What was it like to be at the first Thanksgiving? How did Pilgrim children contribute to the feast? Written from a child's perspective, this illustrated book answers those questions and more.
The Indians who lived along the northern Pacific coast were different from any other Native Americans. Thery were fishermen, wood carvers, and builders of totem poles; they were a hierarchical society with noblemen, commoners, and slaves in which material wealth was greatly admired and sought after.What was it like to be a child among Haida, Makah ...
Offers readers a look at the life and times of slaves in America from the 1600s through the Civil War by providing answers to basic questions about how they were brought here, where they lived when they arrived, and what types of work they were made to do. Original.
This new addition to the popular question-and-answer history series invites readers to step back in time to what it was like growing up 100 years ago on the Great Plains of America. Full color.
There was a time that girls and women in the United States could not: wear pants; play sports on a team; ride a bicycle; or go to college. That all began to change in 1848, when American women (and some men) met in Seneca Falls, NY, at the first convention for women's rights held anywhere in the world.
The history of the Hopi--which means "wise and beautiful people"--is explored through a series of questions and answers, such as "Would you live in a teepee?" and "What did girls have to learn?" Full-color illustrations.
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