Login    0 item(s) in your Shopping Cart  

Home | Jackdaws | Our Historians | Order | My Account | FAQ
Indian Resistance: The Patriot Chiefs
J-A2


     

This Jackdaw and its hands-on documents — a Catlin map, an important array of historical illustrations, Jefferson’s notes, and a letter from a chief — will help students understand how the white man’s “Indian problem,” and the Indian’s “white problem” was approached by all concerned. This Jackdaw teaches a wide scope of American Indian history, covering the subject from the 1600s to 1970s, from the East to West Coasts, and focusing on the key leaders of Indian nations and their interaction with government officials. Students will find that the documents provide a positive image of the Indians and their pleas for justice, which were consistently denied until the last few decades. Historian: Alvin M. Josephy, Jr. The contents of this Jackdaw feature:

Broadsheets
  • King Philip’s War
  • Tecumseh and Expansion Across the Allegheny
  • Manifest Destiny and its Opponents
  • Non-resistant Chiefs
  • American Expansion on the Plains
  • Modem Indian Policy and Indian Resistance Today
Historical Documents
  • Pages from the first Bible printed in America, 1663.
  • Paul Revere’s drawing of King Philip.
  • An engraving, “How They Catch Fish,” from Thomas Hariot’s “Briefe and True Report of the new Found Land of Virginia.”
  • An engraving, “The Town of Secotan,” an Indian village.
  • Pages from Thomas Jefferson’s Notes on the State of Virginia (London, 1787) telling the tragedy of Logan, a Mingo chief.
  • Portraits of great Indian leaders: The Prophet (Tecumseh’s brother), Osceola, Sequoya and Keokuk.
  • The frontispiece and title page of the autobiography of the great Sauk and Fox chieftain, Black Hawk.
  • Part of a letter written in the Nez Percé language by a chief.
  • An illustration of Chief Joseph and his followers being pursued by U.S. Troops in mountains of Idaho in 1877.
  • The last page of a Hopi petition in 1894 asking the government for a survey of promised grazing lands.
  • Remington’s painting of the Ghost Dance of Oglala Sioux.
  • A map of the Indian tribes, drawn in 1865 by George Catlin,
Study Guide / Lesson Plan – Reproducible Activities

Price: $69.50


Quantity:   

 


Home | Jackdaws | Our Historians | Order | My Account | FAQ

Copyright © 1999-2014. All Rights Reserved.    Contact Webmaster     Powered by VRA.NET