It features a timeline of America's wars, from the Revolution to Iraq. Watch an interactive presentation on each war -- slideshows and movies, text and photos, and dozens of artifacts (firearms, flags, uniforms). Read an overview of each conflict; learn about its causes, major events, and consequences. Gain a sense of how wars have shaped our history.
The Price of Freedom: Americans at War
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AP World - 19th cen.-present
StudyStack
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AP World - 1200-19th cen.
StudyStack
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These are for World History, not AP World History
StudyStack
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AP World - 00 - Early Civ. to ~1200
StudyStack
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Enire review of Ap Euro terms
StudyStack
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This site features photos and artifacts from the life of one of the most dynamic and controversial First Ladies in U.S. history.
Eleanor Roosevelt: American Visionary
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It spotlights 8 out of over 100 American women who secured official military accreditation as war correspondents, if not actual front-line assignments during World War II.
WAR, WOMEN, AND OPPORTUNITY
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It shows the typewritten draft of the December 8, 1941, speech in which Franklin Roosevelt asked Congress to declare war on Japan. The draft shows Roosevelt's hand-written edits, including his change of the phrase "a date which will live in world history" to "a date which will live in infamy."
Teaching With Documents:A Date that will Live in Infamy
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This site examines the friendship and working relations that developed between U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill beginning in 1940. Their relationship was crucial in the establishment of a unified effort to deal with the Axis powers.
The National Archives: Teaching with Documents
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