Joseph Bucklin Society Time Line 1600-1799.
This Joseph Bucklin Society time line of history is not intended to be
anything other than a list of a few historical events that the Bucklin Family or Joseph
Bucklin Society members may find of interest in understanding events of which
the Family or Society have special concern.
It is an easy read, and will have additions from time to time. But, if you want a more elegant and longer timeline of some of the
history events,
we recommend Founding.com as a good history site with
a readable timeline of events leading up to the Revolutionary War.

Joseph Bucklin Society Time Line 1600-1799.
1614. Adrian Block, exploring for the Dutch,
explores the mouth of Narragansett Bay.
1630. William Bucklin leaves England and comes to New England
with the Winthrop Fleet.
1633. The trial of Galileo, for his insistence that the
earth revolves around the sun, which the Catholic Church denounced as repugnant
to Holy Scripture. Think about this. This is the era of Europe in
which William Bucklin came to the New World.
1634: William Blackstone was the first Rhode Island settler, in the area now
known as the Blackstone River. .
1636. The Plymouth Colony, because of the pressure of increased
population in the Plymouth area, established the town of Scituate. Because
of the continuing pressure of the Plymouth area, and also because of the
pressure of the Rhode Island settlers, the Plymouth Colony Court formed eight
more new towns in the next ten years, including Rehoboth in 1641, noted below.
1636. Roger Williams first settles on the East side of the Seekonk
River. Under pressure from the Massachusetts colonies of Plymouth and
Massachusetts Bay, Williams moves west. In 1636, Roger Williams founds
Providence Plantation settlement. (See 1663 entry for combination of the
Providence Plantation and Rhode Island settlements as a formal colony of
England.)
1638. Anne Hutchinson founds Portsmouth.
1639: The Newport Compact, which formed the basis of the Rhode Island
settlement, was signed.
1641. The Plymouth Court grants Reverend Newman and his congregation the
privilege of buying the eight square miles tract lying between the Seekonk and
Palmer Rivers. Newman names the settlement Rehoboth, and it is officially
recognized and incorporated by the Plymouth Court, in 1645.
1643. The Plymouth court orders that individual settlers were forbidden
to purchase land from the Indians without formal authorization by the General
Court.
1643: Without authorization from the Plymouth Court. Samuel Gorton buys land
from the Indians and founded Shawomet, Rhode Island's fourth settlement. The
town was named Warwick a few years later in honor of the Earl of Warwick.
1643. By this time most towns in the Plymouth and Massachusetts colonies were
using a town meeting of all resident householders to debate and vote
"orders" relevant to common needs. A variety of executive
committees (selectmen) and officers such as surveyors of highways, constables,
and ad hoc committees were appointed to perform tasks. These institutions
arose spontaneously, based on the English model, without provision in the laws
of the Colony.
1644. Roger Williams receives a patent from the English Parliament, then in
revolt against the King, to united
the four existing towns as the Rhode Island Colony and give it legal status,
protecting it against the Massachusetts Bay Colony and the Plymouth Colony,
which were considering forcible annexation.
1645. William Bucklin has 600 acres in the area of Pawtucket Falls, East of
Providence.
1663: Charles II granted the Charter of Rhode Island & Providence
Plantations July 8. It remained the constitution until 1842.
1656. Joseph Jencks, a skilled iron worker, who was attracted by the
Blackwood Valley's abundant wood, water power and proximity of bog iron, erected
a dwelling and forge in what would be the future city of Pawtucket.
June, 1675. King Phillips War begins with the Indian attack on Swansea. On
March 26 a large war party led by chief sachem Canonchet massacred a company of
approximately sixty-five Englishmen and twenty friendly Indians led by Captain
Michael Pierce on the banks of the Blackstone a few miles north of the William
Bucklin lands in present Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Three days later the
victorious Narragansetts descended upon Providence, burning most of the
buildings in the town.
1676. Between 5 to 8 percent of the adult men of the Plymouth Colony
were killed in the King Phillips war. In November, 1676, the decisive
battle in King Philip's War was fought against the Narragansett. The Indians
were wholly defeated, with King Phillip killed, his body quartered and left to
rot, and his captured warriors and families sold into slavery in the West
Indies.
1686. The charters of the colonies were taken cancelled by King
Charles, and Massachusetts Bay, Plymouth, Rhode Island, and Connecticut colonies
were jointed together in a single "Dominion of New England".
October, 1691. The Glorious Revolution in England leads to the
cancellation of King Charles' "Dominion of New England" and the
issuance of a new charter for Massachusetts Bay, which included the order for
the annexation of Plymouth Colony into the Massachusetts Colony.
1692: The Salem Witchcraft Trials.
1 January 1699. The Abenaki Indians and the Massachusetts
colonists sign a treaty ending the conflict in New England.
1699. The first clearly reported epidemic of yellow fever in the
colonies kills one-sixth of the population in Philadelphia.
