Well I'd have to say the biggest accomplishment was declaring independence from Great Britain's "Tyrannical" rule being the first step in saying we are a sovereign nation who doesn't need a mother country to guide us.
Some believed the use of icons and their veneration was fine, and others felt that icons should not exist because it could lead to idolatry.
The iconoclastic controversy occurred in the Byzantine empire, beginning in the 8th century and lasting into the 9th century. "Iconoclasm" means destroying of icons or images in the church. The iconoclasts pointed to Bible verses from the Old Testament that prohibited the use of "graven images." Those who supported religious artwork and iconography looked at these as valuable ways for worshipers to visualize the truths of the faith.
The controversy went back and forth over many years, with different emperors and church councils disagreeing in the views they supported. Ultimately, veneration of icons was restored for good in AD 843, and this event is celebrated to this day in the Eastern Orthodox Church as the Feast of Orthodoxy.
They took the ice bridge connected to America, which soon collapsed after the Asians reached the Americas.