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Rhode Island Timeline of State History
Chronological History of Rhode Island
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1614: Dutch explorer Adriaen Block visited the island now named for him.
1634: William Blackstone was the first Rhode Island settler.
1636: Providence was founded as a Rhode Island settlement by Roger Williams.
1638: The Portsmouth compact was signed. A picture of the plaque in Founders Park, Portsmouth taken in May of 1997 by Elliot J. Wilcox (98 kb).
1639: The Newport Compact, which formed the basis of the settlement, was signed in April by John Clarke, William Coddington, William Dyer, Nicholas Easton, John Coggeshall, William Brenton, Henry Bull, Jeremy Clarke and Thomas Hazard.
1643: Samuel Gorton founded Shawomet, Rhode Island's fourth settlement. The town was named Warwick a few years later in honor of the Earl of Warwick.
1643-44: Name of Aquidneck changed to "the Isle of Rhodes, or Rhode Island."
1652: First record of African slaves.
1663: Charles II granted the Charter of Rhode Island & Providence Plantations July 8. It remained the constitution until 1842.
1664: Seal of the colony "Mottoe, Rhode Island and Providence, with the word HOPE over head of anker."
1675: The decisive battle in King Philip's War was fought against the Narragansett.
1708: First census taken; population 7,181.
1724: Rhode Island established property ownership qualifications for voters.
1730: Census taken; population 17,935.
1748: Census taken; population 32,773.
1755: Census taken; population 40,414.
1772: British trade restrictions angered the colonists. They burned the British revenue cutters Liberty and Gaspee. See also Gaspee Historical Archives
1774: Census taken; population 57,707.
1774: The Connecticut and Rhode Island colonies prohibited further importation of slaves.
May 4, 1776: The colony declared its independence.
1776-1779: Newport was occupied by the British.
1778: Generals John Sullivan and LaFayette won a partial victory, but failed to oust the British.
1779: British forces evacuated Rhode Island in October of the Revolutionary War.
1780-1781: French troops under General Rochambeau were stationed in RI.
1782: Census taken; population 52,347.
1784: Emancipation act passed providing for gradual abolition of slavery. All children born after March 1, 1784, were free.
1786: Farmers struck against merchants who have refused to accept the depreciated paper money.
Statehood, May 29, 1790 (13th of the original 13 states to ratify the Constitution).
1790: The first successful U.S. cotton mill established by Samuel Slater and David Wilkinson.
1812: Rhode Island refused to participate in the War of 1812.
1840: Population over 100,000.
1841: Providence lawyer Thomas Wilson Dorr founded a People's Party to liberalize the Rhode Island charter of 1663. He submitted a new, liberal constitution to extend suffrage in the state to those who didn't own property.
1842: Dorr's Rebellion in Rhode Island forces the state's conservatives to abolish the Charter of 1663 and expand suffrage.
1843: Present state constitution was adopted.
1877: State Flag established.
1897: New State Flag adopted.
1910: Population over 540,000.
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