How’d They Cover It?

Timeline & Student Challenge

Welcome to the How’d They Cover It Timeline and Student Challenge! Explore ways journalists have covered key moments in US history and think about how you would cover these stories differently.

Send us your response for a chance to be published here on the Timeline, or you can also complete as a regular classroom assignment.

Iroquois Confederacy and the Great Law of Peace

1722
1790

Rhode Island becomes the last of the 13 states to ratify the Constitution

1831

Nat Turner leads one of the largest slave rebellions in US history

Abraham Lincoln signs the Emancipation Proclamation

1863

The Transcontinental Railroad is completed

1869
1890

More than 300 Native Americans killed in the Wounded Knee Massacre

The 19th Amendment gives women the right to vote

1920
1921

As many as 300 people killed in Tulsa Race Massacre

“Black Tuesday” Stock Market crash sets off Great Depression

1929
1945

Germany surrenders, ending World War II in Europe

The US drops atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki

1945
1950

United Nations forces led by the US face a massive counterattack in the Korean war and are forced out of North Korea

1954

The Supreme Court declares legalized segregation unconstitutional in Brown v. Board of Education

1963

Martin Luther King Jr. and other activists bring hundreds of thousands to the national capitol for the March on Washington

1964

Congress passes the Civil Rights Act

1969

NASA lands first human on the moon

Shirley Chisholm becomes the first Black person to run for president in 1972. In 1968, Chisholm became the first African American woman elected to Congress.

1972
1972

Equal Rights Amendment proposed to state legislatures

Richard Nixon resigns following Watergate scandal

1974
1978

Consciousness grows surrounding man-made climate change

1981

Sandra Day O’Connor becomes first woman on the Supreme Court

2000

Supreme Court halts recount in 2000 presidential election

Hijackers fly planes into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon

2001
2003

The United States invades Iraq

2018

March for Our Lives protests draw millions

Sexual assault allegations leveled against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh

2018
2020

COVID-19 begins to spread in the US

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