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General Sites

The Museum of Westward Expansion star star star
Learn more about America's move west in the 19th century at this site from the National Park Service. You will find a timeline of events and online exhibits.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: No

The American West star star star star
This site includes sections on key events, Native Americans, mining, outlaws, and pioneers. You will find links to other resources, primary source materials, images, and essays.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

The Lewis and Clark star star star star
This companion site to the Ken Burns documentary includes a look at the members of the Corps of Discovery, an exploration of the Native Americans in the lands the Corps traveled, and interactive timeline of events, an interactive story where you can travel the trail, and primary source materials.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: No

New Perspectives on the West star star star star
This companion site to the Ken Burns documentary looks at the key people, places and events of western expansion and settlement.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: No

Lewis and Clark: Mapping the West star star star star
This site for students from the Smithsonian National Museum of American History explores the voyage of the Corps of Discovery and has sections on cartography.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: No

Lewis and Clark star star star
This site for students from Idaho Public Television has features on the journey and Sacagawea. You will also find journal entries from Lewis and Clark and interviews with historians.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Discovering Lewis and Clarkstar star star star star
This multimedia site is enhanced by at least one new interpretive episode each month focusing on issues, values and visions relating to the Lewis & Clark Expedition, its preludes, and its aftermath up to the present time. You will find journals of the expedition, photographs, maps, animated graphics, moving pictures, and sound files. The lead producer of the site is Dr. Joseph A. Mussulman.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: Yes

Rivers, Edens, Empires: Lewis and Clark and the Revealing of America star star star star star
This site from the Library of Congress draws on the Library's rich collections of exploration material to feature the trek of the Corps of Discovery as a culmination in the quest to connect the East and the West by means of a waterway passage. The exhibition's epilogue focuses on the transcontinental railroad, which replaced the search for a direct water route with a "river of steel." Look for the light bulb icons, they indicate items of special interest to kids and families!
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: No Searchable: Yes

National Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Commemoration star star star
This site includes a look at Indian nations, background information on the expedition, maps of the journey, and links to additional resources.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: Yes

The Lewis and Clark Journey of Discovery star star star star
This site from the National Park Service includes an overview of the journey of the Corps of Discovery, a timeline of events, and a look at the U.S. in 1804. You will also find a kids section with activities and games.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: No

The Lewis and Clark and the Maps of Exploration 1507-1814 star star star star
This online exhibit from the University of Virginia Library examines the planning of the Lewis and Clark Expedition and the cartographic tradition that made the expedition possible.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

The Roots of Lewis and Clark star star star star
This online exhibit from the University of Virginia includes a film looking at Lewis and Clark's Virginia connections, and includes five student designed web sites exploring the legacy and history of Lewis and Clark.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Bring Back Your Party Safe star star star star
This site from the University of Virginia Health System looks at medicine and health on the Lewis and Clark expedition.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Lewis and Clark and the Corps of Discovery star star star star star
This site from the University of Virginia Library contains the complete text of the journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804-1806.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Ethnography of Lewis and Clark star star star
This site from the the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University contains Native American objects collected by the Lewis and Clark Expedition. You will also find an overview of the expedition at the site.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Elementary/Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Trailblazersstar star star star
This site from teachers Mike Trinklein and Steve Boettcher looks at Lewis and Clark and some of the other people who ventured west including the Spanish, Alexander Mackenzie, the fur traders, and John Fremont.
Intended Audience: Students Reading Level: Elementary School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: No

Mountain Men and the Fur Trade star star star
The purpose this web site is to provide a virtual research center for Western Fur Trade History. The emphasis is on the "Mountain Men" in the United States Rocky Mountain region in the period from 1800-50. The site includes primary source materials that focus on the history, traditions, tools, and mode of living, of trappers, explorers, and traders of the period.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle/High School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Framework CorrelationsOregon Trail in Idaho star star star star star
Travel in the footsteps of the pioneers who traveled the Oregon Trail, read journal entries and learn about trail landmarks in Idaho.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

