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Service and Sacrifice | Canada: The Story of Us, Full Episode 6
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CC BY-NC-ND
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Bravery and sacrifice defines our new nation, as war erupts across Europe. Canada, as a British Dominion, joins in the fight - a young country seeking to find its place on the world stage. It’s not long before nearly half a million Canadians, including thousands of Indigenous soldiers, travel to Europe to serve beside their allies in the First World War.
Francis Pegahmagabow
Soldiers of the Soil

Subject:
Agriculture
Arts and Humanities
Career and Technical Education
History
Social Science
World Cultures
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Date Added:
11/18/2024
The Seven Years War: Crash Course World History #26
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In which John teaches you about the Seven Years' War, which may have lasted nine years. Or as many as 23. It was a very confusing war. The Seven Years War was a global war, fought on five continents, which is kind of a lot. John focuses on the war as it happened in the Americas, Asia, and Africa. the "great" European powers were the primary combatants, but they fought just about everywhere. Of course, this being a history course, the outcomes of this war still resonate in our lives today. The Seven Years' war determined the direction of the British Empire and led pretty directly to the subject of Episode 28, the American Revolution.

Chapters:
Introduction: War
The Seven Years War: When, Where, and Why
The British vs. the French
Native American Participation in The Seven Years War
Fighting in the Caribbean, West Africa, and India
An Open Letter to Robert Clive
The Outcome of the Seven Years War
Credits

Subject:
History
World History
Material Type:
Lecture
Provider:
Complexly
Provider Set:
Crash Course World History
Date Added:
01/26/2012
Treaties Two-Part Lesson Series
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
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Students will learn about treaties and what important role they have played in with Virginia’s Native Americans. They will learn why there are treaties and how they affected the tribes and the Europeans and where they stand in the 21st century. In the second lesson, the teacher will go through the slides with the students explaining what was agreed between the Natives in Virginia and the Europeans that came to their land. This lesson can last as long as it takes to get through the slides, or the teacher can pick some of the agreements and discuss with students. 

Subject:
Computer Science
Measurement and Data
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lesson
Date Added:
11/18/2024
Westward Expansion: Crash Course US History #24
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Some Rights Reserved
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In which John Green teaches you about the Wild, Wild, West, which as it turns out, wasn't as wild as it seemed in the movies. When we think of the western expansion of the United States in the 19th century, we're conditioned to imagine the loner. The self-reliant, unattached cowpoke roaming the prairie in search of wandering calves, or the half-addled prospector who has broken from reality thanks to the solitude of his single-minded quest for gold dust. While there may be a grain of truth to these classic Hollywood stereotypes, it isn't a very big grain of truth. Many of the pioneers who settled the west were family groups. Many were immigrants. Many were major corporations. The big losers in the westward migration were Native Americans, who were killed or moved onto reservations. Not cool, American pioneers.

Chapters:
Introduction: The Wild, Wild West
The Western Frontier
Who Settled in the West?
Railroads Facilitated Westward Expansion
Forced Removal of Native Americans
Indigenous Resistance & The Ghost Dance Movement
The Dawes Act
Mystery Document
American Indian Boarding Schools
Cowboys
Ranches Became Family-Run Farms
Irrigation Projects in the Great Plains
The Legacy of the Westward Expansion Era
Credits

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lecture
Provider:
Complexly
Provider Set:
Crash Course US History
Date Added:
08/22/2013
Who Won the American Revolution?: Crash Course US History #7
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Some Rights Reserved
Rating
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In which John Green teaches you about the American Revolution. And the Revolutionary War. I know we've labored the point here, but they weren't the same thing. In any case, John will teach you about the major battles of the war, and discuss the strategies on both sides. Everyone is familiar with how this war played out for the Founding Fathers; they got to become the Founding Fathers. But what did the revolution mean to the common people in the United States? For white, property-owning males, it was pretty sweet. They gained rights that were a definite step up from being British Colonial citizens. For everyone else, the short-term gains were not clear. Women's rights were unaffected, and slaves remained in slavery. As for poor white folks, they remained poor and disenfranchised. The reality is it took a long time for this whole democracy thing to get underway, and the principles of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness weren't immediately available to all these newly minted Americans.

Chapters:
Introduction: The American Revolution
The Battles of the American War for Independence
Colonists and the American Revolutionary War
Slaves and the American Revolutionary War
Native Americans and the American Revolutionary War
Women and the American Revolutionary War
'Revolutionary' Ideas: Voting Rights
'Revolutionary' Ideas: Religious Freedom
How the American Revolution Affected the Economy
Mystery Document
Slavery and Hypocrisy in the American Colonies
American Ideals of Equality
Credits

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lecture
Provider:
Complexly
Provider Set:
Crash Course US History
Date Added:
03/14/2013