1708: Rhode Island's first census taken; population 7,181.
1720. Rhode Island population about 12,000
1730: Census taken; population 17,935.
1748: Census taken; population 32,773.
1750. Rhode Island is heavily involved in the triangular trade of sugar
and molasses from the West Indies, to Rhode Island where it is made into rum, to
Africa where the rum is traded for slaves, to the West Indies where the slaves
are traced for more sugar and molasses --- with a profit at each corner of the
trade being accumulated from sale of the "excess" for (usually) cash
or letters of credit good for getting goods from English merchants. It is
estimated that about 90 percent of all slaves to the colonies were brought by
Rhode Island ships.
1755: Rhode Island census taken; population 40,414.
1756 - 1763. The French and Indian War. The issue was the Ohio River
Valley trade and settlement. The French had built a line of forts
west of the colonized land of the northern English colonies, e.g., Fort
Duquesne. This Seven Years War ends by the "Treaty of Paris". The French
lost Canada and the American Midwest. British tightened colonial administration
in North America and increased military presence. Royal Proclamation established
a Proclamation Line of 1763 to form a closed Indian Reserve (land west of
Appalachians) to settlers in an attempt to solve the Indian problem and colonist
claims of unlimited territory. In short, land over the mountains is off
limits to the Americans.
1765. Rhode Island population about 50,000. Rhode Island merchants
owned 500 ships, and abut 12,000 men were employed as sailors or directly with
ships.
1764 The British try to recoup come of their war expenses from the Severn Years
War (French and Indian War) by the North American Revenue (Sugar) Act of 1764
and the Currency Act. Duties were imposed on coffee, wines, sugar,
etc. Duties are lowered from those of the Molasses Act of 1733 from 6d to 3d,
but this act tightens up on collection; authorizes Vice Admiralty Courts which
take the place of jury trials; Judges terms are changed to "at the pleasure of
the Crown". The Currency Act prohibits "legal tender" paper in Virginia.
Sugar Act placed duties on lumber, foodstuffs, molasses and rum in colonies, to
pay French and Indian War debts.
1765 Stamp Act. First Quartering Act. A Colonial Congress in New York (9
colonies attended) adopted Declaration of Rights opposing taxation without
representation and trial without jury by admiralty courts. Sons of Liberty band
together throughout the colonies.
1766 Stamp Act repealed.
1767. Parliament enacts a series of measures introduced into
Parliament by Chancellor of the Exchequer Charles Townshend. The Townshend
Acts imposed duties on glass, lead, paints, paper, and tea imported into the
colonies and created a Board of Customs Commissioners to enforce customs laws
without the accused having recourse to a trial by jury.
Townshend hoped the acts would defray imperial expenses of keeping the
military forces necessary in the colonies as a result of the French presence
in North America. Because Americans had argued against Parliament's power to
impose the Stamp Act on the ground that it was a direct tax by a legislature in
which they had no representatives, Parliament thought the colonists would
accept Parliament's right to regulate trade and impose an indirect tax of an
import duty, a wishful misunderstanding of colonial opinion.
But Americans believed that Parliament had no right to impose any taxes at
all on the colonists, viewing taxation as an abuse of Great Britain's
constitutional relationship with the colonies. Massachusetts issued a Circular
Letter describing the idea of not importing goods to protest the Townshend Acts.
The Circular Letter led to a series of Non-Importation Agreements by other
colonies, which in turn lead to a reduction of colonial imports from
Britain in 1768-1769 by half.
1770. In response to demands from its merchants, suffering from the lack of
purchases from America, Parliament repealed all the Townshend duties except the
tax on tea, which it retained in order to assert its right to tax the
colonies.
1770 Boston Massacre. English soldiers in Boston fire on a mob and kill 5
Americans. John Adams defends the soldiers successfully on grounds of "self
defense."
June 10, 1772. Capture and burning of the Gaspee. Committees of
correspondence begin in Massachusetts and spread rapidly.
1773 . The Boston Tea Party becomes a symbol of patriotic protest and
rebellion, but to some it looks like random property violence against a
disinterested party, a reckless act that destroys thousands of pounds worth of
private merchandise. In any case, it causes King George to lose whatever
sympathy he may have had for the colonial cause. Things go downhill rapidly from
here on.
1774 "Intolerable Acts." First Continental Congress in Philadelphia protests
British measures and calls for civil disobedience.
1774: The Connecticut and Rhode Island colonies prohibited further
importation of slaves into their colonies. Rhode Island was the main
importer of slaves and ran most of the slave ships from the United States.
1774. Rhode Island census taken; population 57,707.
1775 Lord North’s plan for reconciliation is rejected; Massachusetts is
declared to be in a state of rebellion. The colonists begin stockpiling stores,
powder. General Gage is instructed to arrest leaders and seize stores.
April 19, 1775. General Gage sends 700 men to capture stores at Concord.
