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General & Miscellaneous African American History, History - Study & Teaching
March on Till Victory: 1877-1970 (Sourcebook 5), Vol. 5 by Primary Source Inc. β€” book cover

March on Till Victory: 1877-1970 (Sourcebook 5), Vol. 5

by Primary Source Inc., Primay Source Inc (Editor), James Oliver Horton
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Overview

Taking us from the period following the end of Reconstruction to the burgeoning Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, this book and accompanying CD recount, like no others, the African American experience through contemporaneous documents, diaries, visuals, and texts.

Synopsis

Taking us from the period following the end of Reconstruction to the burgeoning Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, this book and accompanying CD recount, like no others, the African American experience through contemporaneous documents, diaries, visuals, and texts. These primary sources provide insight into the public and private worlds of those who came before us and shaped the United States of America. The documents make clear the importance of race in the formation of a common American culture. They pay tribute to the strength, endurance, creativity, and contributions of those often ignored in conventional textbooks. March On Till Victory offers an inclusive American history, revealing the interracial, multicultural heritage that became the foundation of our nation.

March On Till Victory is Sourcebook 5 in the groundbreaking five-volume series Making Freedom: African Americans in U.S. History. Developed by Primary Source Inc., a nonprofit organization promoting historically accurate, culturally inclusive studies, the series offers a wealth of primary source materials compiled by leading scholars, classroom teachers, and curriculum specialists. Each sourcebook in the series contains:

  • context essays written by scholars in African American history
  • lesson plans written largely by teachers for teachers
  • a glossary
  • an accompanying CD, featuring all the primary source materials, plus supplementary materials, a chronology of events, an annotated bibliography, and recordings of music.
Innovative and intellectually compelling, these curriculum materials fit into the conventional "scope and sequence." Use a single sourcebook independently or all five to form a powerful vehicle for bringing the history of African American life to middle and high school classrooms.

The system requirements for the CD are:

Windows/PC
Pentium Processor (233Mhz or higher)
Windows 95 or higher
64 MB RAM (more recommended)
SVGA Color Display (or better)
8x CD-ROM Drive (or faster)

Macintosh
PowerPC Processor System 8 (or higher)
64MB RAM (more recommended)
SVGA Color Display (or better)
8x CD-ROM Drive (or faster)

About the Author, Primary Source Inc.

Primary Source is an educational non-profit located in Watertown, Massachusetts. Its mission is to promote accurate history and humanities education through explicit inclusion of peoples who have been misrepresented or excluded in mainstream history. Primary Source is known widely for its professional development services and curriculum resources for K-12 teachers and school communities. In a six-year collaboration with scholars and classroom teachers, Primary Source developed Making Freedom: African Americans in U.S. History to enable teachers across the nation to incorporate the important contributions of African Americans into their U.S. History curriculum.

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Book Details

Published
April 1, 2004
Publisher
Heinemann
Pages
368
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780325005195

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