jeudi 21 janvier 2016

THE US CONSTITUTION

The Basics
The Scales of Justice The law is the set of rules that we live by. The Constitution is the highest law. It belongs to the United States. It belongs to all Americans.
The Constitution says how the government works. It creates the Presidency. It creates the Congress. It creates the Supreme Court.

The Right to Assemble is a key constitutional right The Constitution lists some key rights. Rights are things that all people have just because they are alive. By listing the rights, they are made special. They are made safe. The Bill of Rights is a part of the Constitution. The Bill of Rights lists many rights of the people.




History

 
We the People - the first words of the Constitution The Constitution was written in 1787. Yes, it is over 200 years old. 
We actually have old copies of what was created. We have pictures of the Constitution on this site.

The Framers are the authors of the Constitution In 1787, a group of men met to write the Constitution. They did not like the way the country was going. They fixed it by creating the Constitution. We call these men The Framers.

George Washington was a Framer and our first President Some of the framers are very famous. George Washington was a Framer. So was Ben Franklin.

Independence Hall in Philadelphia The Framers met in Independence Hall during a hot summer in Philadelphia. 

They had a lot of arguments. In the end, they agreed to the words in the Constitution. They knew they had to agree. If they did not agree, the fighting would keep going.
After the Framers wrote the Constitution, they asked the states to approve it. It took some time, but all the states did approve it.
Some people did not like the Constitution. Some were afraid because it did not do enough to protect the rights of the people. It had no bill, or list, of rights.

All laws passed in the United States have to abide by the Bill of Rights Promises were made to add a bill of rights. After the Constitution passed, the Bill of Rights was added. 

The Bill of Rights is the first ten changes to the Constitution.




The Bill of Rights
The police are our friends - and the Bill of Rights makes sure of that The Bill of Rights is very important. It protects important ideas. It protects your right to say what you want. It lets you think for yourself. It keeps the laws from being too hard. It gives rules for the police.

Religion is very important to a lot of people - and the Constitution keeps it safe It lets you believe in God if you want. No one can tell you not to believe. It lets you gather with your friends to talk. It makes sure you can read newspapers.

Your home is safe because the Constitution keeps it safe The Bill of Rights also protects your home. It helps keep Americans safe. Today, we are very happy the Bill of Rights was added to the Constitution.




Making changes
The Constitution is not perfect. When it was written, they knew that it would have to be improved. 
The Framers added a way to make changes. This is called "amendment".
The Bill of Rights was actually added as a set of amendments.
 The Constitution has been changed 18 times since it was written. The amendments added things that the Framers didn't think of.
One amendment says that all black men can vote.
 Another says that all women can vote. 
One more says that the President can only be elected twice.
The first amendments, the Bill of Rights, were added in 1791.
 The last amendment was added in 1992. 
Lots of people have ideas for new amendments. Adding an amendment is hard — it takes lots of agreement.




How it all works
The Constitution sets up the government. It is split into three parts.

The U.S. Capitol Building One part is the Congress. The Congress makes laws. The people elect the members of Congress.

The White House 

The next part is the President. The President enforces the laws.

The Supreme Court Building 

The last part is the Courts. The courts decide what the law means when there are questions.






The People benefit from having a strong and honest government All of the parts have to work together. Just like the Framers agreed on the Constitution, the parts have to agree on the laws. No part has too much power. The power is shared. This helps protect the people.




mardi 5 janvier 2016

The Civil War (1860-1865)


                                                   The Civil War (1860-1865)
Timeline


Watch this video explaining the Civil War
http://www.neok12.com/video/American-Civil-War/zX6779726f01017267034359.htm

Conflict over issues of how much control the federal government should have over the states, industrialization, trade, and especially slavery had increased tension between Northern and Southern states. 
After Abraham Lincoln was elected president in 1860, 11 Southern states seceded (or withdrew) from the Union and set up an independent government--the Confederate States of America.
 These events led to the outbreak of the Civil War--a brutal, bloody, four-year conflict that left the South defeated and ended slavery at the cost of more than half a million lives.


November 6, 1860 - Abraham Lincoln, who had declared "Government cannot endure permanently half slave, half free..." is elected president, the first Republican, receiving 180 of 303 possible electoral votes and 40 percent of the popular vote.







December 20, 1860 - South Carolina secedes from the Union. Followed within two months by Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Texas.

Auction and Negro sales, Atlanta, Georgia.



1861
February 9, 1861 - The Confederate States of America is formed with Jefferson Davis, a West Point graduate and former U.S. Army officer, as president.
March 4, 1861 - Abraham Lincoln is sworn in as 16th President of the United States of America.

Fort Sumter Attacked

April 12, 1861 - At 4:30 a.m. Confederates under Gen. Pierre Beauregard open fire with 50 cannons upon Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina. The Civil War begins.
Fort Sumter after its capture, showing damage from the Rebel bombardment of over 3000 shells and now flying the Rebel "Stars and Bars" - April 14, 1861.
April 15, 1861 - President Lincoln issues a Proclamation calling for 75,000 militiamen, an

Check your knowledge : do this quiz  
http://www.softschools.com/quizzes/history/civil_war/quiz195.html

NATIVE AMERICANS

                                 NATIVE AMERICANS


Watch this video on the history of the Indians : https://youtu.be/8YR2FgxalCU

How well do you know about Native Americans? Do this quiz
http://www.ducksters.com/history/native_americans_questions.php

           Indian reservations and major Indian battles in the 19th century:



                                                                              Indian culture map
    
   Famous Indian chefs
Crazy Horse














                                                           
Sitting Bull































                                                  Crazy Horse Memorial:





Portrait of Pocahontas
Portrait of Pocahontas
Pocahontas
Born: 1596 (exact date uncertain)
Died: March (exact date uncertain) 1617
Have you seen the animated film "Pocahontas"? It tells the story of the daughter of Powhatan, the most powerful Indian chief of coastal Virginia in the early 1600s. Even today, her story fascinates people.
Pocahontas was the daughter of Powhatan, an important chief of the Algonquian Indians (the Powhatans) who lived in the Virginia region. Her real name was "Matoaka." "Pocahontas" was a nickname meaning "playful" or "mischievous one."
Pocahontas was only about 10 years old when her world changed forever. English settlers arrived from far across the ocean and created a settlement at Jamestown, Virginia. These new English settlers looked and acted very differently from Powhatan's tribe. Some of Pocahontas's people were afraid or even hateful of the newcomers. But the chief's daughter had a curious mind and a friendly manner. She wanted to know more about these newcomers.
Pocahontas is most famous for reportedly saving the life of English Captain John Smith. Throughout her short life (she died at the age of 22), however, she was important in other ways as well. Pocahontas tried to promote peace between the Powhatans and the English colonists. She even converted to Christianity and married John Rolfe, a Jamestown colonist, a union which helped bring the two groups together. Her untimely death in England hurt the chance for continued peace in Virginia between the Algonquians and the colonists.

                                      The Trail of Tears (Piste des Larmes)




At the beginning of the 1830s, nearly 125,000 Native Americans lived on millions of acres of land in Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, North Carolina and Florida–land their ancestors had occupied and cultivated for generations. By the end of the decade, very few natives remained anywhere in the southeastern United States. Working on behalf of white settlers who wanted to grow cotton on the Indians’ land, the federal government forced them to leave their homelands and walk thousands of miles to a specially designated “Indian territory” across the Mississippi River
This difficult and sometimes deadly journey is known as the Trail of Tears.
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