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Weber, Carolyn A. – American Educational History Journal, 2013
Millions visited the World's Columbian Exhibition in Chicago between May and October, 1893. World's fairs and exhibitions had grown and developed grander purposes since the first one in London in 1851: "Beginning as large international industrial displays and showcases for the new inventions and discoveries of science and technology, they…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, American Indians, American Indian Culture, Exhibits
Rout, Kathleen – Indiana Social Studies Quarterly, 1985
Interpreted is the novel, "The Massacre at Fall Creek," that dramatizes an event that occurred in Indiana in 1824 in which White men killed unarmed Seneca Indians. The Whites were brought to trial, convicted, and hanged. The novel demonstrates the moral ambiguity that often characterizes responses toward crime and punishment. (RM)
Descriptors: American Indians, Crime, Moral Values, Punishment
Bennett, Pamela J., Ed. – Indiana Historian, 2001
This issue of this magazine is part of an effort to heighten the knowledge of students and teachers about Indiana's American Indian connections past, present, and future. The issue is a guide to accompany the 2001 original play, "People of the Turtle." It can stand alone as a starting place for students interested in learning about, and…
Descriptors: Adult Education, American Indian Culture, American Indians, Drama
Shelton, Lois G. – 1989
As fourth and fifth grade students study this unit in conjunction with their Indiana or U.S. history texts, they see how the Indiana pioneers ate and survived. Many of the foods taken for granted today were eaten by Indians in one of the Americas thousands of years ago. Students learn that the Native Americans had developed agricultural…
Descriptors: American Indians, Class Activities, Colonial History (United States), Food