Instructional Video1:53
Wonderscape

The Freedmen's Bureau: Support for Freed Black Communities

K - 5th
This video delves into the efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau, established in 1865, to assist formerly enslaved individuals in the South. Discover how the Bureau provided food, housing, legal aid, and education, helped reunite families,...
Instructional Video1:37
Wonderscape

40 Acres and a Mule: A Broken Promise of Reparations

K - 5th
This video explores the history behind General Sherman's Field Order Number 15, commonly known as "40 Acres and a Mule," which aimed to provide land to newly freed enslaved people. Learn about the promise of land redistribution, its...
Instructional Video10:09
Weird History

When the Seminole Indians Aligned With Escaped Slaves

12th - Higher Ed
The Black Seminoles were a group of people that history, for the most part, forgot about. Their alliance with the native Seminole tribes resulted in a unique relationship that had never been seen before, and that changed the course of...
Instructional Video11:08
Weird History

What the South Was Like During Reconstruction

12th - Higher Ed
On April 15, 1865, Lincoln was gunned down in Ford’s Theater by John Wilkes Booth, a man sympathetic to the defeated Confederacy. In the years following the end of the Civil War and Lincoln’s assassination, his successor Andrew Johnson...
Instructional Video8:37
Cerebellum

The American Civil War And Reconstruction: 1862-1869 - Post Civil War Laws And Constitutional Amendments

9th - 12th
American democracy has a lineage of written records that we can trace to show the development of our nation, and how each document builds on those before it to make our foundation of freedom stronger. This video looks at the 13th...