In 1783, the continental United States was primarily composed of the thirteen original colonies and some western territories. Key areas that were not part of the U.S. at that time include Florida, which was under Spanish control, and territories west of the Mississippi River, such as present-day Texas, California, and much of the Midwest. Additionally, parts of the Pacific Northwest were claimed by both Britain and Spain. The U.S. expanded significantly through various treaties and purchases over the following decades.
I got this from my Social Studies textbook so it can't be wrong. The answer is 1783.
The Standard parts became Continental Oil, which became Conoco, now part of ConocoPhillips; Standard of Indiana, became Amoco, and Standard of Ohio, became Sohio both now part of BP; Standard of California, became Chevron; Standard of New Jersey, became Esso (and later, Exxon), and Standard of New York, became Mobil, both now part of ExxonMobil; Pennzoil and Chevron have remained separate companies.
The Social Security Act is still a government run program that is continued to this day.
Interchangeable parts meant that you could have many inexperienced workers each making a part of the whole machine.
A predominantly agricultural and mining economy.
Anything west of the Mississippi, and Florida.
There was no United States of America in 1783. The first state to enter the Union was Delaware in 1787.
No the shelf is among the shallowest parts of the ocean.
Equatorial Guinea has two parts, a continental part connected to the African continent, and an island northwest of the continental part. The island contains the capital, Malabo.
Tomorrow would be in the 10th part, assuming that today is the 1st part.
There was no United States of America in 1783. The first state to enter the Union was Delaware in 1787.
Yes. Alexander Hamilton was a delegate from New York, and the only New Yorker to sign the Constitution. The other two, John Lansing, Jr., and Robert Yates, walked out of the Convention before it ended because they opposed substituting a new Constitution for the Articles of Confederation.
A German meteorologist and geophysicist.He proposed the theory of continental drift and believed that all the continents today were all part of one land mass called Pangaea, and that over the years due to continental drift they are how they are today.
Canada, Alaska, The continental United States, parts of Russia, Greenland, part of Iceland, part of the Atlantic Ocean, and a number of islands.
Independent
No. The tropics is defined as the area between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn. Since neither of these tropics pass through the continental US or Europe, then they are not a part of the tropics.
It is important because that is when it become a part of America.