A Hotlist on SS: REPORTS
An Internet Hotlist on SS: REPORTS
created by Mrs. Chapman
Introduction
In addition to using books and magazines to find out about SS: REPORTS, why not also use the power of the Internet? The links below will get you started.
Paul Revere
- Paul Revere was born on January 1, 1735 in Boston, Massachusetts.
Paul Revere
- Paul Revere was born on January 1, 1735 in Boston, Massachusetts.
Paul Revere
- Paul Revere (January 1, 1735-May 10, 1818) was a silversmith who tried to warn American partiots that the British were coming as the American Revolution began.
Paul Revere
- Paul Revere played a very important roll during the American Revolution.
King George III
- George was not very intelligent and could not read until he was eleven.
King George III
- In actuality his name was George William Fredrick. He was the king of Great Britain and Ireland.
King George III
- George III suffered from the genetic disease porphyria which had also tormented Mary Queen of Scots, who passed it on to her son, King James I of England.
King George III
- King of Great Britain from 1760 to 1820, George III had one of the longest reigns in British history.
King George III
- In 1786 a deranged woman, Margaret Nicholson, tried to stab the king of Great Britain outside St. James's Palace.
Thomas Jefferson
- Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) was a founding father of the US, the author of the draft of the Declaration of Independence, and the third President of the United States of America.
Thomas Jefferson
- This great man was a long-term legislator, lawyer, diplomat, architect, inventor, scientist, agriculturist, writer, and revolutionary thinker.
George Washington
- George Washington was the first President of the United States of America.
George Washington
- Have you ever been disappointed or frustrated? Have you ever felt ambition, or grief? If you have, you have something in common with George Washington.
George Washington
- George Washington became known as 'The Father of His Country'. He is an important person in the history of the United States.
George Washington
- As a youth, he was trained as a surveyor and helped survey the Shenadoah valley in Virginia.
George Washington
- George Washington was a great war hero. He was born on February 22, 1732 on a large farm in Virginia.
Boston Massacre
- The Boston Massacre was the killing of five men by British soldiers on March 5, 1770.
Boston Massacre
- Apparently, a soldier fired a musket into the crowd, immediately followed by more shots. This action left several wounded and five dead including an African-American named Crispus Attucks.
Boston Massacre
- The 'Boston Massacre' occurred on March 5, 1770. A squad of British soldiers. come to support a sentry who was being pressed by a heckling, snowballing crowd, let loose a volley of shots.
Boston Massacre
- Over 200 years ago, our nation was born. Small militia bands rose up against the powerful British army and started to rebel.
Boston Massacre
- There are many different feeling and accounts of what people thought of the Boston Massacre. As in any trial, there were many arguments, and sides to be taken. On March 5, 1770, the start of the Boston Massacre occured.
Boston Massacre
- The Boston Massacre wasn't really a Massacre. A clash of several colonists with a squad of British Soldiers lead to killing.
Boston Massacre
- On the fifth day of March in 1770, a terrible thing happened, the Boston Massacre. But the Boston Massacre wasn't really a massacre, it was more like a riot.
The Boston Tea Party
- My true feeling is that The Boston Tea Party was more about tax than tea.
The Boston Tea Party
- The tea destroyed was contained in three ships, lying near each other at what was called at that time Griffin's wharf, and were surrounded by armed ships of war.
The Boston Tea Party
- On the night of December 16, 1773 the Sons of Liberty dumped 342 chests of tea into the Boston Harbor.
The Boston Tea Party
- The American Colonists held the Boston Tea Party because the British placed a tax on tea.
The Boston Tea Party
- In 1770 the first real battle between the colonists and the British took place. The British soldiers got angry at a crowd of colonists who were throwing snowballs at them. The soldiers fired.
Crispus Attucks
- Apparently, young Attucks developed a longing for freedom at an early age.
Crispus Attucks
- In what later would be called the Boston Massacre, Crispus Attucks became known for being the first to be killed in the American Revolution.
Crispus Attucks
- Little is known about the early years of Crispus Attucks. He was born a slave around 1723 probably in the colony of Massachusetts.
Crispus Attucks
- Crispus Attucks, one of the first men to die for American freedom, was a fugitive slave who had escaped from his master and had worked for twenty years as a merchant seaman.
