Slater's second mill at Pawtucket.
Samuel Slater in 1793. In Pawtucket, Rhode Island.
Rhode Island pound ended in 1793.
Arthur Fenner (born December 10, 1745 in Providence, Rhode Island; died October 15, 1805 in Providence, Rhode Island) succeeded John Collins as the fourth Governor of Rhode Island, serving between May 5, 1790 and his death, including the whole of 1793.
Considering that the original U.S. Mint didn't begin production until 1793, what you most likely have is a Rhode Island state quarter, minted in 2001 (1790 is the year Rhode Island became a state). The quarter is worth exactly 25 cents.
St. Petersburg, the former capital of Russia, was built along the Neva River in 1712, not 1793.
between 1793 and 1798
In 1793 but the castle was built in the 12th century
In 1793, there were 13 states in the United States. These states had originally declared independence from Britain and ratified the Constitution. The states were: Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Georgia, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, South Carolina, New Hampshire, Virginia, New York, North Carolina, and Rhode Island. Expansion would occur later as new states joined the Union.
Samuel Slater committed industrial espionage by illegally memorizing the designs and workings of textile machinery from Britain, where such information was protected by law. After arriving in the United States, he used this knowledge to establish the first successful water-powered cotton spinning mill in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, in 1793. His actions were pivotal in kickstarting the American Industrial Revolution, despite their illegality.
Construction began in late 1793 and it was finished in March 1794.
It originally began to be built then, but it has changed over the centuries and the building has only been used as a museum since 1793.
The first church was built by Reverend Richard Johnson in Sydney (1793).