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Golston, Syd – Social Education, 2010
The Federal Writers' Project was an arm of the Works Progress Administration (WPA), Franklin Delano Roosevelt's massive program to put the unemployed back to work. The Writers' Project was charged with producing an extensive guidebook for each of the 48 states; and more than 6,000 local newspaper writers, novelists, poets, college professors, and…
Descriptors: United States History, Economic Climate, Structural Unemployment, Authors
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Pershey, Edward Jay – OAH Magazine of History, 1990
Documents history of Lowell, Massachusetts, from the careful planning of town, the recruitment of farm family daughters into the labor force, the demise of the town, and Lowell's subsequent regeneration as a high technology center in the 1970s and 1980s. Suggests that the study of this town's history can illuminate the study of current U.S. urban…
Descriptors: Community Development, Demography, Economic Development, Employed Women
Massachusetts Univ., Lowell. Tsongas Industrial History Center. – 1999
This field trip program, three 45-minute hands-on workshops and a 30-45-minute interpretive tour, provides students with the opportunity to explore the many ways that the Industrial Revolution significantly changed modes of U.S. work, lifestyle, and land use. The workshops complement one another by exploring different aspects of these changes.…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Field Trips, Heritage Education, Historic Sites
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Bennett, Paul W. – History and Social Science Teacher, 1990
Discusses the Salem witchcraft trials as a reflection of the social and moral values of colonial Massachusetts and New France. Traces the history of the trials. Describes other instances of witchcraft and folk superstitions during that same historical period. Provides primary sources of a picture, map, and excerpts from letters pertaining to the…
Descriptors: Folk Culture, History Instruction, Maps, Moral Values
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Fellner, Kelly; Stearns, Liza – New England Journal of History, 1995
Examines a primary source-based kit that describes the life of a young woman factory worker in early 19th-century New England. The kit includes five document sets, utilizing maps, newspaper articles, deeds, letters, poems, and other artifacts. The document sets illustrate various topics including mill life and personal life. (MJP)
Descriptors: Curriculum Enrichment, Employed Women, Females, Industrialization
Massachusetts Univ., Lowell. Tsongas Industrial History Center. – 1998
This field trip program, a 75-minute interpretive tour and a 90-minute workshop, provides students with the opportunity to explore what it was like for newcomers from many different cultures to move to an industrial city. The workshop complements the tour by bringing the significance of historic resources to life. The tour focuses on the…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Field Trips, Heritage Education, Historic Sites
Massachusetts Univ., Lowell. Tsongas Industrial History Center. – 1998
This field trip program, a 90-minute interpretive tour and a 90-minute hands-on workshop, provides students with the opportunity to explore the causes and nature of the conflict between workers and owners which grew out of the Industrial Revolution. The workshop complements the tour by bringing the significance of historic resources to life as…
Descriptors: Employer Employee Relationship, Field Trips, Heritage Education, Historic Sites
Emerson, Rae; Hoermann, Elizabeth; Stearns, Liza – 1999
As the steward of the nation's premier historic, natural, and recreational resources, the National Park Service manages 15 unique areas within the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Each of these sites offers hands-on programs specifically geared to meet the needs of teachers and students. The programs support the Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks…
Descriptors: Curriculum Enrichment, Elementary Secondary Education, Heritage Education, Historic Sites
Obleschuk, Leslie C. – 1999
This lesson is based on the John F. Kennedy National Historic Site (Massachusetts), the birthplace of President John F. Kennedy. The lesson can be used as a biographical study, an introduction to the Kennedy presidency and the turbulent sixties, or as part of a unit on post-World War II U.S. history. Primary and secondary sources are included for…
Descriptors: Built Environment, Heritage Education, Historic Sites, History Instruction
Robinson, Barbara – 1991
This document, a teacher's manual, was published as part of the state of Massachusetts' observance of the bicentennial of the United States Constitution. The manual accompanies a videotape on the topic. Together, the materials can help educators identify the people, places, and pictures that they can use to underscore the significance of the Bill…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Civil Liberties, Constitutional History, High Schools
Brue, Sandy – 2002
This lesson describes and discusses the Battle of Bunker Hill (Massachusetts), which took place during the Revolutionary War. The lesson plan contains eight sections: (1) "About this Lesson"; (2) "Getting Started: Inquiry Question"; (3) "Setting the Stage: Historical Context"; (4) "Locating the Site: Maps"…
Descriptors: Colonial History (United States), Geography, History Instruction, Map Skills
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Banit, Thomas F. – New England Journal of History, 1994
Contends that, although the topic of sports and leisure seems suited for study primarily at the national level, local communities can be rich sources of information. Describes the role of sports history within the overall work of the Needham (Massachusetts) Historical Society. (CFR)
Descriptors: Athletics, Community Resources, Cultural Context, Elementary Secondary Education
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Nutting, P. Bradley – New England Journal of History, 1994
Contends that what a society does publicly to entertain itself reveals shared values. Maintains that public entertainment in Worcester (Massachusetts) prior to the War of 1812 was limited largely to Sundays, court days, and the Fourth of July. Describes changes in entertainment and social values after the War of 1812. (CFR)
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Elementary Secondary Education, Group Behavior, History Instruction
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Smith, Rick; O'Connell, Peter – OAH Magazine of History, 1997
Profiles activities and exhibits at the Tsongas Industrial History Center and Lowell National Historical Park. Follows a group of students as they participate in a situation simulating 19th-century working conditions and subsequent union organizing. Includes two documents from a resource kit illustrating worker's lives. (MJP)
Descriptors: Exhibits, Experiential Learning, Extracurricular Activities, Field Instruction