Studying history is an interesting endeavor, because the people who lived during the historical time period one studies are generally no longer alive to affirm or deny how historical events unfolded. We are generally left with the writings that were left behind, and the authors who interpret those writings, if written materials even still exist. It generally comes down to faith, and who you believe to be giving an accurate account of historical facts. When it comes to the history of the United States, and the activities of the "Founding Fathers" who drafted and wrote documents such as the Declaration of Independence in 1776, or The Constitution of the United States written more than a decade later in 1789, most public and private school educators in the United States are fairly unified in viewing this period of history very positively, as well as taking a positive view of the "Founding Fathers," and the U.S. Constitution. It makes perfect sense to have this kind of
Colin Donovan, an alumnus of the ASU Online history master’s program, was named the 2022 Idaho History Teacher of the Year by the Gilder Lehrman Institute for American History.
Modern perceptions of early modern slavery associate the institution almost solely with Africans and their descendants. Yet slavery was a ubiquitous institution in the early modern world…The story of European colonialism in the Americas and its victimization of Africans and Indians follows a central paradigm in most textbooks. The African “role” encompasses the transportation, exploitation, […]
The Biden Administration promised to increase federal funding for Native Americans and followed through in March 2021 via the American Rescue Plan signed into law