Amy Sangwin
Chester Public Schools
POB 550
School Drive and Main
Chester, MT 59522
"Continuous effort - not strength or intelligence - is the key to unlocking our potential."
Winston Churchill
Nancy Widdicombe created the unit.
Dottie
> Nancy Widdicombe created the unit.
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> Dottie
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Martha
Kohl
Historical Specialist
Montana Historical Society
PO
Box 201201
Helena MT 59601
406-444-4740
Hi Martha,
I’ve used Sinclair’s The Jungle, Willa Cather’s O Pioneers! and when we did our project on the Fires of 2000—we used Jeannette Inglold’s historical fiction The Big Burn. It gave us a good perspective of what communication, transportation, and the forest service was like at the turn of the century.
Darlene
Darlene Beck
English Dept.
Broadwater High School
201 N. Spruce Street
Townsend, MT 59644
<BR
I would second Darlene’s suggestion of Willa Cather’s O Pioneers.
Also: Wind From an Enemy Sky by D’Arcy McNickle, for a strong Native American view. The setting is fictional and the time isn’t that specific, but it’s the early reservation period, so it sets up the issues on the Reservations that were “opened” to homesteading in 1910. It’s about the best book I know of for giving the Native American world view – in some ways similar to Fools Crow but also very different. Also, McNickle’s short stories from The Hawk is Hungry are very good and I’ve used several of them to good effect.
Homesteading by Percy Wallaston is a brief memoir that also works well to get kids oriented to the times and issues.
A book that I keep on my desk but haven’t assigned to kids is My Russian by Dee McNamer. Also, Doig’s latest is set in Montana in 1910: Prairie Nocture. I haven’t read it yet but Marcella spoke well of it. My favorite for getting a lively sense of the times is Big Trouble, set in Idaho. It’s written by two-time Pulitzer winner Anthony Lukas.
From: montana...@googlegroups.com [mailto:montana...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Kohl, Martha
Sent: Friday, March 28, 2008 10:04
AM
To: 'montana...@googlegroups.com'
Subject: 1910 literature tie in
Hi, All,
I would second Darlene's suggestion of Willa Cather's O Pioneers.
Also: Wind >From an Enemy Sky by D'Arcy McNickle, for a strong Native American view. The setting is fictional and the time isn't that specific, but it's the early reservation period, so it sets up the issues on the Reservations that were "opened" to homesteading in 1910. It's about the best book I know of for giving the Native American world view - in some ways similar to Fools Crow but also very different. Also, McNickle's short stories from The Hawk is Hungry are very good and I've used several of them to good effect.
>--
Dale and Tomi Alger
Roundup MT 59072
da...@midrivers.com
"A good listener is not only popular everywhere, but after a while he gets to know something."
-Wilson Mizner
Michael L. Umphrey
120 Arrow Street
P.O. Box 546
Saint Ignatius, MT 59865
(406) 370-4369 (cell)
(406) 883-6351 (School District 23)
(406) 745-3305 (Home)
(406) 745-2757 (fax)
The Power of Community-Centered Education
http://www.montanaheritageproject.org/index.php/MichaelUmphrey