When Harriet Met Sojourner - Teaching American History
Transcription
When Harriet Met Sojourner - Teaching American History
Sojourner Truth Harriet Tubman When Harriet Met Sojourner By Catherine Clinton ISBN 978-0-06-050425-0 Teacher: Joyce Hoehn-Parish Unit Topic: Civil War Grade: 4 History Essential Question: What are some of the conflicts that developed between the northern and southern states in the years following the American Revolution and led to the Civil War? Standards of Learning: History SOL: The student will: VS.7 Demonstrate knowledge of the issues that divided our nation and led to the Civil War by: a) Identifying the events and differences between northern and southern states that divided Virginians and led to secession, war, and the creation of West Virginia. English SOL: The student will: 4.1 Use effective oral communication skills in a variety of settings. b) The student will contribute to a group discussion. 4.5 Read and demonstrate comprehension of nonfiction. b) Formulate questions that might be answered in the selection. d) Make simple inferences, using information from the text. e) Draw conclusions, using information from the text. i) Identify new information gained from reading. Lesson Objectives Content: The student will: 1. Describe key events that divided Virginians and led to secession from the Union and eventually, the Civil War. 2. Explain key concepts, individuals, and events: abolitionists, Harriet Tubman, the Underground Railroad, John Brown, and Harper’s Ferry, Virginia. Process: The student will: 1. Examine text and archival documents that provide details of events leading up to secession and the Civil War. 2. Use a K-W-L chart to access students’ prior knowledge of people and events regarding secession and the Civil War. 3. Create a Venn diagram to draw conclusions about the commonalities between Harriet Tubman, John Brown, and Nat Turner. 4. Write an acrostic poem to summarize Harriet Tubman’s activities that contributed to the Civil War. 5. Summarize the impact that Harriet Tubman, John Brown, and other abolitionists had on secession and the commencement of the Civil War. Materials: Trade book: Clinton, Catherine, When Harriet Met Sojourner, New York, HarperCollins Children’s Books, 2007, ISBN 978-0-06-050425-0. Ibooks with Internet access or Computer Lab. Access to United Streaming Video Clips (download these): o The Underground Railroad: Escape from Slavery. The Abolitionists (3:19) o The American Civil War, Causes of the War. Abolitionists (1:06), The Underground Railroad (5:45) o Discovering Language Arts: Reading. The Underground Railroad (1:27) o Animated Hero Classics: Harriet Tubman (27:44) LCD cart or Aver Key access Copies for every 2-3 students: Handout #1 – K-W-L Chart Handout #2 – Illustrations of the American Anti-Slavery Almanac for 1840 Handout #3 – Reward Poster for Runaway Slaves from 1847 Handout #4 – Poster of Anthony Burns – depicting his escape and recapture Handout #5 – Poster Announcing Anti-Slavery Fair Handout #6 – Photograph of Harriet Tubman Handout #7 – Photograph of Winder Station – a station on the Underground Railroad Handout #8 - John Brown in 1859 Handout #9 - Picture of Harper’s Ferry wood engraving Handout #10 – “The Last Moments of John Brown” etching Handout #11 - Letter from Susan B. Anthony to a friend, heralding Harriet Tubman Handout #12 – HARRIET TUBMAN Acrostic Poem Template - transparency One copy per student: Handout #13 – Pre-Civil War People and Events Chart Handout #14 – People against Slavery Venn Diagram Assessment/Evaluation: The student will: 1. Be observed during discussions of text and supplemental information. 2. Be observed during the composition of the ABOLISH acrostic poem. 3. Be evaluated on the responses provided on the “Pre-Civil War People and Events Chart” and K-W-L chart. 4. Be evaluated on the accurate responses provided on the Venn Diagram. Lesson Procedure Background Knowledge/Purpose Setting: The teacher will: 1. Review the events leading up to Nat Turner’s Revolt and the reactions of the Virginia General Assembly. Ask students to recall that Nat Turner was a save in Virginia in the early 1800’s and that in 1831 he revolted against his master. Recall the Virginia General Assembly lawmakers conducted a meeting where Turner’s actions were discussed. This resulted in a division regarding slavery. Wealthy Virginian plantation owners in favor of slavery instituted Slave Codes. These prohibited slaves from being taught to read or write, and restricted communication and congregation among the slaves. This legislative split created tension between eastern and western Virginians. 2. Evaluate the students’ existing knowledge of Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad. Each student is to receive a K-W-L chart (Handout #1). Students should list any knowledge they have of Tubman and the Underground Railroad. Students should generate one question each about Tubman and the Underground Railroad, which will be answered by the end of the lesson. 3. Introduce the terms abolish and abolitionist. Ask students how these words might relate to Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad. Show students either one (or both) of the video clips entitled, Abolitionists. 