Instructional Plans for High School CLASSROOMS
“New Jersey at Gettysburg,” by Josh Biringer (Shrewsbury, N.J.)
“Gettysburg Monuments,” by Matthew Bower (Millsboro, Del.)
“Battle Reunions and the Gettysburg Address,” by Monica Coccia (Queensbury, N.Y.)
“Gettysburg Through Your Eyes,” by Carleena Day (Sulphur, Okla.)
“Letters from the Battlefield,” by Manny Duran (Tampa, Fla.)
“Civil War Essays,” by Tom Emmel (Jefferson City, Mo.)
“Pursuit of Consensus in Creating Monuments at Gettysburg National Military Park,” by Ted Frisbie (Carbondale, Colo.)
“Approaching Conflict Through Performance,” by Merry Gordon (Litchfield Park, Ariz.)
“Analyzing How Sacrifice at Gettysburg is Memorialized,” by Shane Gower (China, Me.)
“Battle of Gettysburg Timeline,” by Jared Huhta (Carmel, Ind.)
“History & Memory,” by Sarah Jones (Salt Lake City, Utah)
“The Flight for Survival by African-Americans: Gettysburg,” by Carol Krauss (Portsmouth, Va.)
“The Role of Gettysburg in the Civil War,” by Michele Mar (Pembroke Pines, Fla.)
“Remembering Gettysburg,” by Lindsay Martin (Raleigh, N.C.)
“Civil War Letters,” by Colleen Medlock (Portland, Ore.)
“Voices from Gettysburg,” by Megan O’Brien (Deerfield, Mass.)
“Imagining Pickett’s Charge,” by Frank O’Grady (Olmsted Township, Oh.)
“Analyzing the Gettysburg Address,” by Stuart Palczak (Amsterdam, N.Y.)
“Final Reunion of the Blue & Grey at Gettysburg, 1938,” by Christopher Powers (Dyer, Ind.)
“Why Do 102 of Vermont’s 251 Towns Have Civil War Monuments?,” by Brian Rainville (Randolph, Vt.)
“Rhetoric and Media Reaction: The Gettysburg Address,” by Angela Reklau (Lomira, Wis.)
“History & Memory and The American Presidency & Gettysburg,” by Alison Rund (Chandler, Ariz.)
“Dramatizing Gettysburg,” by John Kelly Shelburne (Brookhaven, Miss.)
“A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words—But Whose Words?,” by Elizabeth Sorelle (San Angelo, Tex.)
“Podunskburg or Gettysburg?,” by Ryan Ussery (Phoenix, Ariz.)
“Monumental Memory: Remembering the Confederacy at Gettysburg,” by Kevin Wagner (Carlisle, Pa.)
“Journaling During the Civil War,” by Sarah Willis (Seattle, Wash.)