Post by The Web lady on Jan 20, 2007 14:47:15 GMT -5
World War II
3 - 6 grade reading level
American Aircraft of World War II
August 6, 1945 -''lived near Hiroshima Railroad Station on the day when Atomic Bomb exploded. In Showa 20th ( 1945 ), I was just a first grader of elmentary school. I will tell all of you what I saw, I did, and I thought on that day. "
Hiroshima : A Survivor's Story -another witness of the atomic bomb
A Kid's Perspective -bombing of Pearl Harbor
Pearl Harbor - Remembered
Anne Frank Online
Anne Frank
World War II, An American Scrapbook
World Wars Virtual Classroom
World War II: Military Operations
7+ reading level
American Experience : MacArthur -about the life of this WW II general
Bombers of World War II
The World at War: History of WW 1939-1945
EyeWitness to History: World War II -eyewitness accounts
Voices of World War II -newscasts, presidential speeches, and songs of the time.
Groliers Interactive World War II Commemoration - Hitler
The Rise of Adolf Hitler
Normandy: 1944 -a battleground
The Holocaust: Learning Site for Students -Educational unit on the Holocaust.
C.A.N.D.L.E.S. Holocaust Museum
Cybrary of the Holocaust -interviews with survivors
Voice/Vision Holocaust Survivor Oral History Archive
America and the Holocaust -documentary about what "social and political factors shaped America's response to the Holocaust
World War II in the Pacific
Japanese Surrender Document
Japanese Internment
"In the wake of America's entry into World War II, more than 100,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry were forced to leave their homes, possessions and friends behind and report to relocation centers and internment camps where many were confined for the remainder of the war years"
Children of the Camps Internment History
Exploring Japanese American Internment -
Letters from the Japanese American Internment -from the Smithsonian. Children's letters.
3 - 6 grade reading level
American Aircraft of World War II
August 6, 1945 -''lived near Hiroshima Railroad Station on the day when Atomic Bomb exploded. In Showa 20th ( 1945 ), I was just a first grader of elmentary school. I will tell all of you what I saw, I did, and I thought on that day. "
Hiroshima : A Survivor's Story -another witness of the atomic bomb
A Kid's Perspective -bombing of Pearl Harbor
Pearl Harbor - Remembered
Anne Frank Online
Anne Frank
World War II, An American Scrapbook
World Wars Virtual Classroom
World War II: Military Operations
7+ reading level
American Experience : MacArthur -about the life of this WW II general
Bombers of World War II
The World at War: History of WW 1939-1945
EyeWitness to History: World War II -eyewitness accounts
Voices of World War II -newscasts, presidential speeches, and songs of the time.
Groliers Interactive World War II Commemoration - Hitler
The Rise of Adolf Hitler
Normandy: 1944 -a battleground
The Holocaust: Learning Site for Students -Educational unit on the Holocaust.
C.A.N.D.L.E.S. Holocaust Museum
Cybrary of the Holocaust -interviews with survivors
Voice/Vision Holocaust Survivor Oral History Archive
America and the Holocaust -documentary about what "social and political factors shaped America's response to the Holocaust
World War II in the Pacific
Japanese Surrender Document
Japanese Internment
"In the wake of America's entry into World War II, more than 100,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry were forced to leave their homes, possessions and friends behind and report to relocation centers and internment camps where many were confined for the remainder of the war years"
Children of the Camps Internment History
Exploring Japanese American Internment -
President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 authorizing the mass incarceration of over 110,000 Japanese Americans during World War II.
Two-thirds were American citizens. Over half were children or infants.
Their "crime": their Japanese ancestry.
Forty-six years later our government officially apologized for this "grave injustice" and paid reparations.
Two-thirds were American citizens. Over half were children or infants.
Their "crime": their Japanese ancestry.
Forty-six years later our government officially apologized for this "grave injustice" and paid reparations.
Letters from the Japanese American Internment -from the Smithsonian. Children's letters.