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  2. Act of Union 1840 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Act_of_Union_1840

    The British North America Act, 1840 (3 & 4 Vict. c. 35), [1] also known as the Act of Union 1840, (French: Acte d’Union) was approved by Parliament in July 1840 and proclaimed February 10, 1841, in Montreal. [2] It abolished the legislatures of Lower Canada and Upper Canada and established a new political entity, the Province of Canada to ...

  3. Territorial evolution of North America since 1763 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territorial_evolution_of...

    The United Kingdom ceded most of its remaining land in North America to Canada, with Rupert's Land and the North-Western Territory becoming the North-West Territories. The Rupert's Land Act 1868 transferred the region to Canada as of 1869, but it was only consummated in 1870 when £300,000 were paid to the Hudson's Bay Company .

  4. Long's Expedition of 1820 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long's_Expedition_of_1820

    The Stephen H. Long Expedition of 1820 traversed America's Great Plains and up to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains. [1] It was the first scientific party hired by the United States government to explore the West. Lewis and Clark (1803–1806) and Zebulon Pike (1805–1807) explored the western frontier but they were primarily military ...

  5. Territorial evolution of the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territorial_evolution_of...

    The United States began expanding beyond North America in 1856 with the passage of the Guano Islands Act, causing many small and uninhabited, but economically important, islands in the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean to be claimed. [4] Most of these claims were eventually abandoned, largely because of competing claims from other countries.

  6. History of the United States (1815–1849) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_United...

    The Perfectionist movement, led by John Humphrey Noyes, founded the utopian Oneida Community in 1848 with fifty-one devotees, in Oneida, New York. Noyes believed that the act of final conversion led to absolute and complete release from sin.

  7. Great Plains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Plains

    The term "Great Plains" is used in the United States to describe a sub-section of the even more vast Interior Plains physiographic division, which covers much of the interior of North America. It also has currency as a region of human geography , referring to the Plains Indians or the Plains states .

  8. Iron Confederacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_Confederacy

    From around 1800 to 1850, the Iron Confederacy was at its apogee, controlling the trade with HBC posts such as Fort Pitt and Fort Edmonton. Their southern expansion peaked in the 1860s when the Plains Cree controlled most of present-day southern Saskatchewan and east-central Alberta with the Assiniboine also moving south. [20]

  9. Railroad land grants in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railroad_land_grants_in...

    The greatest nation of the Earth: Republican economic policies during the Civil War (Harvard UP, 2009) pp. 170–208, detailed history of passage of the Pacific Railroad Acts. Riegel, Robert Edgar. The Story of the Western Railroads (1926) online; Shortridge, James R. Cities on the plains: The evolution of urban Kansas (UP of Kansas, 2004 ...