British lake. It was important for a lot of reasons. One pennsylvania, maryland, delaware and virginia were the bread basket of the United States. You bottle up the Chesapeake Bay and a lot of the goods, the wheat that was exported that does not get to sea. In addition, uch the important sea ports and cities of indianapolis and baltimore and the new capitols, washington dc. Alexander and virginia. The british with blocking the bay hope that we would pull our troops out of canada and using them closer to home and recognizing the war being unpopul unpopul unpopular amongst our people. The economy was not doing so well, that may help end this war of 1812. For the british, the war of 1812 is a distraction. All this is but a side show. They want to bring the war of 1812 to a conclusion as quickly as they can. The world of 1812 here on the Chesapeake Bay sees the world navy against a number of small town and americans living over the bay. However, even a small resistance that town would be b
Community members are invited to honor the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. on Monday as the Hardin County Branch of the NAACP conducts its 31st MLK/Lottie O. Robinson Scholarship
In a response to national attention and local concern about Critical Race Theory, the Hardin County branch of NAACP will conduct an information webinar next week.
The session will be offered free beginning at 7 p.m. Tuesday. It will address derivations from the original legal intent of CRT authors and explain the theories primary use by universities in the fields of law, psychology and sociology, the local organizationâs announcement said.
To date, the theory is not part of the public-school curriculum or mentioned in Kentucky Academic Standards. The Hardin County NAACP Branch statement said it hopes âcurriculum will continue to offer educational opportunities that encourage critical and creative thinking skills that prepare students for local, national and global problem solving. Additionally, the schoolsâ curriculum will provide equitable access to educational materials and experiences that will develop the highest skill levels possible for all of our students to m
Eugene Hall, a Texas-based world geography historian, was the featured speaker Tuesday evening during the third of four webinars being held this month to recognize and celebrate Black History Month.