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  1. History of the United States (1865-1918) (52094 bytes)
    2: ... bitterly divided. In the South, the Federal policy of [[Reconstruction era (United States)|Reconstru...
    7: ...defeated [[Confederate States of America|Confederacy]], which had seceded from the [[United States]], ...
    21: ...olitical control. The North allowed white supremacy and encouraged white ex-Confederates to regain th...
    38: U.S. federal government policy since the [[James Monroe]] administration had bee...
    40: ...surviving indigenous population. In 1934 U.S. policy was reversed again by the [[Indian Reorganization...

Page text matches

  1. Periodic table (7298 bytes)
    82: ...chemist [[John Alexander Reina Newlands]], who in 1865 noticed that the elements of similar type recurre...
  2. List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
    165: | [[1854]] — [[1865]]
  3. List of explorers (24013 bytes)
    26: *[[Heinrich Barth]] ([[1821]]-[[1865]]), Northern and Central Africa
    130: *[[Sven Hedin]], (1865-1952), Swedish explorer of [[Central Asia]]
    233: *[[Cândido Rondon]], (1865-1958), Explored the Amazon with [[Teddy Roosevelt...
    246: *[[Scylax of Caryanda]] - a [[Hellenic civilization|Gree...
    306: [[pl:Najwięksi odkrywcy]]
  4. Victoria of the United Kingdom (38571 bytes)
    16: ...t such a scenario, Parliament passed the ''[[Regency Act 1831]]'', under which it was provided that Vi...
    25: ...queen had just turned eighteen years old, no regency was necessary. By [[Salic law]], no woman could r...
    37: ...r-presumptive, the King of Hanover. These conspiracy theories afflicted the country with a wave of pat...
    39: ... no effect on the queen's health or on her pregnancy. The first child of the royal couple, named [[Vic...
    73: ...eform, but his ministry ended upon his death in [[1865]]. He was followed by Lord Russell (the former Lo...
  5. Lucretia Mott (3249 bytes)
    3: ...curately, the launcher of women's political advocacy. She was a [[Quaker]], a [[women's rights]] prop...
    5: ...ott was one of the first Quaker women to do advocacy work for [[abolition]].
    7: ... people of those times, mostly due to their advocacy and martyrdom for being "conscientious objectors"...
    9: ...es of representative government's political advocacy to women coming up as women's and abolitionist ad...
    13: ... known after this. When slavery was outlawed in [[1865]], she began to advocate giving black Americans t...
  6. Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
    6: ...ne Arts]] in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]] (1861-1865). Tired of patronizing instructors and fellow mal...
  7. Ouida (1938 bytes)
    29: * ''Strathmore'' (1865)
  8. Suzanne Valadon (4068 bytes)
    2: '''Suzanne Valadon''' ([[September 23]], [[1865]] – [[April 7]], [[1938]]) was a French [[p...
    18: ...life, leaving him, he said, with "nothing but an icy loneliness that fills the head with emptiness and...
  9. Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (3312 bytes)
    5: ...ce of Apothecaries' Hall, which she obtained in [[1865]].
  10. Clara Barton (9023 bytes)
    10: == Teaching, organizing, learning bureaucracy, a mission ==
    14: ... learned the ins and outs of the federal bureaucracy.
    21: ...ly a year, she lobbied the [[U.S. Army]] bureaucracy in vain to bring her own medical supplies to the ...
    23: In [[1865]], President [[Abraham Lincoln]] placed her in ch...
  11. Dorothea Dix (5868 bytes)
    2: ...s]] for the [[insane]]. Unfortunately for her legacy, these state hospitals grew into enormous "museum...
    16: ... the insane. Dix followed this up by persuading [[Cyrus Butler]], a self-made Providence millionaire a...
    20: ...n. The two dozen mental hospitals built between [[1865]] and [[1880]] demonstrate the continuing momentu...
  12. Jennie Kidd Trout (1706 bytes)
    3: ...rd]], [[Ontario]]. She married Edward Trout in [[1865]] and thereafter moved to [[Toronto]], where Edwa...
  13. Mary Edwards Walker (4835 bytes)
    12: ...d [[George Henry Thomas]]. On [[November 11]], [[1865]], President [[Andrew Johnson]] signed a bill to ...
  14. Clara Schumann (3372 bytes)
    9: ... disapprobation. She returned to [[London]] in [[1865]] and continued her visits annually, with the exc...
  15. Edith Cavell (1802 bytes)
    5: '''Edith Louisa Cavell''' ([[December 4]], [[1865]] - [[October 12]], [[1915]]) is one of the few f...
    7: ...|Norfolk]], where her father was [[rector]], in [[1865]]; she trained as a [[nurse]]. In [[1907]], she ...
  16. President of the United States (42878 bytes)
    14: ...public officials that are barred from the presidency because they were not born U.S. citizens include ...
    16: ...in office should he have succeeded to the Presidency previously and served less than two years complet...
    38: ...fficials to serve or act as President upon a vacancy in the office due to death, resignation, or remov...
    54: ...rican Civil War]]. Lee surrendered [[9 April]] [[1865]].
    86: |align=center| 6 || [[John Quincy Adams]]
  17. George Washington (29551 bytes)
    21: ...an important precedent of [[republic]]an [[democracy]] that served as an example around the world.
    51: ... out an offensive against the [[Iroquois Confederacy]], which had allied with the British and attacked...
    53: ...n found out about a [[Newburgh conspiracy|conspiracy]] that was being planned by some of his officers ...
    55: ==Activities between Revolution and Presidency ==
    62: ...elieve that the [[Framers]] created the [[Presidency]] with Washington in mind. After the Convention, ...
  18. Abraham Lincoln (48771 bytes)
    13: | [[March 4]], [[1861]] – [[April 15]], [[1865]]
    24: | '''Date of death:''' || [[April 15]], [[1865]]
    38: *[[Hannibal Hamlin]] ([[1861]]-[[1865]])
    39: *[[Andrew Johnson]] ([[1865]])
    42: ...at Emancipator''', was the 16th ([[1861]]–[[1865]]) [[President of the United States]], and the fi...
  19. Andrew Johnson (12662 bytes)
    11: | [[April 15]], [[1865]] - [[March 4]], [[1869]]
    40: ...[1865]]–[[1869]]), succeeding to the presidency upon the assassination of [[Abraham Lincoln]].
    51: ...] of [[Confederate States of America|the Confederacy]], Johnson was the only Senator from the seceded ...
    54: ...rst Vice President to succeed to the U.S. Presidency upon the assassination of a President and the thi...
    66: ...gn="left" |'''[[Andrew Johnson]]'''||align="left"|1865–1869
  20. Ulysses S. Grant (23281 bytes)
    32: ...change, it was difficult to resist the [[bureaucracy]]. Upon graduation, Grant adopted the form of his...
    43: ...terful in military history; it split the Confederacy in two, and it represented the second major Confe...
    45: ...Atlanta, Georgia]], and the heart of the Confederacy. His willingness to fight and ability to win impr...
    50: ...rategy that would strike at the heart of Confederacy from multiple directions: Grant, [[George G. Mead...
    54: ...e [[Trans-Mississippi Department]] on [[June 2]], 1865.

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