Found 71 bookmarks
Newest
ACLU Commends Federal Investigation into Racially Hostile Environment in Paw Paw Public Schools | ACLU of Michigan
ACLU Commends Federal Investigation into Racially Hostile Environment in Paw Paw Public Schools | ACLU of Michigan
"The OCR states its investigation will determine in part “…whether the District effectively caused, encouraged, accepted, tolerated, or failed to correct a racially hostile environment for Native American persons at its high school.” If the OCR determines the school district’s practices violate Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, the district could lose federal funding."
ACLU Commends Federal Investigation into Racially Hostile Environment in Paw Paw Public Schools | ACLU of Michigan
Wounded Knee Massacre - DBQ
Wounded Knee Massacre - DBQ
Short context paragraph and 3 accounts of the massacre and two images make for a single class lesson. Black Elk in 1890, Flying Hawk and 1936 and Benjamin Harrison in 1890 - how and why are these accounts different? How do we make history from this?
Wounded Knee Massacre - DBQ
150th Anniversary Sand Creek Massacre | The Official Site of Governor Hickenlooper
150th Anniversary Sand Creek Massacre | The Official Site of Governor Hickenlooper
This speech was delivered by the Governor of Colorado in 2014 memorializing the Sand Creek Massacre - buried within it is a brief description of two university studies into the Massacre and the role of then-governor John Evans. They did not come to the same conclusion which demonstrates for students the nature of history to come to different conclusions. It also shows that way in which history is used to understand the past
150th Anniversary Sand Creek Massacre | The Official Site of Governor Hickenlooper
Little War on the Prairie - This American Life
Little War on the Prairie - This American Life
Podcast that can show students the history in their backyard. It speaks to what of the past "becomes" history and how it becomes history - or not.
Little War on the Prairie - This American Life
Life among the Piutes Hopkins, Sarah Winnemucca, (Book)
Life among the Piutes Hopkins, Sarah Winnemucca, (Book)
Life Among the Paiutes: Their Wrongs and Claims is an 1883 book by Sarah Winnemucca. It is both an autobiographic memoir and history of the Paiute people during their first forty years of contact with European Americans. It is considered the "first known autobiography written by a Native American woman."[1] Anthropologist Omer Stewart described it as "one of the first and one of the most enduring ethnohistorical books written by an American Indian," frequently cited by scholars
Life among the Piutes Hopkins, Sarah Winnemucca, (Book)
MASCOTS - Listings of Schools by State
MASCOTS - Listings of Schools by State
Teachers looking to incorporate the issue of mascot names into their lessons can use this list to identify schools still using Native American mascot names
MASCOTS - Listings of Schools by State
The Horrific Sand Creek Massacre Will Be Forgotten No More | History | Smithsonian
The Horrific Sand Creek Massacre Will Be Forgotten No More | History | Smithsonian
Would anyone believe that the United States army would attack women and children who not only raised the United States flag, but white flags of surrender as well? This Smithsonian article can be used by teachers as a launching point to explore the conquering of the plains and war on Native Americans that was connected with the Civil War.
with the opening of the Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site. “We’re the only unit in the National Park Service that has ‘massacre’ in its name,”
“We remember the Civil War as a war of liberation that freed four million slaves,” Kelman says. “But it also became a war of conquest to destroy and dispossess Native Americans.” Sand Creek, he adds, “is a bloody and mostly forgotten link” between the Civil War and the Plains Indian Wars that continued for 25 years after Appomattox.
Another casualty of Sand Creek was any remaining hope of peace on the Plains. Black Kettle, the Cheyenne chief who had raised a U.S. flag in a futile gesture of fellowship, survived the massacre, carrying his badly wounded wife from the field and straggling east across the wintry plains. The next year, in his continuing effort to make peace, he signed a treaty and resettled his band on reservation land in Oklahoma. He was killed there in 1868, in yet another massacre, this one led by George Armstrong Custer.
The Horrific Sand Creek Massacre Will Be Forgotten No More | History | Smithsonian
Native Americans - Google Cultural Institute
Native Americans - Google Cultural Institute
This is a collection of paintings of Native Americans that demonstrate the changing conception of Native Americans by white settlers over time.  Showing these paintings to students and asking them what they see, might lead them to this understanding
Native Americans - Google Cultural Institute
An apology from the Bureau of Indian Affairs
An apology from the Bureau of Indian Affairs
Remarks of Kevin Gover in May, 2000 acknowledging the responsibility of the BIA for ethnic cleansing with regard to western tribes.
