Forty accurately rendered residences and birthplaces -- from George Washington's first home in Virginia to Barack Obama's childhood house in Honolulu. Includes fact-filled captions and a map.
This is the companion adventure maze activity Book 2 to --- Santos the Tiny Dog: From the Texas Hill Country & San Antonio Environs- A Bilingual (English-Spanish) Adventure Story Coloring Book (Book 2) Join Santos the tiny dog and have fun helping Little Santos and his Calavera family go through each mystical adventure maze from the outskirts of San Antonio, to the Texas Hill Country, from fishing at Calaveras Lake, to floating down the Guadalupe River in New Braunfels, Texas. Go through the Enchanted Rock maze and help Santos get through many caves in the Texas Hill Country and beyond. Enjoy and good luck!
Notes and documents is 294 pages, with Table of contents, Appendix, Bibliography, Endnotes, and Index. The book chronicles are of an African American Family who were designated as Free Persons of Color, in Colonial Virginia. They were Virginia's own Creole Population.
Despite the many advances that the United States has made in racial equality over the past half century, numerous events within the past several years have proven prejudice to be alive and well in modern-day America. In one such example, Governor Nikki Haley of South Carolina dismissed one of her principal advisors in 2013 when his membership in the ultra-conservative Council of Conservative Citizens (CCC) came to light. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, in 2001 the CCC website included a message that read "God is the one who divided mankind into different races.... Mixing the races is rebelliousness against God." This episode reveals America's continuing struggle with race, racial integration, and race mixing-a problem that has plagued the United States since its earliest days as a nation. The Color Factor: The Economics of African-American Well-Being in the Nineteenth-Century South demonstrates that the emergent twenty-first-century recognition of race mixing and the relative advantages of light-skinned, mixed-race people represent a re-emergence of one salient feature of race in America that dates to its founding. Economist Howard Bodenhorn presents the first full-length study of the ways in which skin color intersected with policy, society, and economy in the nineteenth-century South. With empirical and statistical rigor, the investigation confirms that individuals of mixed race experienced advantages over African Americans in multiple dimensions - in occupations, family formation and family size, wealth, health, and access to freedom, among other criteria. The Color Factor concludes that we will not really understand race until we understand how American attitudes toward race were shaped by race mixing. The text is an ideal resource for students, social scientists, and historians, and anyone hoping to gain a deeper understanding of the historical roots of modern race dynamics in America.