The Tennessee Primary Sources is a pack of 20 primary source documents that are relevant to the history in Tennessee. The Tennessee Primary Sources will help your students build common core skills including: Analysis Critical Thinking Point of View Compare and Contrast Order of Events And Much More! Perfect for gallery walks and literature circles! Great research and reference materials! The Tennessee Primary Sources are: 1. Illustration of Hernando de Soto first European to visit Tennessee 1570 2. Portrait ...
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The Tennessee Primary Sources is a pack of 20 primary source documents that are relevant to the history in Tennessee. The Tennessee Primary Sources will help your students build common core skills including: Analysis Critical Thinking Point of View Compare and Contrast Order of Events And Much More! Perfect for gallery walks and literature circles! Great research and reference materials! The Tennessee Primary Sources are: 1. Illustration of Hernando de Soto first European to visit Tennessee 1570 2. Portrait of John Sevier first governor of Tennessee 1792 3. Illustration of President Andrew Jackson & William Weatherford, Creek Indian leader, after the Battle of Horseshoe Bend 1814 4. First page of the Constitution of the State of Tennessee adopted in 1835 5. Oil painting entitled "Daniel Boone Escorting Settlers Through the Cumberland Gap" - 1851 6. Lithograph of the Battle of Chattanooga General Thomas charge near Orchard Knob 1863 7. General Ulysses S. Grant and men on Lookout Mountain 1863 8. Oil painting of Davy Crockett 1889 9. Young boy working in cotton mill, Fayetteville, Tennessee 1910 10. Photograph of womens suffrage activist Anne Dallas Dudley with her children 1912 11. Photograph of Admiral William Banks Caperton 1914 12. Photograph of Sergeant Alvin C. York 1918 13. Photograph of Samuel Gompers (left), President of the American Federation of Labor, participating in a demonstration in Washington, D.C. 1919 14. This Congressional resolution giving women the right to vote became the 19th Amendment to the Constitution when Tennessee became the 36th state t
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