Crispus Attucks
- Crispus Attucks was born in 1723. His birth date cannot be determined because he grew up as a slave.
Crispus Attucks
- Crispus Attucks was born in 1723. His father, Prince, lived in Africa but was shipped to New England to become a slave.
Crispus Attucks
- Who was Crispus Attucks? Was he a hero? Was he a patriot who died for freedom, or just someone who was in the wrong place at the wrong time?
Crispus Attucks
- Crispus Attucks was born in 1723 in Framingham, Massachusetts. He was a black slave who lived with his family in a small cottage.
Phillis Wheatley
- Phillis Wheatley was the first important black American poet.
Phillis Wheatley
- Phillis Wheatley America's First Black Woman Poet
Phillis Wheatley
- Phillis Wheatley was one of the most well- known poets in America during her day. Wheatley was born on the western coast of Africa and kidnapped from the Senegal-Gambia region when she was about seven years old.
Phillis Wheatley
- During her life, while it was not common for American women to be published, it was especially uncommon for children of slaves to be educated at all. Her gift of writing poetry was encouraged by her owners and their daughter, Mary.
Phillis Wheatley
- She was a patriot and admired George Washington. She wrote a poem about him.
Betsy Ross
- Betsy Ross sewed the first American flag. When we view the flag, we think of liberty, freedom, pride, and Betsy Ross.
Betsy Ross
- Betsy Ross was born in Philadelphia in 1752. She was a seamstress who shared an upholstery business with her husband, John. John was killed in 1776, in an explosion.
Betsy Ross
- George Washington was a frequent visitor to the home of Mrs. Ross before receiving command of the army. She embroidered his shirt ruffles and did many other things for him.
Betsy Ross
- Betsy was chosen by the 1776 Congressional Committee on flag design to make the first Stars and Stripes.
Revolutionary War Uniforms
- The Army of 1784 was not always able to furnish uniforms even for the small number of troops in the service.
Deborah Sampson
- Deborah Sampson (b. 17 Dec 1760 d. 29 Apr 1827) was a remarkable woman serving in the Continental Army in the Revolutionary war. She disguised herself as a man.
Deborah Sampson
- Revolutionary War Soldier Born in 1760 - Died in 1827
Deborah Sampson
- Deborah disguised herself and went to the local recruiting office, enlisting under the name of Timothy Thayer.
Deborah Sampson
- In the year 1760 a woman named Deborah Sampson was born in Plymouth, Massachusetts. When Deborah was a young girl her father drowned in a terrible storm.
Debora Sampson
- Deborah Sampson Gannett, early one morning in 1778, left the family with whom she was living, telling them she was going to find work; however, when she reached the edge of town, she exchanged her skirts for male clothing and enlisted in the nearest Army camp.
Debora Sampson
- Deborah Sampson was born in 1760. When she was a child, her father died at sea and her mother sent all of her family away.
Deborah Sampson
- Deborah Sampson was born in 1760 in Plymouth, Massachusetts. At age 19, after she was no longer an indentured servant, she became inspired by the Revolutionary War that had been going on for some time.
Deborah Sampson
- She was the oldest of three daughters and three sons. Deborah's father was Jonathan Sampson. He left his family to go out to sea and there he lost his life in a ship wreck.
Battle of Lexington and Concord
- When the British soldiers reached Lexington, Captain Jonas Parker and 75 armed Minutemen were there to meet them.
Battle of Lexington and Concord
- The column approaches Lexington as dawn rises to find the militia formed up on the town green.
Battle of Lexington and Concord
- British troops fire on colonists, who had gathered at Lexington to stop them from going on to Concord to destroy a colonial supply depot.
Battle of Lexington and Concord
- In the afternoon of the 18th (April, 1775) the patriots in Boston watched every movement of the troops with keen vision.
The Battle of Lexington and Concord
- When on the night of the 18th of April, 1775, Paul Revere rode beneath the bright moonlight through Lexington to Concord, with Dawes and Prescott for comrades, he was carrying the signal for the independence of a nation.
The Battle of Lexington and Concord
- This event took place in April 19, 1775, at Lexington and Concord, Massachusetts. Some angry Americans refused to pay taxes so the British went to war with them.
