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More Resources
(1872 resources)
U.S. President: Facts
Learn facts about the presidents of the United States with this lesson. This activity can be... | Emancipation Group
This statue of Abraham Lincoln and Archer Alexander sits adjacent to the Park Plaza Hotel in... | |
Know the Presidents
Review facts about U.S. presidents, a great worksheet to use during the presidential elections... | Harriet Tubman Memorial
These statues reside in Boston's South End. Harriet Tubman spoke in Boston area Meeting Houses... | |
Inaugural Poetry
Review poems read at presidential inauguration ceremonies with this lesson plan. After the... | Virtual Field Trip: Black History in Boston
Take students on a virtual field trip for Black History Month. Use these photos and resources... | |
Women Abolitionists -- Poem and Speech
The poem by Sarah Forten and the speech by Sojourner Truth reflect their feelings about working... | ||
Colonial America Kaleidoscope
Students use the information they obtain through independent research to create a Colonial... | An Abolitionist Play
Students learn about five women abolitionists and are asked to write a one-act play that... | |
Convey Acceptance
This handy list of behavior management techniques will help you build trust and establish a... | African-Americans and Others Fight Discrimination
Ask students to read and answer related questions about the state of racial equality in the... | |
Site of the Boston Massacre
View the site of the Boston Massacre, where Crispus Attucks was the first man killed in the... | Colonial American Gazette
Assign a project that centers on the creation of a publication called the Colonial American... | |
Old South Meeting House
Photo of the Old South Meeting House in Boston; Phillis Wheatley was a member of the... | Crispus Attucks
A brief article about Crispus Attucks, believed to be the first man killed in the American... | |
African Meeting House/Abiel Smith School
Photos of the oldest African-American church (still standing) in the U.S. and the school it... | ||
66 Phillips Street/86 Pinckney Street
Both of these houses were occupied by abolitionists and African-American families in the 1800s. |