4. Explain the pre-reading activity. The teacher will show pictures, asking students to describe them. Have students draw conclusions about the feelings and attitudes of the characters. Students should predict what they think might happen in the story. Before Reading: The teacher will: 1. Explain that this book is to provide information about Harriet Tubman’s life. The book explains her motivations to not only personally escape slavery, but to also assist other enslaved people in gaining freedom. (Note: While Sojourner Truth is not addressed in the fourth grade Virginia SOL, her contributions to the Anti-Slavery movement can be used to understand what escaped slaves and abolitionists were doing to fight slavery.) 2. Explain that as the story is read, several primary sources will be explored to understand the sentiments of pre-Civil War America. During Reading: The teacher will: 1. Read the title. Ask students if they know who “Sojourner” is. Allow students to share their thoughts. Explain more about Sojourner as the story is read. 2. Read the first page. Have students draw conclusions from what the author has written. 3. Discuss why she is called Sojourner Truth when her parents named her Isabella Bomefree. Inquire about the illustrations. (Who are the people? What are they doing? What do their facial expressions tell you? Why do you think the illustrator showed so few faces? Why does the young girl stand out?) Remind students that slavery existed at this time in America, not just in the South. 4. Discuss why Harriet Tubman is called by two different names. Ask students to compare Araminta and Sojourner. (Were they born near the same time or place? How were they 5. 6. 7. 8. alike?) Have students look at the illustrations. Note the differences in how the girls’ youths are different. (Which girl looks happier? In what ways do their lives appear to be different or similar?) Pass out Handout #2. Have students look at the scenes. Continue to the next page and read more about Isabella’s childhood. Encourage students to consider why Isabella was sent from farm to farm. Encourage students to share their ideas about why Isabella was beaten. Have students explain what it means to “vow.” Ask students why Sojourner would make the vow she did? Ask students to look at the illustrations and describe them and have them predict what Sojourner will do when she grows up. Encourage students to share their thoughts on the picture. Read the following page about Araminta. Retell what happened to her as a child. Ask them why she was not taken to a hospital. Explain that Araminta’s injury affected her. (Tubman would often fall asleep suddenly and unexpectedly throughout the rest of her life. She suffered from severe bouts of fatigue. Today, doctors would probably call this condition epilepsy. Tubman had visions that guided her to do things in her life.) Allow students to compare the injuries in Sojourner’s and Harriet’s lives and to consider the impact the injuries had on the women’s futures. Read the following page about Isabella. Discuss her strong desire to gain freedom. New York passed a law outlawing slavery in 1827. Ask why northern states wanted to end slavery. Also explain that northern states were industrialized. (Why didn’t northern states need slaves? Were workers in northern state industries paid? How is that different than slavery? Were paid workers more productive than people who were forced to work for a master with no pay?) Ask students what effect ending slavery had on other states. Students should consider if Sojourner will really be freed. Read the next page about Araminta. Explain “auction block.” Ask why Araminta wants to run off to the North. (Why does she have to make a plan to run off? What will happen to a slave who leaves? Why would she risk running off and being caught?) Show students Handout #3. Have students read over the poster and share what they have read. (What does it say? Who made it? How will it help Mr. Allen? Why would anyone want to return the slaves to Mr. Allen? Is this a primary source?) Note the poster date. Point out the date the slaves ran away. Ask about the time between when the slaves ran away and when the poster was made. (How long did it take to report the missing slaves? Why would the owner be in such a hurry to print the poster? Where would the reward poster be posted? Why would masters use a newspaper? Were newspapers widely read? How often are newspapers printed today compared to how often they were published in the 1800s? When would be a good time for slaves to runaway if there newspapers were not published on weekends?) Provide small groups with Handout #4. Lead a discussion about the poster. [A Stafford County elementary school is named after Anthony Burns. Burns was born in Stafford County in 1834.] (According to the poster, what did he do? What happened to him?) Explain that Anthony Burns’ arrest caused a huge uprising in Boston, where he was imprisoned. (Thousands of abolitionists protested outside the prison. They wanted Burns to be free since he was in the free North. Burns was returned to his owner. Abolitionists tried to buy him from his owner, but he later sold him to another slaver. This second owner sold him to abolitionists and Burns was eventually freed and moved to Boston.) Ask students why this poster would be a primary resource. 