The Oregon Trailstar star star star
This site from teachers Mike Trinklein and Steve Boettcher has lots of information about the Oregon Trail and includes primary source materials.
Intended Audience: Students Reading Level: Elementary School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: No

The Oregon Trail star star
Take a virtual tour of the Oregon Trail at this site. You can learn about landmarks on the trail like Independence Rock, Fort Boise and the Whitman Mission.
Intended Audience: Students Reading Level: Elementary School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

The Overland Trail star star star
This site looks at the Overland Trail Mail route was established and owned by Ben Holladay, the "Stagecoach King." Sometimes confused with the "Oregon" or "California" Trail, which actually followed the North Platte Valley from Nebraska through Wyoming, the Overland Trail refers specifically to that portion of the mail and passenger route, established in 1862, that avoided the Indian uprisings that were occurring on the Oregon Trail. The site includes information on the Concord coach, maps of the trail, essays on the trail and region, and biographies of key people, and links to other resources.
Intended Audience: Students Reading Level: Elementary/Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Heritage Gateways star star star
This site for students from the Utah State Office of Education looks at the Mormon Trail Wagon Trek. You will find biographies, journal entries, and activities.
Intended Audience: Students Reading Level: Elementary/Middle School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: No

Taming the Wilderness: Rivers, Roads, Canals, and Railroads star star
This site looks at the modes of transportation used to expand westward.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

U.S. Territorial Maps 1775-1920 star
Maps that tracks the expansion of the United States from 1775-1920..
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Elementary School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Boundaries of the United States and the Several States star
Animated maps that track the expansion of the United States from 1650-1907.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Elementary School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Union Pacific Railroad star star star star
This site from the Union Pacific Railroad includes a history of the nation first transcontinental railroad; historical maps; biographies; and a photo gallery with advertising posters; stereo views; people; and locations.
Intended Audience:
General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Fort Scott star star
This site from the National Park Service looks at the role Fort Scott in Kansas played in American history. You will find sections on the Osage Indians,manifest destiny, the Mexican War, the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, and the Civil War.
Intended Audience:
General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Whitman Mission star star
This site from the National Park Service looks at the role Whitman Mission in Washington state played in U.S. history. You will find information on the Cayuse Indians, the fur trade, and the Oregon trail.
Intended Audience:
General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Fort Larned National Historic Site star star
Take a virtual tour of this fort in Kansas and learn about the role it played in the Indian Wars at this site from the National Park Service. You can also learn about the Plains Indians, Buffalo Soldiers, and the Sante Fe Trail.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Bent's Old Fort star star
Learn more about this fort, the Sante Fe Trail and the people who traveled the trail at this site from the National Park Service.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Sante Fe Trail star star
Learn more about this trail that spanned 900 miles of the Great Plains between Missouri and Mexico.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Fort Davis star star star star
Learn more about this Texas fort, Buffalo soldiers, Plains Indians, and the Indian Wars at this site from the National Park Service.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

Homestead National Monument star star star
Learn more about the homestead act at this site from the National Park Service.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

The Multicultural American West star star star
This site provides links to a wide-variety of resources Native peoples, women, African Americans, Asians, and Latinos in the American West. You will also find sections on art, literature, natural history, and folklore.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

The Gold Rush star star star star star
This site for students provides background information on the gold rush, fun facts, and activities.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Elementary School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: No

At Home on the Fringes of the Prairie: 1900-1850 star star star star
This site from the Illinois State Museum looks at life in early Illinois and includes maps, a timeline, and objects from frontier homes.
Intended Audience: Students Reading Level: Elementary/Middle School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: No

From Native Prairie to Present star
This site looks has sections on pioneer life on the prairie with a focus on farming.
Intended Audience:
Students Reading Level: Elementary/Middle School Teacher Section: Yes Searchable: No

Pioneer Camera star star
This site has photographs of life in North Dakota from 1870 through the turn of the century.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

 

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