★ The American Chronicle ★

Stories That
Shaped a Nation

History is not a list of dates. It is the accumulated weight of choices made by ordinary people in extraordinary moments — and the consequences that outlasted everyone who lived them.

All Stories Founding Era Conflict & Transformation Civil Rights & Society Innovation & Progress States & Culture

31 Stories

1777

The Stars and Stripes

On June 14, 1777, Congress described the American flag in three lines — naming no designer and fixing no arrangement of its stars. The woman remembered for making it left no proof she did; the man who likely designed it was denied his fee.

Founding Era Read Story
1776

The Lee Resolution

On June 7, 1776, a Virginian rose in Philadelphia and said out loud what no colony had yet dared put to a vote: that the thirteen colonies were, and of right ought to be, free and independent States. The Declaration everyone remembers was the answer. This was the question.

Founding Era Read Story
1942

The Battle of Midway

Six months after Pearl Harbor, the United States Navy was outnumbered, outgunned, and reading Japan’s mail. In four days off a speck of coral in the Pacific, a handful of dive bombers reversed the course of a war — in about five minutes.

Conflict & Transformation Read Story
1892

Homer Plessy

He bought a first-class ticket, sat down in the wrong car on purpose, and told the conductor he was a colored man. The arrest was the plan. What it set in motion was fifty-eight years of “separate but equal” — and, eventually, the argument that brought it down.

Civil Rights & Society Read Story
1963

John F. Kennedy

He was 43 when he took the oath. He was 46 when he was killed. In between, he faced down nuclear war, sent Americans to the moon, and asked a generation to give something back. Fifty years later, the question he asked has not expired.

Civil Rights & Society Read Story
1937

The Golden Gate Bridge

Built during the Great Depression over four years across a notoriously difficult strait, the Golden Gate Bridge opened on May 27, 1937 — and immediately became the symbol of American ambition made concrete.

Innovation & Progress Read Story
1969

Stonewall

At 1:20 a.m. on June 28, 1969, plainclothes officers raided the Stonewall Inn on Christopher Street. The patrons fought back. Six nights of protest followed.

Civil Rights & Society Read Story
1963

The March on Washington

A. Philip Randolph called for it in 1941; Bayard Rustin organized it in 1963. Two hundred and fifty thousand people gathered on August 28. King delivered his speech that afternoon.

Civil Rights & Society Read Story

Your Story Belongs
On This Map

These stories were written by people no different from you. Choose your hex on a state map, leave your name, and become part of the living record that America is still writing.