Printable Sample From State HIstory From A Christian Perspective
Printable Sample From State HIstory From A Christian Perspective
Printable Sample From State HIstory From A Christian Perspective
We chose to share some of the pages from our Texas State History
Student Booklet. We offer all 50 states, so you can choose to study your
own state or any other state in which you are interested.
The student booklet for your chosen state is a book of handouts and as
such is not a complete course by itself. It is intended to be used with the
Master Lesson Plan Book, which tells how and when to use the handouts
and what to do in each lesson as well as how to adjust the length and
difficulty level of the course for your individual needs. In the actual
course, your student will make a project notebook about his state using
pages like this from the student booklet along with pictures and
information from free tourist literature.
We hope you will enjoy these sample pages from our Texas State
History Student Booklet. You can find more information and
purchase the course at
www.statehistory.net
Please note that we also offer a color-cut-paste state history study, My
State History Funbook, for age 4 – grade 2. The two levels are
correlated so you can teach all your students together. In addition, we
offer a history-based study of all 50 states in order of statehood on two
levels (Fifty States Under God, for grades 3-12, and Fifty States Under
God for Young Learners, for age 4 – grade 2) and a geography-based
study of all 50 states in order of statehood (Geography of the Fifty
States, for grades 3-12).
Lesson 1 – Interesting Facts (Be able to list any two of these facts on a quiz or test.)
In 1855, 33 camels were shipped to Camp Verde, Texas, from Egypt. Congress thought
camels would make good transport animals on the western frontier! But camels were
slow, smelly, and mean. When a camel got angry, he could spit at people as far away
as 10 feet! American pioneers decided they would rather raise horses!
The first non-stop flight around the world started in Fort Worth, Texas, on February 26, 1949. The plane
was a B-50 named Lucky Lady II. The flight took 94 hours and 1 minute, and the plane was refueled in the air 4
times by B-29 tanker planes!
It is believed that the ancestors of the Texas longhorn were first brought from Spain by Christopher
Columbus in 1493. He brought them from the West Indies to Mexico and then into Texas. In 1689, a
Spanish captain named Alonso de Leon traveled through Texas. He left a cow and a calf at each river
crossing along his journey. Spanish missionaries also brought cattle. When the missions were closed, the
cattle were turned out to roam free. When American settlers brought cattle from the East into Texas, their
cattle mingled with the Spanish cattle. The new breed was called "longhorn cattle." Cattle ranches and cattle
drives along the famous Chisholm Trail played an important part in the growth of Texas. The cattle drives
stopped with the coming of the railroad.
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Texas is bordered by four states: New Mexico, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana.
Texas shares its southern border with one foreign country, Mexico. To help you remember
the names of these neighbors, say, “My NaMe On A Label.” Beginning with Mexico and
going clockwise, the capital letters in the sentence are the beginning letters of the states in
order (the "N" and "M" in NaMe stand for New Mexico). Find and label these neighbors on
the Lesson 2 boxed map.
Sometimes a geographical feature such as a river or lake helps to form the boundary line.
Texas has three rivers and a gulf that help to form its boundary.
• The southeastern side of Texas borders on the Gulf of Mexico. In the area outside
the southeastern border, write “Gulf of Mexico.” Color this section blue.
• The border between Texas and Mexico is formed by the Rio Grande ("Big River").
Label the Rio Grande and trace it with blue. Color Mexico brown.
• The northeastern boundary is drawn by the Red River. Label the Red River and
trace it with blue.
• The Sabine River forms part of the eastern boundary. Label the Sabine River and
trace it with blue.
Find the approximate location of your home city on the map. Make a dot representing your
city and label it.
Chorus:
God bless you, Texas, and keep you brave and strong
That you may grow in power and worth thro’out the ages long.
Pioneer life in Texas began at the invitation of the Mexican government! Comanche raiding
parties had become such a problem that Mexicans and Mexican-Indians refused to settle in
the area. Mexico could not afford to send large armies to defend settlers. So in the
beginning Mexico offered to let settlers from America buy land for only $1.25 per acre as
long as they agreed to be loyal to Mexico, obey the Mexican laws, and accept the Roman
Catholic faith. None of these conditions were enforced at first. For about ten years after
Stephen Austin and his three hundred settlers arrived, American settlers paid no taxes and
performed no public duties for Mexico. Because of this freedom, settlers enjoyed self-
government and developed their own American frontier culture without interference from
Mexico. The Comanche Indians seemed to have great respect for the tall Americans who
kept their word and showed remarkable accuracy with their guns, so they entered into a
peace treaty with the American settlers.
