case that established the principle of judicial review.
- May 2, 1803: The United States concluded the purchase of the Louisiana Purchase with France.
- May 25, 1803: Ralph Waldo Emerson was born in Boston.
- July 4, 1803: President Thomas Jefferson officially gave orders to Meriwether Lewis, who had been preparing for an expedition to the Northwest.
- July 23, 1803: A rebellion led by Robert Emmet broke out in Dublin, Ireland, and was quickly put down. Emmet was captured a month later.
- September 20, 1803: Robert Emmet, leader of an Irish rebellion against British rule, was executed in Dublin, Ireland.
1804:
- May 14, 1804: The Lewis and Clark Expedition began its westward voyage by heading up the Missouri River.
- July 11, 1804: The vice president of the United States, Aaron Burr, fatally wounded Alexander Hamilton in a duel at Weehawken, New Jersey.
- July 12, 1804: Alexander Hamilton died in New York City following the duel with Aaron Burr.
- August 20, 1804: A member of the Corps of Discovery on the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Charles Floyd, died. His death would be the only fatality on the entire expedition.
- November 1804: Thomas Jefferson easily won reelection, defeating Charles Pinckney of South Carolina.
- December 2, 1804: Napoleon Bonaparte crowned himself Emperor of France.
1805:
- March 4, 1805: Thomas Jefferson took the oath of office for the second time and delivered a remarkably bitter inaugural address .
- April 1805: During the Barbary Wars, a detachment of U.S. Marines marched on Tripoli, and after victory, raised the American flag over foreign soil for the first time.
- August 1805: Zebulon Pike, a young U.S. Army officer, embarked on his first exploring expedition, which would take him to present day Minnesota.
- October 21, 1805: At the Battle of Trafalgar, Admiral Horatio Nelson was fatally wounded.
- November 15, 1805: The Lewis and Clark Expedition reached the Pacific Ocean.
- December 1805: Lewis and Clark settled into winter quarters at a fort constructed by the Corps of Discovery.
1806:
- Bernard McMahon published The American Gardener’s Calendar, the first book on gardening published in America.
- Noah Webster published his first dictionary of American English.
- March 23, 1806: Lewis and Clark began their return journey from the Pacific Northwest
- March 29, 1806: President Thomas Jefferson signed into law a bill allocating funds for the building of the National Road, the first federal highway.
- May 30, 1806: Andrew Jackson, future American president, killed Charles Dickinson in a duel provoked by disagreement over a horse race and insults to Jackson’s wife.
- July 15, 1806: Zebulon Pike departed on his second expedition, a voyage with mysterious purposes that would take him to present day Colorado.
- September 23, 1806: Lewis and Clark and the Corps of Discovery returned to St. Louis, completing their expedition to the Pacific.
1807:
- Washington Irving published a little satirical magazine, Salmagundi. Twenty issues appeared between early 1807 and early 1808.
- March 25, 1807: The importation of slaves was prohibited by a law passed by the U.S. Congress, but the law would not take effect until the January 1, 1808.
- May 22, 1807: Aaron Burr was indicted for treason.
- June 22, 1807: The Chesapeake Affair, in which a U.S. Navy officer surrendered his ship to the British, created an enduring controversy. Years later, the incident would provoke a duel that would kill Stephen Decatur.
- July 4, 1807: Giuseppe Garibaldi was born.
- August 17, 1807: Robert Fulton’s first steamboat left New York City bound for Albany, sailing on the Hudson River.
1808:
- Albert Gallatin completed his landmark Report on Roads, Canals, Harbors, and Rivers, a comprehensive plan for creating a transportation infrastructure in the United States.
- January 1, 1808: The law banning importation of slaves into United States took effect.
- November 1808: James Madison won the U.S. presidential election, defeating Charles Pinckney, who had lost to Thomas Jefferson four years earlier.
1809:
- February 12, 1809: Abraham Lincoln was born in Kentucky. On the same day, Charles Darwin was born in Shrewsbury, England.
- December 1809: The first book by Washington Irving, A History of New York, an inventive blend of history and satire, is published under the pseudonym Diedrich Knickerbocker.
- December 29, 1809: William Ewart Gladstone, British statesman and prime minister, was born in Liverpool.
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