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Books in Picture the Past series

  • Children of the Orphan Trains

    Holly Littlefield

    Library Binding (Carolrhoda Books, Dec. 1, 2000)
    Recounts the experiences of abandoned, orphaned, or homeless children from city orphanages in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries who were sent out by the trainload to find families that would adopt them or take them as workers.
    V
  • Life in a Greek Trading Port

    Jane Shuter

    Paperback (Heinemann, June 16, 2005)
    Much of Greece is covered by mountains. This made it hard to travel around by land in ancient times. But Greece is also surrounded by sea on three sides, and has many islands around the mainland. So the sea was always important to the ancient Greeks. They traveled by sea as much as they could. This meant they needed harbors to land in. Some of these harbors grew into ports – places where ships came from all over ancient Greece. Ports were especially useful to traders, because they could meet there to trade.
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  • Life in New Amsterdam

    Laura Fischer

    Library Binding (Heinemann, Sept. 8, 2003)
    This book describes what life was like in the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam from 1624 to 1664. A colony is a small town created by a country in a new or different land. New Amsterdam was first settled along the Hudson River Valley of what is now New York S
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  • Life in a Colonial Town

    Sally Senzell Isaacs

    Paperback (Heinemann, Feb. 21, 2001)
    The Picture the Past series looks at the many kinds of communities in America's past. Each book describes what made each community different and what children and adults did each day. Life in a Colonial Town In this book, visit one of the first towns in America. See how craftspeople made clothes, tools, and wagon wheels. Visit a house to find out how families found and made their food. Then use a recipe to cook a real American treat–apple pancakes!
    Y
  • Life in New Amsterdam

    Laura Fischer

    Paperback (Heinemann, Sept. 8, 2003)
    This book describes what life was like in the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam from 1624 to 1664. A colony is a small town created by a country in a new or different land. New Amsterdam was first settled along the Hudson River Valley of what is now New York State. Soon after the colony was set up, it became centered on what is today the island of Manhattan in New York City. The colony was named after the city of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, from where many of the colonists had come. We have illustrated the book with paintings and drawings from colonial times and with artists’ ideas of how things looked then.
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  • Life in a California Mission

    Sally Senzell Isaacs

    Paperback (Heinemann, Sept. 24, 2001)
    The Picture the Past series looks at the many kinds of communities in America's past. Each book describes what made each community different and what children and adults did each day. Life in a California Mission In this book, learn why Spanish settlers built missions in California. Find out how the Spanish missions changed the way native Americans lived. Discover what life was like for people living and working there. Learn about mission churches, workshops, and farms, and the foods they grew. Then use a recipe to make a California mission treat–jiricalla!
    K
  • Life in a Colonial Town

    Sally Senzell Isaacs

    Library Binding (Heinemann, July 25, 2000)
    The Picture the Past series looks at the many kinds of communities in America's past. Each book describes what made each community different and what children and adults did each day. Life in a Colonial Town In this book, visit one of the first towns in America. See how craftspeople made clothes, tools, and wagon wheels. Visit a house to find out how families found and made their food. Then use a recipe to cook a real American treat–apple pancakes!
    Y
  • Life in New France

    Jennifer Blizin Gillis

    Library Binding (Heinemann, Sept. 8, 2003)
    This book tells about the daily life of people in New France from 1639 to 1760. New France was made up of three colonies in North America: Canada, Acadia, and Louisiana. The colonies were founded by the European country of France, starting in the early 166
    S
  • Life on a Pioneer Homestead

    Sally Senzell Isaacs

    Library Binding (Heinemann, July 25, 2000)
    The Picture the Past series looks at the many kinds of communities in America's past. Each book describes what made each community different and what children and adults did each day. Life on a Pioneer Homestead In this book, discover how pioneers made new lives in America's new lands in the West. See how they built their houses and made furniture, clothes, and soap. Visit a pioneer school, a general store, and a work party. Learn how the pioneers found and cooked their food. Then use a recipe to cook a pioneer treat–corn bread!
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  • Life in a Sioux Village

    Sally Senzell Isaacs

    Library Binding (Heinemann/Raintree, Oct. 1, 2001)
    Describes the daily life in a Sioux village, what they wore, what they ate, and how they moved to follow herds of buffalo,
    Q
  • Life on the Oregon Trail

    Sally Senzell Isaacs

    Paperback (Heinemann, Feb. 21, 2001)
    The Picture the Past series looks at the many kinds of communities in America's past. Each book describes what made each community different and what children and adults did each day. Life on the Oregon Trail In this book, discover what it was like to be a part of a wagon train on the Oregon Trail. Find out how children went to school on the trail. Visit a fort on the trail to learn how travelers traded with Native Americans. Discover how travelers found and prepared food. Then use a recipe to cook an Oregon Trail meal–bacon stew!
    O
  • Life at Ellis Island

    Sally Senzell Isaacs

    Paperback (Heinemann, Sept. 24, 2001)
    The Picture the Past series looks at the many kinds of communities in America's past. Each book describes what made each community different and what children and adults did each day. Life at Ellis Island In this book, discover why and how millions of people came to live in the United States. Learn how these people landed in New York, at Ellis Island, and were checked before entering the United States. Visit Ellis Island and see how immigrants lived there. Then use a recipe to make an immigrant treat–noodle kugel!
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