Pioneer life was very hard. Farmers who came from the East often came during the winter
after the crops on their old farms had been harvested. They were met with very cold, very
windy weather and a land that had little water for growing crops. Often there was deep
snow. Sometimes pioneer families had to live in “dugouts,” holes carved into the sides of
hills, until they could build a suitable dwelling. Texas pioneers were blessed by an
abundance of cattle, which provided meat, milk, cheese, and butter. Cultivated crops
included cotton, hay, wheat, squash, and beans.
Pioneer children often worked right alongside their parents and learned from them all the
skills of frontier life. Once a boy became ten years old, he worked in the fields with his
father and helped with the hunting and fishing. Girls helped their mothers with cooking and
baking, preserving food for winter, and sewing and mending. Since there were very few
schools on the frontier, most pioneer children also learned to read and write from their
parents at home. Pioneer children had many exciting adventures, including social
gatherings with their neighbors, trips into town to buy supplies, and visits to and from
relatives who lived in the East. Texas families often participated in cattle drives and raised
horses that were needed for ranch life.
Many of the early pioneer schools were started by missionaries or by Christian settlers, and
early schools were often conducted in the community church building. It should be noted
that most of the early universities in our country were established by Christians for the
promotion of the Gospel. Wherever the Gospel has gone, it has raised the education and
cultural level of society.
Texas has more than one thousand different types of soil! Because of this,
farmers in Texas can grow many different types of crops. Farms and ranches
cover about three-fourths of Texas, and Texas has more farms than any other
state. Texas produces more cattle, sheep, and wool cotton than any other
state and is also first in the U.S. for shrimp, second in snapper, and third in
oysters. For many years, the economy of Texas was dependent on
petroleum and natural gas. Today the state economy has more diversity and
more stabilty. Texas ranks first in the U.S. in mining and second in
manufacturing. Manufactured products include aircraft, chemicals,
electronics, processed food, and machinery. Service industries such as trade
and finance have also become important in Texas.
Fill in the lines below using Appendices 7 and 8. Be able to identify the three “chiefs” from
the list below. If the answer includes more than one item, you need only give one on
quiz/test questions.
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STATE PRIMARY NATURAL RESOURCES MAIN INDUSTRY MAIN SERVICE CHIEF AGRICULTURAL CHIEF FISHING CHIEF MANUFACTURED CHIEF MINERAL PRIMARY SOURCE
INDUSTRY PRODUCT PRODUCT PRODUCT PRODUCT OF ELECTRICITY
AL forests, soil, minerals, rivers service industries personal services broilers shrimp transportation equipment natural gas coal
AK soil, minerals, water, fish, forests service industries government greenhouse/nursery products salmon food products petroleum natural gas
AZ climate, minerals service industries finance cattle, calves transportation equipment copper coal
AR soil, minerals, forests, water service industries finance, personal svcs broilers food, beverages natural gas coal
CA minerals, timber, soil, climate service industries finance, personal svcs dairy products squid computer, electronic products petroleum natural gas
CO minerals, soil, water service industries personal services cattle, calves food, beverages natural gas coal
CT (limited forests, soil, minerals) service industries finance greenhouse/nursery products clams transportation equipment sand, gravel nuclear
DE soil, minerals service industries finance broilers crabs chemicals sand, gravel coal
FL beaches, climate, forests, minerals service industries finance greenhouse/nursery products shrimp computer, electronic products phosphate rock natural gas
GA minerals, forests, water service industries personal services broilers shrimp food, beverages kaolin coal
HI climate, topsoil, water service industries finance bananas dolphinfish chemicals gemstones petroleum
ID soil, minerals, water, forests service industries personal services dairy products computer, electronic products molybdenum hydroelectric
IL soil, minerals service industries finance corn chemicals coal nuclear
IN soil, minerals, water service industries personal services corn chemicals coal coal
IA soil, water service industries finance corn food, beverages limestone coal
KS soil, minerals service industries personal services cattle, calves transportation equipment petroleum coal
KY soil, coal service industries personal services horses, mules transportation equipment coal coal
LA soil, minerals, forests service industries personal services poultry, eggs shrimp chemicals natural gas natural gas
ME forests, soil, minerals service industries finance potatoes lobster paper products sand, gravel natural gas
MD soil, building materials service industries personal services broilers bass computer, electronic products coal coal
MA soil, sand, gravel service industries personal services greenhouse/nursery products scallops computer, electronic products crushed stone natural gas
MI soil, minerals, forests, water, plants/animals service industries personal services dairy products whitefish transportation equipment natural gas coal
MN soil, minerals, forests service industries finance corn herring food, beverages iron ore coal
MS soil, water, minerals, forests service industries government broilers menhaden transportation equipment petroleum natural gas
MO soil, minerals service industries personal services soybeans food, beverages lead coal