9. Read the next page about Isabella. Discuss what Isabella’s master did. Point out that she has now changed her name to Sojourner. Ask students why she did this. Reread the last sentence and discuss Sojourner’s commitment to help “others find freedom.” 10. Read the next page about Araminta. Ask students to compare what Araminta did that was like what Sojourner did. Have students compare the fact that both women escaped to freedom, both changed their names, and both women were committed to helping others find freedom. Ask students what time of day Harriet chose to run away. (Why would she leave at night? How did she know where she was going?) Tell students that other explorers such as Columbus used stars as their guide. Explain that stars are similar to a map because people use the location of constellations as a directional guide for traveling. Mention the song “Follow the Drinking Gourd. “ Describe how the drinking gourd refers to a hollowed out gourd that enslaved people used as a water dipper. Ask students what “Follow the Drinking Gourd” means. 11. Read the following page about Sojourner. Point out that she spoke to people about emancipating slaves (and women). Show Handout #5. Have students look over the poster. How is the poster related to what Sojourner was doing? (What was the AntiSlavery Fair? What would you call the people who were putting on the fair? Why did people have to pay? Why did the fair also mention a “Social Dancing Party?” Why did they charge money for the dance?) Explain why this is a primary document. 12. Read the next page about Harriet Tubman. Show Handout #6. Ask students to recall the Underground Railroad. (What was it? Why was it used? Who helped the escaping slaves? Why was it dangerous? What did Harriet do to help people on the Underground Railroad? Why was Harriet the “most famous Underground Railroad conductor”?) Distribute copies of Handout #7. Allow students to examine the photograph and share their observations of Winder Station. 13. Show the United Streaming clips entitled “The American Civil War, Causes of the War – The Underground Railroad” and “Discovering Language Arts: Reading – The Underground Railroad.” Discuss with students. (How do you think southern slave owners felt about the Underground Railroad? How did they feel about people in the north who helped slaves escape? What effect did the Underground Railroad and Harriet Tubman have on North-South relations? What happened as people in the North and South started feeling more tension toward one another?) 14. Have students access the website, www.nationalgeographic.com/railroad/. Show students how to begin the interactive Underground Railroad activity. Students will be guided through a simulation, offering choices for escaping slaves. This activity could also be completed as a group, using an LCD cart. 15. Explain that Harriet Tubman was helped slaves gain their freedom, and she met many other people who were trying to do the same thing. Indicate that some people she met were people who helped free slaves by donating money. Other abolitionists helped hide slaves as they traveled on the Underground Railroad. Tell students that some abolitionists were ready to fight for emancipation. Harriet Tubman met with abolitionist John Brown on several occasions. Distribute Handout #8. Explain that Brown contributed a great deal to the Anti-Slavery Movement and that he wanted Tubman to assist him with the upcoming raid. Detail John Brown’s attack on the U.S. Armory at Harper’s Ferry. (Brown wanted to capture the Armory and use the weapons for covert battles in the fight for slave emancipation. His plan was to carry out secret attacks on southern slave owners. Brown rented a farmhouse in Maryland and he spent weeks collecting supplies for the surprise revolt. Brown and his small army attacked the Armory on October 16, 1859. Within three days, Marines led by Robert E. Lee and J.E.B. Stuart, overpowered Brown and his militia. Brown found guilty of treason, conspiring with slaves, and murder. He was hanged on December 2, 1859.) Share Handouts #9 and #10. Explain the etching, “The Last Moments of John Brown,” was made several years AFTER Brown was hanged. Ask students to examine it and conclude what the artist wants people to remember about John Brown. Have students share their thoughts about the effect John Brown’s raid had on the already-fragile relations between the North and South. (How would this event make people in the South feel about abolitionists? How would slave owners feel about people trying to give weapons to escaped slaves and encouraging the slaves to revolt? How would people in the North feel about what happened at Harper’s Ferry or about what happened to John Brown?) Ask students what the photo of Brown, wood carving of the engine house, and etching of Brown are examples of. (Primary sources). 