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Joseph Phelan

The American Civil War - 6 views

http://edsitement.neh.gov/american-civil-war

American Civil War_Abraham Lincoln_slavery_sectinalism_Frederick Douglass

started by Joseph Phelan on 25 Mar 11 no follow-up yet
David Hilton

NARA - AAD - Main Page - 0 views

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    Archive of links to sources on American history from 1800 to the present. Seems to focus especially on the wars and economic matters.
Aaron Palm

Gus Hall (1910-2000): Stalinist operative and decades-long leader of Communist Party USA - 2 views

  • The Stalinist apparatus in the Kremlin was able to carry out its taming of the American party in large measure by appropriating the mantle of the Russian Revolution. At the same time it exploited ideological and political weaknesses within the American party and the US labor movement in general, weaknesses that took the form of national provincialism and indifference to theory.
  • By the time of the Great Depression, which brought new political opportunities and challenges in the US and elsewhere, the Stalinist grip on the American CP was complete.
  • Equating Stalinism with Marxism, this group saw the crisis of the bureaucracy as proof that the building of a Marxist party in the working class was impossible.
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • Earl Browder, general secretary of the party during this period, dubbed communism “twentieth century Americanism.” The party devoted itself to fervent support of the administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt, and gave even more enthusiastic support to Stalin's purges and the counterrevolutionary terror
  • 1956 and 1958 the majority of CP members, increasingly demoralized and lacking any clear analysis of the upheavals taking place within the Soviet bloc, simply left the party.
    • Aaron Palm
       
      The new leadership of the Communist Party in 1958 found that bringing Communism to the US working class was impossible (It had been tied to Stalin who was hated by all in America.)  So they decided to get their way by workign within the exisiting political structure.  They became staunch supporters of the Democratic Party and the Unions to make their initiatives reality.  
  • They remained unswerving in their support for the Democratic Party and the trade union bureaucracy. Millions of American workers, students and youth found themselves well to the left of the misnamed Communist Party during the 1960s and 1970s. The CPUSA, or what remained of it, could always be relied upon—in the struggle for civil rights, the movement against the war in Vietnam, and upsurges of working class militancy—to prop up the AFL-CIO and the Democrats in the White House, Congress and state and local office.
  • The CP, in fact, has supported every Democratic candidate for US President from Roosevelt to Gore, with the single exception of the 1948 race,
  • The Stalinists barely complained of the AFL-CIO's record of corruption, strike-breaking and anti-immigrant chauvinism, and avidly backed its support for the Democratic Party representatives of big business. All they wanted was the opportunity to serve the American trade union bureaucracy as they had before the Cold War. Hall would often hark back to the days when the “center-left” alliance of Stalinists and labor bureaucrats worked in tandem for Roosevelt.
Rob Jacklin

3D American Civil War on Google Earth - 18 views

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    "Informing you about 3D models of Civil War related places, buildings, and structures that are featured in Google Earth or created with the Sketchup software."
David Korfhage

Visualizing Emancipation - 7 views

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    An amazing digital visualization of emancipation events during the Civil War
tcornett

Episode 20: Reconstruction | 15 Minute History - 1 views

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    Host: Joan Neuberger, Professor of History and Editor, Not Even Past Guest: H.W. Brands, Dickson, Allen, Anderson Centennial Professor of History, UT-Austin After the chaos of the American Civil War, Congress and lawmakers had to figure out how to put the Union back together again-no easy feat, considering that issues of political debate were settled on the battlefield, but not in the courtroom nor in the arena of public opinion. How did the defeated South and often vindictive North manage to resolve their differences over issues so controversial that they had torn the Union apart? Historian H.W. Brands from UT's Department of History reflects on this issues and how he has dealt with them in his thirty years of experience in teaching about Reconstruction: "It's one of the hardest parts of American history to teach, in part because I think it's the hardest to just understand."
David Hilton

From Slavery to Civil Rights - For Teachers (Library of Congress) - 10 views

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    Interactive site which might be good for a lesson on African-American history.
Brian Peoples

Don Cheadle on African American Lives: What He Discovered - 5 views

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    Interesting story that links Indian Removal (1830s) with the Civil War and Reconstruction, then includes the consequences of the Dawes Act - which benefited Cheadle's family but few Natives.
Nicole Avery

American Wars lessons - 13 views

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    This sites provides some great resources about most of the wars in America's history.
Eric Beckman

The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. The Collection. Battle Lines - 2 views

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    Collection of letters from American Wars.
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    This online exhibition of letters and audio, created by the Gilder Lehrman Institute and the Legacy Project, features correspondence from over 200 years of American conflicts, ranging from the Revolution to the war in Iraq. This exhibition uses the words of famous generals and lesser-known troops, as well as parents, sweethearts, and children, to explore such themes as leaving home, life in the military, the pride and worries of those left behind, and ultimate sacrifice.
David Hilton

U.S. History Topics Teaching and Learning Resources - 4 views

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    Collection of resources on modern American history organised by topic.
David Hilton

The Papers of Jefferson Davis - 2 views

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    Collection of the papers of Jefferson Davis, the president of the South during the American Civil War. Nice-looking chap.
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    The Papers of Jefferson Davis, a documentary editing project based at Rice University in Houston, Texas, is publishing a multi-volume edition of his letters and speeches, several of which can be found on this web site. The site also provides extensive information on Davis and his family and numerous images.
Deven Black

THOMAS (Library of Congress) - 5 views

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    Congress thinks people should know what's going on. I know, I'm skeptical, too. But they asked the Library of Congress to create this site where students can find out how government works or doesn't. Track bills, check up on your Congressman, or visit the LEARN section midway down the homepage for links to sections on how laws are made, how the Supreme Court works and a host of primary source documents sorted by theme: The American Revolution and New Nation; National Expansion and Reform; and Civil War & Reconstruction.
David Hilton

http://picturingamerica.neh.gov/downloads/pdfs/Resource_Guide/English/English_PA_Teache... - 10 views

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    A guide to teaching some of the seminal images of American history. 
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    Also check out Picturing Early America, especially the unit plans from 2009 (ones from 2010, including one from yours truly coming soon): http://picturingamerica.salemstate.edu/
David Hilton

American History to 1865 - 1 views

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    An enormous number of links to sources related to American history up to 1865.
David Hilton

Letters Home from an Iowa Soldier in the American Civil War - 1 views

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    "These letters are part of a collection written by Newton Robert Scott, Private, Company A, of the 36th Infantry, Iowa Volunteers. Most of the letters were written to Scott's neighborhood friend Hannah Cone, in their home town of Albia, Monroe County, Iowa, over the three year period that he served as Company A's clerk. The final letter, describing the long-awaited mustering out in August of 1865, was written to his parents."
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    These letters are part of a collection written by Newton Robert Scott, Private, Company A, of the 36th Infantry, Iowa Volunteers. Most of the letters were written to Scott's neighborhood friend Hannah Cone, in their home town of Albia, Monroe County, Iowa, over the three year period that he served as Company A's clerk. The final letter, describing the long-awaited mustering out in August of 1865, was written to his parents.
David Hilton

Calisphere - A World of Digital Resources - 0 views

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    An excellently run site with primary sources for all things Californian.
David Hilton

America's First Look into the Camera: Daguerreotype Portraits and Views, 1839-1862 - 0 views

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    Over 700 daguerreotypes (early photos) from the period just before the US Civil War.
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