As the nation looked to the West for more land, this agency participated in the ethnic cleansing that befell the western tribes.
et in these more enlightened times, it must be acknowledged that the deliberate spread of disease, the decimation of the mighty bison herds, the use of the poison alcohol to destroy mind and body, and the cowardly killing of women and children made for tragedy on a scale so ghastly that it cannot be dismissed as merely the inevitable consequence of the clash of competing ways of life
An apology from the Bureau of Indian Affairs
CENSORED NEWS: Mohawk Nation News 'Holly Wood Lincoln'
CENSORED NEWS: Mohawk Nation News 'Holly Wood Lincoln'
This alternative view of Abraham Lincoln shows what the Mohawk nation thought of the Spielberg movie by pointing out Lincoln's role in the Homestead Act and the largest mass-execution in the history of the United States,
CENSORED NEWS: Mohawk Nation News 'Holly Wood Lincoln'
Buffalo Meat & Wounded Knee
Buffalo Meat & Wounded Knee

In this lesson, students analyze, through paintings, photographs, and letters, how a major change in the Native American’s way of life, the loss of the buffalo, was a partial cause of the Battle of Wounded Knee. This activity is intended to be used with other Social Studies lessons to provide a comprehensive study of Westward Expansion.

Buffalo Meat & Wounded Knee
American Indian Reservation Controversies - (Library of Congress)
American Indian Reservation Controversies - (Library of Congress)
Using various teaching/learning strategies, which include brainstorming, role playing, and oral presentations, the students access primary sources and other background sources to arrive at a recommendation, based on the information. The teacher, librarian, and other support staff act as guides or advisors through most of the process.
American Indian Reservation Controversies - (Library of Congress)
Indian Boarding Schools -(Library of Congress)
Indian Boarding Schools -(Library of Congress)
Through photographs, letters, reports, interviews, and other primary documents, students explore the forced acculturation of American Indians through government-run boarding schools.
Indian Boarding Schools -(Library of Congress)
Billy the Kid: Perspectives on an Outlaw -(Library of Congress)
Billy the Kid: Perspectives on an Outlaw -(Library of Congress)
This lesson relates to the westward movement in the United States in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Students analyze the role that gunfighters played in the settlement of the West and distinguish between their factual and fictional accounts using American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936 - 1940.
Billy the Kid: Perspectives on an Outlaw -(Library of Congress)
Closing the Western Frontier: Digital History
Closing the Western Frontier: Digital History
This chapter chronicles the construction of the transcontinental railroad; the settlement of the Great Plains; the mining, cattle, and farming frontiers; the oil industry’s birth; and popular culture’s treatment of the Western frontier.
Closing the Western Frontier: Digital History
American Experience . Buffalo Bill | PBS
American Experience . Buffalo Bill | PBS
William "Buffalo Bill" Cody's legendary exploits helped create the myth of the American West that still endures today.  Companion site for American Experience documentary. Includes timeline and extra information of people and events in film
American Experience . Buffalo Bill | PBS
Crash at Crush -- 1896
Crash at Crush -- 1896
Almost 50,000 people paid to see two 35 ton locomotives crash into each other head-on at 40 miles per hour in 1896.
Crash at Crush -- 1896
PBS - Frontier House
PBS - Frontier House
Companion site for documentary. Have you ever wondered what life was really like for pioneers living in the American West during the late 19th century? How did they fare without the modern conveniences we take for granted? Could a modern-day family handle a pioneer family's lifestyle?
PBS - Frontier House
Frederick Jackson Turner: The Frontier In American History
Frederick Jackson Turner: The Frontier In American History
Full text of book in which Jackson argues the idea of the frontier shaped the American being and characteristics. He writes of how the frontier drove American history and why America is how it is today. Turner reflects on the past to prove his point by noting human fascination with the frontier and how expansion to the American West changed people's views on their culture. From the University of Virginia
Frederick Jackson Turner: The Frontier In American History
The Gold Rush Trail
The Gold Rush Trail
Illustrations, articles and photos from the San Fransisco Chronicle
The Gold Rush Trail