Organized incorporated territories of the United States
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Organized incorporated territories are territories of the United States that are both incorporated (part of the United States proper) and organized (having an organized government authorized by an Organic Act passed by the U.S. Congress, usually consisting of a territorial legislature, territorial governor, and a basic judicial system). There have been no such territories since Alaska and Hawaii were admitted as states in 1959.
Through most of U.S. history, regions that were admitted as U.S. states were, prior to admission, territories or parts of territories of this kind. As the United States grew, the most populous parts of the organized territory would achieve statehood. The remainder frequently kept at least some of the governing structure of the old legal entity (territory) and would be renamed to avoid confusion.
Some territories existed only a short time before becoming states, while others remained territories for decades. The shortest-lived was Alabama Territory at two years, while New Mexico Territory and Hawaii Territory both lasted more than 50 years.
Contents
Historical
Of the current 50 US states, 31 were at one time or another part of a U.S. territory (see list below). The exceptions include: the original Thirteen Colonies; Kentucky and West Virginia (both split off from Virginia); Maine (split off from Massachusetts); California (created as a state out of the unorganized territory of the Mexican Cession); and Vermont and Texas (both previously self-declared republics).
Common regional names such as Louisiana Purchase, Indian Territory, and Oregon Country were never formally organized as territories.
During the American Civil War, there was (at least nominally) a Confederate-established Arizona Territory (1861–1865), which split Arizona and New Mexico along an east-west line, rather than the Union-established north-south line that persists today. See article for map.
Current situation
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Since 1959, there have been no incorporated U.S. territories formally organized by an Organic Act. All current U.S. territories except Palmyra Atoll are unincorporated (meaning that they are not fully part of the United States and that all aspects of the United States Constitution do not automatically apply), whereas other former incorporated territories are now states. While the District of Columbia functions similarly to an organized incorporated territory, it is governed by entirely different provisions of the United States Constitution as a federal district.
List of organized incorporated territories
The following territories within the United States were officially organized by Congress with an Organic Act on the first date listed. Each was admitted as a US state (of the same name, except where noted) on the second date listed. Often, larger outlying portions of an organized territory were not included in the new state.
For maps, see Territorial evolution of the United States.
- Northwest Territory (1787–1803) became the State of Ohio and the Indiana Territory (1800)
- Southwest Territory (1790–1796) became the State of Tennessee
- Mississippi Territory (1798–1817) became the State of Mississippi and Alabama Territory
- Indiana Territory (1800–1816) became western Michigan Territory (1805), Illinois Territory (1809), and the State of Indiana
- Territory of Orleans (1804[1]–1812) became the State of Louisiana[2]
- Michigan Territory (1805–1837) became Wisconsin Territory (1836) and the State of Michigan
- Louisiana Territory (1805–1812), renamed Missouri Territory
- Illinois Territory (1809–1818) became the State of Illinois, and part of the Michigan Territory
- Missouri Territory (1812–1821) became the State of Missouri and the rest unorganized
- Alabama Territory (1817–1819)
- Arkansas Territory (1819–1836) became the State of Arkansas and unorganized Indian Territory
- Florida Territory (1822–1845) became the state of Florida
- Wisconsin Territory (1836–1848) became the Iowa Territory (1838), and the State of Wisconsin, with a portion becoming part of the Minnesota Territory
- Iowa Territory (1838–1846) became the State of Iowa and the rest unorganized
- Oregon Territory (1848–1859)
- Minnesota Territory (1849–1858)
- New Mexico Territory (1850–1912)
- Utah Territory (1850–1896)
- Washington Territory (1853–1889)
- Kansas Territory (1854–1861)
- Nebraska Territory (1854–1867)
- Colorado Territory (1861–1876)
- Nevada Territory (1861–1864)
- Dakota Territory (1861–1889) became the Idaho Territory (1863), and the States of North Dakota and South Dakota
- Arizona Territory (1863–1912)
- Idaho Territory (1863–1890)
- Montana Territory (1864–1889)
- Wyoming Territory (1868–1890)
- Oklahoma Territory (1890–1907)
- Territory of Hawaii (1900–1959)
- Territory of Alaska (1912–1959)
See also
- Historic regions of the United States
- Insular areas of the United States
- Insular Cases
- Political divisions of the United States
- Territorial evolution of the United States
- Territories of the United States - foreign possessions, legal classifications
- Territories of the United States on stamps
- United States territorial acquisitions
References
- Use mdy dates from April 2012
- Articles containing Arabic-language text
- Insular areas of the United States-related lists
- Former organized territories of the United States
- Territories of the United States
- Colonization history of the United States
- United States geography-related lists
- United States history-related lists
- Territories