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Your search produced (18) results
Image: 1763 political cartoon lampooning George Whitefield. From the Library of Congress.

Great Awakening

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Image: Illustration of tarring and feathering published in London in 1774. From the Library of Congress.

Loyalists

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Image: Thomas Jefferson's original rough draft of the Declaration of Independence from 1776. From the Library of Congress.

Declaration of Independence

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Image: 1787 Political cartoon lampooning anti-federalists by Amos Doolittle. From the Library of Congress.

Federalists and Anti-Federalists

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Image: Manuscript of the Constitution of the United States, 1787. From the Wikimedia Commons.

Slavery in the Constitution

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Image: Print of Galileo by Samuel Sartain from painting by Wyatt, date unknown. From the Library of Congress. In 1633, scientist Galileo Galilei was convicted of heresy by the Inquisition. He was forced to recant his beliefs and spent the rest of his life under house arrest. Students may be surprised to learn Galileo's crime: teaching the sun, rather than the earth, is at the center of the solar system. In this lesson, students explore three primary sources and one New York Times article to answer the quest

Galileo

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Image: Stamp Act political cartoon published by William Bradford in 1765. From the Library of Congress.

Stamp Act

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Plague Doctor

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Louis XIV

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