






Natives Along the Wabash & Ohio New!


Natives Along the Wabash & Ohio Revised & Expanded Edition 2010
188 Pages New ! Piankeshaw Trails Publications
By Sheryl Hartman Illustrated by Steve Tucker /Retired Teacher
Now on CD $15.00 Spiral Bound Book $25
This CD contains 32 pages of Powerful Support Materials including Colorful views of real sites along the Wabash and more information to help with classroom curriculum. Meets or exceeds National and State Academic Standards for Indiana and Ohio Social Studies Elements for 4th-5th Grade Social Studies
To order: www.etsy.com/shop/craftinghistory
Revised Expanded Teacher’s Resource Book Edition 2010 - 188 Pages of Reproducible
Interdisciplinary Activities
Index, Bibliography, Glossary, Coloring Pages, HIstory, Games, Biographies, Q&A and so much more!
This edition is a must for museum gift shops, school classrooms, and educators libraries. The goal of this publication is to provide lots of accurate background for educators to stimulate their interest in Native American Studies and Help them create exciting and engaging activities for students and youth.
The topics covered range from discussions of Paleo Indians with details on Clovis and those that followed to Archaic and extensive coverage of Woodland groups such as Hopewell and Mississippian All of these are followed by detailed discussions of historic people including the Miami, Shawnee, Lenape, Illini, Potawatomi, and Wyandot of the region between Western Pennsylvania and Illinois.
Uses of Corn, Foods, Wigwams, Longhouses, Hide Tanning, Bison, Myths, and How-To-Projects -- all well illustrated with lots of ready to use activities
New!
Support Material: FREE - Take your students on a journey along the Wabash from Mississippian Mound Builders at Angel to the place at the headwaters in Fort Recovery where Little Turtle defeated his enemy in 1791. Take a closer look at hide tanning, cattail mat making, wigwam building and venture along the Wabashiki River to Chief Richardville’s place at the Forks and to the Seven Pillars along a tributary called the Mississinewa 32 pages add to your classroom resources for social studies.
Where Fort Recovery stands today, Little Turtle and Blue Jacket defeated a huge American army in 1791.
Grouseland in Vincennes is where Tecumseh met with Harrison 200 years ago. See what a Mississippian house looked like at Angel Mounds and more
To see more illustrations and samples of the text, click the illustration to the left.