The Battle of Lexington and Concord
- Neither the British nor the colonists knew who fired first, but 8 colonists were killed and 10 were wounded.
The Battle of Bunker Hill
- Boom, Bang, Crack! The sounds of muskets being fired, its ammunition ricocheting off rocks and splintering trees are heard all around.
The Battle of Bunker Hill
- The Battle of Bunker Hill was actually fought on Breeds Hill. The reason why it was fought on Breeds Hill is because it was closer to where the British were coming.
The Battle of Bunker Hill
- In Massachusettts, the patriot army was growing. Thousands of rebels poured into England ready to drive the British out of the colonies, and more specifically, out of Boston.
The Battle of Bunker Hill
- British troops of the Boston garrison against troops of the American Continental Army.
The Battle of Bunker Hill
- On June 16, 1775, under cover of darkness, 1200 patriots threw up earthwork fortifications on Breed's Hill. It may have been that they really didn't know that they weren't on Bunker's Hill, or that Breed's Hill was more defensible, but they did fortify the wrong hill.
The Battle of Bunker Hill
- On June 17, 1775, in Massachusetts, the British soldiers drove the American colonists from Bunker Hill.
Battle of Bunker Hill
- On June 17, 1775 the Battle of Bunker Hill took place. It is one of the most important colonial victories in the U.S. War for Independence.
Battle of Bunker Hill
- Bunker Hill was a battle of the American Revolutionary War that took place on June 17, 1775 during the Siege of Boston. Although it is known as Bunker Hill, most of the action was on Breed's Hill.
Battle of Bunker Hill
- This battle was one of the earliest in the American Revolution.
Flags of the American Revolution
- George Washington's original pencil sketch for the flag indicated 6-pointed stars, a form he apparently preferred.
Flags of the American Revolution
- he following links show the flags made by students as a group project. The students researched each flag and provided reports.
Flags of the American Revolution
- Sons of Liberty flag 1775. The Sons of Liberty used this flag of thirteen horizontal stripes to represent the unity of the colonies.
Flags of the American Revolution
- The original nine stripes of this flag represented the nine colonies that convened the 'Stamp Act Congress' in 1765.
Flags of the American Revolution
- The early days of the American Revolution led to the use of many flags as the colonists struggled with the aims of the revolt, whether rights within the British Empire or outright independence.
Flags of the American Revolution
- This flag was present at the battle of Concord in April 19, 1775. It was carried by Nathaniel Page, a Bedford Minuteman.
Flags of the American Revolution
- The early days of the American Revolution led to the use of many flags as the colonists struggled with the aims of the revolt, whether rights within the British Empire or outright independence.
The Liberty Bell
- Frequently Asked Questions about the Liberty Bell
The Liberty Bell
- The Liberty Bell is a huge bronze bell that symbolizes freedom in the United States of America.
The Liberty Bell
- The Liberty Bell has been a symbol of patriotism for over 200 years.
Molly Pitcher
- Everyone has heard of Molly Pitcher, but did you know that her actions may have saved the Continental Army from losing the Battle of Monmouth?
Molly Pitcher
- Not many women are mentioned during the Revolutionary War. If they are, they are not always titled a 'heroine.'
Molly Pitcher
- An Artillery wife, Mary Hays McCauly (better known as Molly Pitcher) shared the rigors of Valley Forge with her husband, William Hays.
Molly Pitcher
- MOLLY PITCHER (Mary Ludwig Hays McCauley) Born October 13, 1754 -- Died January 22, 1832
Molly Pitcher
- Pitcher, Molly, 1744–1832, American Revolutionary heroine whose real name was Mary Ludwig Hays
Molly Pitcher
- History raves about the heroics of men in war... but few instances are mentioned in which female courage was displayed. Yet during every conflict, and the peaceful years between, they too were there.
Molly Pitcher
- Molly pitcher is another name for a woman named Mary Hayes McCauley.
Content by Mrs. Chapman, chapmac@morrow.k12.or.us
http://www.kn.sbc.com/wired/fil/pages/listssrepmr.html
Last revised Sun Dec 7 13:45:49 US/Pacific 2003