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    • Delaware. December 7, 1787. (ratified)
    • Pennsylvania. December 12, 1787. (ratified)
    • New Jersey. December 18, 1787. (ratified)
    • Georgia. January 2, 1788. (ratified)
  1. Aug 13, 2022 · The United States of America (USA) has 50 states. It is the second largest country in North America after Canada (largest) and followed by Mexico (third largest). The U.S. has 50 states, a federal district, and five territories. Here is a list of the 50 states and their capitals.

    Serial
    State Name
    State Capital
    Postal Abbreviation
    1.
    Alaska
    Juneau
    AK
    2.
    Texas
    Austin
    TX
    3.
    California
    Sacramento
    CA
    4.
    Montana
    Helena
    MT
    • From Overthrow to Annexation
    • Early Statehood Efforts Go Nowhere
    • The Cold War Changes Statehood Calculus
    • Amid Sovereignty Push, An Apology
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    Hawaii drew American interest for both economic and strategic reasons. After Christian missionaries visiting in the early 19thcentury reported favorable conditions for planting sugar cane, white business investors arrived, buying up large tracts of land. By the 1870s, treaties tied Hawaiian trade increasingly to the U.S. economy, while the wealthy ...

    Efforts to make Hawaii a full state started early and continued for decades. Sanford B. Dole, the first governor of the territory of Hawaii (and cousin to the future pineapple magnate), initially raised the possibility in his 1894 inaugural address. On February 11, 1919, the first bill for Hawaiian statehood was introduced to the U.S. House of Repr...

    By 1940, two of every three voters in Hawaii supported statehood. World War IIinitially stalled the process, but in 1947, the push renewed in earnest. The Hawaiian Equal Rights Commission changed its name to the Hawaii Statehood Commission. Numerous Hawaii statehood bills passed either the U.S. House or Senate in 1947, 1950, 1951 and 1953. But none...

    However, not all Hawaii residents celebrated statehood. Native Hawaiians have continually challenged Hawaii’s incorporation into the United States, from royalists staging a counter-revolutionin the immediate aftermath of the coup to contemporary calls for decolonization. The Native sovereignty movement got a significant boost in the 1970s from anti...

    Learn how Hawaii overcame decades of resistance and discrimination to join the union in 1959, after a coup ousted the Native Hawaiian monarchy in 1893. Explore the political, economic and strategic factors that shaped Hawaii's statehood journey.

  2. Nov 24, 2009 · Learn how Hawaii became the 50th state of the United States on August 21, 1959, after a long and turbulent history of exploration, annexation and resistance. Find out how the American flag was changed to reflect the new state and what challenges Hawaii faced as a new member of the Union.

    • 1 min
  3. The following table is a list of all 50 states and their respective dates of statehood. The first 13 became states in July 1776 upon agreeing to the United States Declaration of Independence, and each joined the first Union of states between 1777 and 1781, upon ratifying the Articles of Confederation, its first constitution. [6] (

    State
    State
    Date (admitted Or Ratified)
    Formed From
    1
    December 7, 1787 [8] (ratified)
    2
    December 12, 1787 [10] (ratified)
    Proprietary Province of Pennsylvania
    3
    December 18, 1787 [11] (ratified)
    Crown Colony of New Jersey
    4
    January 2, 1788 [8] (ratified)
    Crown Colony of Georgia
  4. This article lists the 50 states of the United States. It also lists their populations, the date they became a state or agreed to the United States Declaration of Independence, their total area, land area, water area, and the number of representatives in the United States House of Representatives.

  5. This is a list of the states of the United States of America and the dates on which they achieved statehood, ordered by date of admission to the union. This list excludes U.S. territories, as they have not been admitted as states, although they are constituents of the United States.

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