Web Sites (21 - 30 of 9274):
1900 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950 American History
| ||
21. |
The American Experience | America 1900
*
- The Film & More | Special Feature | Timeline | Maps | People & Events | Teacher's Guide
The American Experience | Kids | Feedback | Search | Shop | Subscribe | Web Credits
New content © 1999 PBS/WGBH.
Source/Host: PBS |
|
22. |
Harlem 1900-1940
*
- check out a timeline of events that happened in Harlem during the early 1900s, from the Schomburg Center of the New York Public Library. Includes info on the exhibit.
|
|
23. |
||
24. |
Collection Finder: American Memory from the Library of Congress
*
- American Memory Collection Finder. American Memory consists of primary source and archival materials relating to American culture and history. These historical collections are the key contribution of the Library of Congress to the National Digital Librar...
|
|
25. |
About the Database of African-American Poetry, 1760-1900: Electronic Text
*
- Chadwyck-Healey's Electronic Text Center , University of Virginia The Database of African-American Poetry, 1760-1900, is a collection of over 2,500 poems, based on William French's bibliography, Afro-American Poetry and Drama 1760-1975 . This database is...
|
|
26. |
||
27. |
Freedom Timeline: March of Dimes
- Many Americans, especially children, experienced the crippling affects of polio during epidemics in the 1920s and 1930s. This website examines The March of Dimes as well as other organizations.
Reviewer: K. Mortensen |
|
28. |
African American History: Welcome
*
- This project documents a selection of important events in African American history. Currently it begins with the 1857 Dred Scott case and continues through Plessy v.
|
|
29. |
William Faulkner: Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech
*
- This is a copy of the acceptance award by American author William Faulkner for the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1950.
|
|
30. |
The Rutgers Reading List
*
- A Reading List for English Majors History The reading list below was composed several years ago by a professor at Rutgers University in New Jersey for the use of his own students. It was then passed along by Rutgers undergraduates to friends at other sch...
|
|