Americans, warned by Revere and Dawes, assemble at Lexington green and shots
break out, killing 8 and wounding 10. More militia (minutemen) gather at Concord
Bridge—the British are forced to retreat to Boston, suffering over 100 killed
along the way.
1775. April. A week after the skirmishes at Lexington and Concord, the
Rhode Island colonial legislature authorized raising a 1,500-man ''army of observation'' with
Nathaniel Greene as its commander.
1776. May 4, 1776, Rhode Island became the first colony to renounce allegiance to
King George III and declare its independence. May: capture of Ft.
Ticonderoga (upstate NY). June: Battle of Bunker Hill; Continental Congress
named Washington commander-in-chief.
1776 Richard Henry Lee of Virginia proposes that the Continental Congress
gathered at Philadelphia approve a declaration of independence. July 4: Second
Continental Congress approved document prepared by Thomas Jefferson. British
troops evacuated Boston and move to New York where in August, Washington
lost Battle of Long Island and evacuated New York.
July 18, 1776 Rhode Island Assembly ratified the Declaration of
Independence.
1776. Until 1779, Newport, RI, was occupied by the British.
1777 British General Burgoyne surrendered at Saratoga NY. Articles of
Confederation approved by Congress. France recognized independence of 13
colonies.
1778 Continental Army suffered hardships in winter camp at Valley Forge PA.
France declares war on Britain; French support arrives, led by Major General de
Lafayette.
1778. In Newport, American
Generals John Sullivan and Lafayette won a partial victory, but failed
to oust the British
1779, October, British forces evacuated Newport and the rest of Rhode Island. Thereafter until
the end of the Revolutionary War, French troops under General Rochambeau
were stationed in Rhode Island.
1779 Main theater of fighting shifts to the South.
1780 Charleston fell to British. Benedict Arnold, American commander and hero
of Saratoga, found to be a traitor, made general of British army.
1781 Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown (Oct 19).
1782: Rhode Island census taken; population 52,347.
1782 New British cabinet agrees to recognize U.S. independence.
1783 Treaty of Paris signed Sept 3. Noah Massachusetts Supreme Court
declares slavery to be illegal.
1784 Jefferson’s proposal to ban slavery in the territories acquired in the
Treaty of Paris is narrowly defeated in Continental Congress.
1784: Rhode Island passed Emancipation act, providing for gradual abolition
of existing slavery. All children born after March 1, 1784, were free.
1786 Virginia adopts Thomas Jefferson’s statute to ban future slavery.
1787 Shays’s Rebellion in Western MA failed. Constitutional Convention
opened at Philadelphia (May 25). U.S. Constitution passed (Sept 17).
1788 Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay published The
Federalist. Ratification of Constitution by 9th state, NH, meant adoption.
1789 Constitution went into effect March 4. Congress began session at New
York (April 6).
1790: In Pawtucket, the first successful United States water powered cotton
mill was established by Samuel Slater and David Wilkinson. Although the
British lost dominion over the American colonies during the Revolutionary War,
they fought hard not to lose their commercial preeminence as well. Britain
particularly worked to prevent the export of technology or technicians. Yet
Samuel Slater, formerly employed as a middle manager at mills in
England, was able to use his knowledge to establish America's first successful
water-wheeled textile mill. Upon his arrival in America, Slater was contacted by
Providence merchant Moses Brown, who, with several colleagues, was attempting to
duplicate the Arkwright system used in England. A working set of mechanical spinning machines
for the entrepreneurs was in operation in Pawtucket in 1790. In 1793 the
thriving spinning operation moved into a new, larger building known today as the
Slater Mill Historic Site. More than any other single event, this successful
transplantation of the Arkwright factory system can be said to mark the birth of
the American Industrial Revolution and the transformation of American life and
character from agriculture into manufacturing.
May 29, 1790 (Rhode Island became the 13th of the original 13 states to
ratify the Constitution).
1791 Bill of Rights effective Dec 15. Vermont admitted to Union.
1792 Washington reelected president. Kentucky admitted to Union.
1793 Eli Whitney invented cotton gin.
1794 Whiskey Rebellion in western Pennsylvania. General ("Mad Anthony")
Wayne’s forces rout Miami Indians in the Battle of Fallen Timbers (near
present-day Toledo OH).
1796 Tennessee admitted to Union.
1798 XYZ Affair. Alien & Sedition Acts passed by Federalists, intended to
silence political opposition. War with France threatened over French raids on
U.S. shipping and rejection of U.S. diplomats. Naval skirmishes saw U.S. vessels
victorious. — Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions.
21 March 1799. The militia of Pennsylvania is federalized to put down
the armed insurrection against the property taxes of the federal government.
14 December, 1799. George Washington dies, with a unified United States
of America as a legacy.
1800 Federal government moves from Philadelphia to Washington DC. Gabriel
Prosser leads slave rebellion in VA.