United States
Introduction
The outlying territories and areas of the United States include: in the Caribbean Basin, Puerto Rico (a commonwealth associated with the United States) and the Virgin Islands of the United States (purchased from Denmark in 1917); in the Pacific Ocean, Guam (ceded by Spain after the Spanish-American War), the Northern Mariana Islands (a commonwealth associated with the United States), American Samoa, Wake Island, and several other islands. The United States also has compacts of free association with the Republic of the Marshall Islands, the Republic of Palau, and the Federated States of Micronesia.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Related Articles
- The George W. Bush Presidency, 9/11, and Iraq
- Bush, Clinton, and Bush
- The Reagan Years
- Internationalism and the End of the Cold WarFord and Carter
- The Nixon Years
- The Great Society, the Vietnam War, and Watergate and the Vietnam War
- The United States in a Divided World
- World War II
- From Prosperity to Depression
- World War I
- Expansionists and Progressives
- The Late Nineteenth Century
- Slavery, Civil War, and Reconstruction
- Jackson to the Mexican War
- Madison, Monroe, and Adams
- Washington, Adams, and Jefferson
- The States in Union
- Colonial America
- European Exploration and Settlement
- Government
- Economy
- Religion and Education
- People
- Climate
- Major Rivers and Lakes
- The Pacific Coast, Alaska, and Hawaii
- The Western Mountains and Great Basin
- The Plains and Highlands of the Interior
- The East and the Gulf Coast
- Physical Geography
- Political Geography
- Geographical Studies
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