MT minerals, soil service industries personal services wheat concrete petroleum coal
NE soil, water service industries finance cattle, calves food products petroleum coal
NV minerals, wildlife, scenery service industries finance cattle, calves computer, electronic products gold natural gas
NH climate, soil, minerals service industries finance, personal svcs greenhouse/nursery products cod computer, electronic products coal nuclear
NJ soil, small mineral deposits service industries finance greenhouse/nursery products scallops chemicals sand, gravel nuclear
NM minerals, soil, forests, plants, animals service industries personal services cattle, calves computer, electronic products natural gas coal
NY soil, minerals, water service industries finance dairy products clams chemicals natural gas natural gas
NC soil, minerals, forests service industries finance broilers crabs chemicals granite coal
ND soil, minerals service industries finance wheat machinery petroleum coal
OH soil, minerals service industries finance soybeans perch transportation equipment coal coal
OK minerals, soil service industries personal svcs, govt cattle, calves machinery natural gas coal
OR forests, minerals, water, soil service industries finance greenhouse/nursery products crabs computer, electronic products crushed stone hydroelectric
PA soil, minerals, water, timber service industries personal services dairy products perch chemicals coal coal
RI limited minerals and soil service industries finance greenhouse/nursery products lobster fabricated metal products sand, gravel natural gas
SC soil, minerals, forests, water service industries personal services broilers shrimp transportation equipment portland cement nuclear
SD soil, minerals, forests service industries finance corn machinery crushed stone coal
TN soil, climate, water, minerals service industries personal services soybeans food, beverages limestone coal
TX minerals, soil, grasslands service industries personal services cattle, calves shrimp chemicals natural gas natural gas
UT minerals, soil service industries finance cattle, calves computer, electronic products copper coal
VT minerals, forests, soil service industries personal services dairy products computer, electronic products crushed stone nuclear
VA soil, minerals service industries personal svcs broilers scallops beverage & tobacco products coal coal
WA water, timber, soil service industries finance apples clams transportation equipment sand, gravel hydroelectric
WV minerals, timber, scenery, rainfall service industries government broilers chemicals coal coal
WI soil, water, minerals, forests service industries finance dairy products whitefish food, beverages sand, gravel coal
WY minerals, grassland, scenery, wildlife, water service industries government cattle, calves chemicals natural gas coal
New One- or Two-Year Plan for Homeschoolers!
Study your way through all fifty states in order of statehood,
inserting a more detailed study of your own state when you come to it in chronological order!
♦ Teach all your students together, age 3 through grade 12
♦ We provide a schedule (see below)
Grades 3-12: Your study begins with our two fifty-states books, which you use simultaneously.
Both books are completely self-contained—no additional books, resources, or teacher materials needed
Fifty States Under God Geography of the Fifty States
teaches your student what our country teaches the geographical regions and
was like during its growing period! major geographical features of the U.S.
Includes a timeline and a progressive map study Compares the growth pattern by state
so your student can watch the map change! with the geographical regions, showing how
Provides four pages for each state: geography correlates with history
o A page of interesting facts Provides four workpages of interesting
o Two work-pages of important state data geographical information about each state with
Includes reference section and symbol pictures maps the student will color in with highlighters and
o GREAT STORIES from a Christian or historical perspective label
Contains five tests on the progressive map study and the current Teaches geographical terms and definitions
US map (student learns states, capitals, state nicknames, 2- Contains five tests over US geography and
letter postal abbreviations) geographical terms
When you come to your own state chronologically, you will insert a study of your own state
using our State History from a Christian Perspective 30-lesson course:
All 50 states available
All students make a project notebook about their state using text material, maps, and state
symbol pictures we provide in the Student Booklet
Students add pictures and info from free tourist literature (we tell you where to get it)
Simple and complete instructions in our Master Lesson Plan Book tell you what to do each
day and allow you to individualize the difficulty level and depth of the course if desired
The project notebook can be made in A Beka’s My State Notebook or in a 3-ring binder
Course includes 6 quizzes and 2 tests and an optional State Constitution Study Guide
Age 3 through Grade 2 will learn with the older students using color-cut-paste books!
Fifty States Under God for Young Learners introduces the fifty states in the order of statehood
Includes four pages per state
Includes all state symbol pictures and cutouts
My State History Funbook provides a color-cut-paste introduction to the student’s own state
Includes a pre-formatted spiral-bound scrapbook
Activity Pages for your state provide state symbol pictures and informational cutouts
for your student to cut and paste into the scrapbook
Student adds color pictures from free tourist literature (we tell you where to get it!) or from
places you visit together as a family
www.Statehistory.net
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