Using ESSEX History is a three-year project to improve the quality of American History instruction in Essex County's middle schools and high schools through teacher seminars and summer institutes on the people, places and events of
Essex County, Massachusetts.

Rebecca Nurse Homestead

Field
Resources

Explore early settlement, maritime and industrial sites in Essex County.



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Jan Maetzliger

Lesson
Plans

Developed by teachers using primary and field resources available here and throughout Essex County.

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List of Import Tariffs from 19th Century

Primary
Resources

Documents, online here and available through our partners, for teaching any American History class.

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Seminars and Institutes

Upcoming Seminars

Westward Migration
The Culture of Jim Crow
October 29, 2008

The China Trade
November 19, 2008

Summer Institute 2008


Ordinary People, Extraordinary Times

July 14 - 18, 2008





July 14 - Life at the Center of the Storm: Massachusetts and the American Revolution
Dr. Dane Morrison from Salem State College will use Robert Gross' classic text, The Minutemen and Their World to talk about life in Massachusetts during the early Revolution. While John Adams was debating in the Continental Congress and Paul Revere was making his famous ride, what were average Massachusetts citizens doing? This seminar will make use of the wonderful resources at the Museum of our National Heritage in Lexington to examine this important topic.
Parking and Directions

July 15 - The Union in War
Boston University's Dr. Nina Silber will use her book Daughters of the Union: Northern Women Fight the Civil War to talk about the ways in which the war fundamentally changed how American women lived and related to one another and their government. This seminar will make use of the collections at the Marblehead Grand Army of the Republic Museum.
Parking and Directions

July 16 - "Go West, Young Man" (and Woman!)
Even before John L. O'Sullivan coined the term "manifest destiny," the west occupied a unique place in American culture. During this seminar, independent scholar Dr. Beth Ladow will examine the westward migration of millions of Americans in search of opportunity, escape, or freedom. During the afternoon, we will use the resources of the Peabody Essex Museum to examine the role of the west in American memory and culture.
Parking and Directions


July 17 - "Local People": Everyday Americans and The Civil Rights Movement
Using Charles Dittmer's Local People: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi, Dr. Jamie Wilson from Salem State College will examine how average Americans played a critical role in the Civil Rights movement. This seminar will take place at the National Archives and Records Administration - Northeast.
Parking and Directions

July 18 - "The fictional Classroom" - Using Literature to Teach History

English scholars Dr. Arthur Riss and Dr. John D. Scrimgeour from Salem State College will team up for this year's methodology session. During the morning, Dr. Riss will discuss techniques for using literature as a primary source while the afternoon's teacher talk will feature Dr. Scrimgeour and a discussion of creative writing assignments to do with your students. This seminar will make use of Salem's own literary and historical treasure, The House of the Seven Gables.
Parking and Directions


Using ESSEX History Themes

Using ESSEX History will address four core themes in American history. These four themes are listed below. Teachers will find materials that relate to specific topics linked to the appropriate heading. Any subjects that relate to more than one theme will be linked to all of the appropriate headings.