16. Read the remainder of the book. Mention that Harriet Tubman was a spy for the North. Add that she was quite familiar with the terrain of the land in the South, having been on many Underground Railroad missions. She also served as a nurse to injured Civil War soldiers. 17. Distribute Handout #11. Ask students to read as much of the letter as possible. Talk about Susan B. Anthony. Provide a short biography if needed. Point out that Susan B. Anthony had great admiration for Tubman. Reinforce the idea that Harriet Tubman’s work had two important effects: (1) fueled the fire of division of the Northern and Southern states and (2) helped to emancipate many enslaved people. After Reading: The teacher will: 1. Show the United Streaming clip, “American Hero Classics: Harriet Tubman.” 2. Scribe for students as they offer input in writing an acrostic poem using Handout #12. 3. Redistribute the K-W-L chart and have students add information regarding what they have learned about Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad. Closure: The student will: 1. Work individually to complete Handout #13. 2. Create diagrams or pictures to accompany the acrostic poem written as a class. These will be used to create a collage with the poem. It will be displayed outside the classroom for other students. 3. Work in small groups to compare and contrast Nat Turner, Harriet Tubman, and John Brown using Handout #14. 4. Write a letter to Harriet Tubman, expressing their sentiments about her contributions to the emancipation of enslaved African American people. Extension/Differentiation: The student could: 1. Research Nat Turner or John Brown and locate information about their lives and contributes to the freeing of enslaved people. 2. Write and act out a skit about Harriet Tubman, focusing on key events in her life. 3. Create a comic book-style story of Harriet Tubman’s life. 4. Research known Underground Railroad routes and map them. 5. Be given word/phrase boxes to use in the completion of Handouts #13 and #14. Students could match information rather than recall challenging concepts from memory. 6. Provide a verbal account of abolitionists, Harriet Tubman, the Underground Railroad, John Brown, and Harper’s Ferry; to be scribed by a teacher. Prompting questions could also be used. K-W-L: Harriet Tubman/Underground Railroad Name ________________________________________________ K- What I already know: Handout #1 W – What I want to know: L – What I learned: Illustrations of the American Anti-Slavery Almanac for 1840 Handout #2 Library of Congress Portfolio 248, Folder 1 A reward poster for runaway slaves from 1847 Library of Congress Rare Book and Special Collections Division, African American Odyssey Printed Ephemera Collection; Portfolio 86, Folder 2 Handout #3 Poster showing the escape and recapture of slave, Anthony Burns, 1855 Library of Congress Reproduction Number: LC-USZ62-90750 DLC Handout #4 Anti-Slavery Fair Poster Library of Congress Portfolio 62, Folder 35 Handout #5 Harriet Tubman, full-length portrait Library of Congress Reproduction Number: LC-USZ62-7816 Handout #6 Winder Station Photograph of one of the houses used as a stop on the Underground Railroad by the Winder brothers of North Lewisburg, Champaign County, Ohio Ohio Historical Center Archives Library Call Number: SC1338 Handout #7 John Brown, 1859 Library of Congress Reproduction Number: LC-USZ62-2472 Handout #8 The Harper's Ferry insurrection--The U.S. Marines storming the engine house--Insurgents firing through holes in the doors Wood engraving Library of Congress Reproduction Number: LC-USZ62-126970 Handout #9 The Last Moments of John Brown, etching Library of Congress Reproduction Number: LC-DIG-01629 Handout #10 In a handwritten note, Susan B. Anthony, who was an abolitionist as well as a suffragist, referred to Tubman as a “most wonderful woman” Library of Congress Digital ID: rbcmis ody0321 Handout #11 H _____________________ A _____________________ R _____________________ R _____________________ I ______________________ E _____________________ T _____________________ T _____________________ U _____________________ B _____________________ M _____________________ A _____________________ N _____________________ Handout # 12 Name Nat Turner Who or what was this? Slave What did this person do or what happened here? How did this cause the Civil War? Led a slave revolt against plantation owners in Virginia Virginia General Assembly met to discuss this revolt. Some wanted to end slavery. Others did not. The split was one of the things that led to Virginia’s secession & the Civil War. Harriet Tubman helped many slaves escape to freedom. This angered southern plantation owners. It made them want to break away from the free North. Harriet Tubman John Brown Abolitionist The money, rallies, and assistance with freeing slaves that this group provided made southern plantation owners very angry with this group of northern people. Abolitionist Underground Railroad Harper’s Ferry Handout #13 Slaves escaped to freedom The Armory at Harper’s Ferry, VA, was attacked by John Brown The armory arsenal was attacked. Brown hoped to use the weapons for revolts against southern slave owners. Name _________________________________ Handout #14 Name _____________________________ People against Slavery Venn Diagram