Resource |
PPT |
“Stealing a Little Freedom” – Enslaved Runaways in North Carolina |
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01 Preparing for a Field Trip to North Carolina Freedom Park |
02 An Introduction to North Carolina Freedom Park |
03a North Carolina Freedom Park Field Notebook |
03b North Carolina Freedom Park Printable Journal |
04 The Leaders Behind the Words: NC Freedom Park’s “Voices of Freedom” |
05 Primary Source Analyzation at North Carolina Freedom Park |
06 Post-Visit Prompts & Strategies for Discussion & Reflection |
07 Post-Visit Processing Activities & Projects for NC Freedom Park |
A Counter Revolution: The Fight Against Segregated Dining |
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A Parallel Struggle for Freedom: Black People During the American Revolution |
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A Red Record: “The Light of Truth:” Acknowledging the Legacy of Lynching |
A Red Record: Lynching and Dehumanization |
A Red Record: Lynching Resistance |
Abolitionism, Quakers & the Underground Railroad in North Carolina |
Affrilachia |
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African American Troops in the Civil War |
African American Voting Rights and the North Carolina Constitution |
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African Americans and the Vietnam War |
African Americans in Revolutionary Times |
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African Americans in US Congress During Reconstruction |
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African Folk Tales: Resistance, Hope and Freedom |
Against All Odds: The African American Founding of Princeville, NC |
American Abolitionists |
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An Introduction to A Red Record |
Blood Done Sign My Name |
Booker T. Spicely & the Dangers WWII Black Veterans Faced in their Fight Against the Jim Crow South |
Coastal Freedom Seekers: Hotel D’Afrique, Roanoke Island Freedmen’s Colony & James City |
Creating a Civil Rights Quilt |
Durham’s Hayti Community – Urban Renewal or Urban Removal? |
Elizabeth Keckly: From Slavery to Celebrity |
Exploring African American Leadership and Service in North Carolina |
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Exploring Islam in North Carolina |
Exploring Life in 1898 Wilmington & the Wilmington Coup with Crow, a novel for young adults |
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Exploring the American Dream with A Raisin in the Sun |
Exploring the Hypocrisy of American Slavery with Frederick Douglass’ “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” |
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Fighting for Freedom: Black Contributions to the Civil War |
Freedom Music |
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Freedom Parade, a Group Project |
Freedom Rides of 1961 |
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Freedom Seeking Across North Carolina |
George Henry White: The American Phoenix |
Halifax County, the Roanoke River and Freedom Seeking |
Hero Abroad, Second Class Citizen at Home: John Seagraves, African-Americans & World War II |
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How Horace Carter Fought the KKK in North Carolina |
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How Should Robert F. Williams Be Remembered? |
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Ida B. Wells & Her “Light of Truth” |
Journey of Reconciliation, 1947 |
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Living History: Local Voices of the Civil Rights Movement |
Missing Pieces of the Puzzle: African Americans in Revolutionary Times Project |
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Moments in the Lives of Engaged Citizens who Fought Jim Crow |
NO FEAR: The Extraordinary Artistry of Nina Simone |
North Carolina’s 35th USCT |
North Carolina’s Settlements of Freedmen During the Civil War: The Roanoke Island Freedmen’s Colony and the Trent River Settlement |
OAK CITY ADVERTISING: Plan a Social Media Campaign for NC Freedom Park |
Plessy v. Ferguson & the Roots of Segregation |
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Quotes on the Purpose of Freedom Park |
Remembering Martin Luther King, Jr. |
Resistance, Resilience & Strength: The Life of Harriet Ann Jacobs |
Rocky Mount Mills Living Museum |
Shining a Light on Untold History: North Carolina’s Black Revolutionary War Soldiers |
Sitting Down To Stand Up For Democracy |
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Sitting Down to Stand Up for Democracy |
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Sitting Down to Stand Up for Democracy |
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Slave Resistance |
Source Packet for Charlotte Hawkins Brown |
Source Packet for Golden A. Frinks |
Source Packet for Harriet Jacobs |
Source Packet for Lyda Moore Merrick |
Standards Alignment for NC Freedom Park |
Surviving and Thriving Despite Jim Crow: Durham’s “Black Wall Street” |
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Talking About Reparations: A Civil Conversation |
The History of Black Education in North Carolina: A Teaching Guide for High School Educators |
The Power of Youth: Exploring the Civil Rights Movement with “Freedom’s Children” |
The Wilmington Coup of 1898 |
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Tips for Tackling Sensitive History & Controversial Current Events in the Classroom |
Unboxing Henry Box Brown |
Voices from the Transatlantic Slave Trade |
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