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Abraham Lincoln Administration -
Dewey 973.7
[a constantly changing URL database with content relevant to elementary school curricula]
ABRAHAM LINCOLN ADMINISTRATION, 1861-1865
Life
- Life * of Abraham Lincoln
- John Wilkes Booth * flees - April 14, 1865 (see: 923.4)
- Lincoln dies * at Petersen's Boarding House - April 15, 1865 (see: 917.53)
- John Wilkes Booth shoots * Lincoln on April 14, 1865 (see: 923.4)
- Ford's Theater * in Washington, DC - Lincoln shot on April 14, 1865 (see: 917.53)
- Lincoln shot while sitting in a chair * at Ford's Theater * in Washington, DC - on April 14, 1865 by John Wilkes Booth (see: 917.53)
- Lincoln shot * in Washington, DC at Ford's Theater on April 14, 1865 by John Wilkes Booth (see: 917.53)
- Abraham Lincoln *, a Republican, is elected president in 1860. (see: 923.124)
- First Lady - Mary Todd Lincoln *
Domestic (Civil War)
- The South * during the Civil War (Library of Congress)
- The North * During the Civil War (Library of Congress)
- African-American * Soldiers During the Civil War (Library of Congress)
- Civil War Soldiers Stories * (Library of Congress)
- 1859 - Watervliet Arsenal * at Watervliet, New York had been built in 1813 but with added storage for raw materials, bullets and war objects were made.
Overall Civil War resources
- Jefferson Davis *, Pres. of Confederate States of America (see: 923.212)
- Civil War photographs * at the Library of Congress
Lesson plans
- Lesson plan resource - Civil War *
Wilmot Proviso (1847); Missouri Compromise (1820)
Abolition Movement
- Slave Narratives *
- Student-created, interpretative slave narratives *
- Children's literature - Underground Railroad * and Abolitionism
- John Brown's Raid - A * Chronology (1859) (see:973.682)
- John Brown's Raid - Eyewitness * accounts (1859) (see:973.682)
- American Colonization Society * (1817) (see: 973.501)
- John Brown's anti-slavery * actions (see: 973.682)
- Abolitionists' * pictures (see: 974.46423)
- Anti-slavery * picture (see: 974.4642)
- Lewis Tappan of Philadelphia, defended Amistad mutineers * and was active in American Anti-Slavery Society (1833)(see:974.8) [ Amistad * Case]
Fugitive slaves
- Underground Railroad - North * Carolina
- Harriet Tubman * (see: 975.2)
- Frederick Douglass * (see: 975.2) (Frederick Douglass Papers *)
- Frederick Douglass *
- Anthony Burns *, a fugitive slave, was helped by American Anti-Slavery Society(see:974.46423)
- Underground Railroad in Franklin * County (see:975.2)
John Brown's Raid, 1859
- John Brown's * anti-slavery actions (see: 973.682)
Emancipation Proclamation, Lincoln (1862)
- Emancipation Proclamation *, January 1, 1863 (see: 973.052)
Diplomatic history of the Civil War
Operations and battles of the Civil War
- Civil War timeline *
- Civil War * WWW
- Library of Congress * Photographs from the Civil War
- Robert E. Lee on April 9, 1865 surrendered * at Appomattox Court House (see: 923.3)
- Battle of Bull Run *, July 21, 1861 (Manassas)
- Civil War * Battles
- Fort Sumter * (Charleston, SC) the April 12, 1861 beginning of the Civil War (see: 975.7)
- June, 1865 - Gettysburg * in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania - Lee against Meade
Gettysburg Address *, Lincoln (1865)
Military Units of the Civil War
- Civil War soldiers and * sailors
Black troops
- 1863 - Fort Desperate * (Port Hudson) in Zachary, Louisiana defends the lower Mississippi. There was major African American combat here.
- African-Americans * in the Civil War - Mississippi State Information
- African-American * Civil War Memorial
- Colored troops * in the Civil War
- 54th Massachusetts * Infantry (R.G. Shaw, commander)(see: 974.4642)
- 54th Massachusetts * Volunteer Infantry (R.G. Shaw, commander)(see: 974.4642)
- African American Warriors * - in the Civil War (see: 974.4642)
Naval history of the Civil War
- 1862 - At Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, the Union's, Monitor * against the Confederate, Merrimack
Celebrations of the Civil War
Prisoner of war camps
- Andersonville * in Andersonville, Georgia was the largest Confederate prison camp of all.
Later 19th Century, Reconstruction Period, 1865-1901
Educator is the recipient of the Miss Rumphius Award
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Copyright © 1997 Marjorie Duby, practitioner formerly sited at Joseph Lee School, Boston, MA.
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Last modified: September 19, 2005.
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