CATEGORIES

The Final Push
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

The Final Push

When Germany launched a spring offensive in March 1918, it hoped to defeat Great Britain and France on the Western Front before U.S. forces could arrive.

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2 mins  |
May/June 2017
The War's Pull
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

The War's Pull

Americans read all about the horrible fighting in the Great War in 1914.

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3 mins  |
May/June 2017
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Cump Sherman Finds His Way

Of the 11 children in the Sherman family, red-haired Cump was the studious one. He read books and studied mathematics and Latin, while his younger brother John got into fistfights.

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5 mins  |
January 2018
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

To Savannah And The Sea

To Savannah And The Sea

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5 mins  |
January 2018
Maker of Masks
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Maker of Masks

They were called mutilés—soldiers whose faces had been destroyed by the war. Some were missing an eye, a nose, or an ear. Some had horrible burns or parts of their jaws blown away by enemy fire.

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2 mins  |
May/June 2017
A Deadly Flu
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

A Deadly Flu

More than 50 million people, including half a mil-lion people in America, became victims of a force more deadly than war.

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2 mins  |
May/June 2017
The Harlem Hellfighters
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

The Harlem Hellfighters

Private Henry Johnson was on watch in the French trenches of the Argonne Forest on May 15, 1918, when a grenade exploded nearby.

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3 mins  |
May/June 2017
Great Facts About The Great War
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Great Facts About The Great War

World War I was the first war that used aircraft and aircraft carriers. About 65,000 aircraft eventually were built and used by the countries involved.

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1 min  |
May/June 2017
Preparing To Fight
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Preparing To Fight

When the United States declared war on Germany on April 6, 1917, the decision triggered a massive effort to organize, train, and supply U.S. forces for duty overseas.

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4 mins  |
May/June 2017
Helping Hands
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Helping Hands

The large number of immigrants coming into the country at the turn of the century led to crowded living conditions in city tenements.

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3 mins  |
April 2017
Protect and Conserve
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Protect and Conserve

When Theodore Roosevelt became president of the United States in 1901, he used the power of the federal government to support an important movement in the Progressive Era: the protection of America’s natural resources.

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3 mins  |
April 2017
Teacher
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Teacher

The story of Anne Sullivan’s life once it became linked to Helen Keller’s life is known. Less familiar is Sullivan’s life before she arrived in Alabama in 1887. Johanna Mansfield “Anne” Sullivan was born on April 15, 1866.

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2 mins  |
March 2017
Famous Friends
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Famous Friends

Most people have heard of Helen Keller’s remarkable friendship with Anne Sullivan, her “Teacher,” who first taught her how to communicate.

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5 mins  |
March 2017
A School With Vision
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

A School With Vision

By the time Helen Keller arrived at the Perkins Institution in the 1880s, the school had changed its name and location a few times. Today, it is known as the Perkins School for the Blind, but its mission of working with children with vision disabilities remains just strong as when it opened nearly 190 years ago.

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3 mins  |
March 2017
Riches Of The Ocean
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Riches Of The Ocean

For hundreds of years, whales were one of the riches of the ocean. Commercial whaling was viewed as an important and admirable occupation because the main industry it supported—supplying oil for light—was invaluable in a time before electricity or natural gas were introduced. 

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3 mins  |
September 2017
Meet The Crew
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Meet The Crew

New England whaling crews were made up of a diverse community of men.

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3 mins  |
September 2017
Harpooned!
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Harpooned!

A 19th-century whaler sailed the ocean alone, set apart from the rest of the world.

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5 mins  |
September 2017
Parts
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Parts

People used different parts of the whale in their daily lives in the 1800s.

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1 min  |
September 2017
Picture The Age Of Whaling
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Picture The Age Of Whaling

A typical whaling voyage lasted several years, and several months might pass out on the ocean between whale sightings.

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2 mins  |
September 2017
The Story Of The Essex
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

The Story Of The Essex

“HERE HE IS—HE IS MAKING FOR US AGAIN!” 

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5 mins  |
September 2017
First Settlement
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

First Settlement

It’s hard to imagine Chicago, the third most-populated city in the United States today, as ever being an open, swampy plain. But the area near the southern tip of Lake Michigan was once rich with wildlife, fish, and fertile soil. Different Native American groups, including the Illinois, Kickapoo, Miami, Ojibwa, Ottawa, Potawatomi, and Shawnee, once lived there. When the first French fur trappers and settlers arrived in presentday Canada and reached the western Great Lakes in the 1600s, they established a fur trade with the native communities there.

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4 mins  |
January 2017
City On Fire
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

City On Fire

For years, legends blamed Mrs. O’Leary’s cow, Daisy, for starting Chicago’s Great Fire of 1871.

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2 mins  |
January 2017
Dear Mama Letters From A Mill Girl
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Dear Mama Letters From A Mill Girl

Lowell, Massachusetts, on the Merrimack River, was founded in the 1820s as a textile manufacturing center.

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6 mins  |
July/August 2017
Champions For Reform
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Champions For Reform

Imagine that instead of going to school 7 hours a day, 5 days a week, 9 months a year, you went to work 14 hours a day, 6 days a week, 12 months a year.

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4 mins  |
July/August 2017
Focusing On Labor
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Focusing On Labor

Photographs can communicate in many ways.

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3 mins  |
July/August 2017
What The Camera Captured - Outdoors
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

What The Camera Captured - Outdoors

William Parralla, 7 years old, newsboy, 313 Second St., SW, Washington, D.C. Newsboy without a badge who tried to “short change” me when he sold me a paper. “He can rustle de poipers,” another boy said. April 1912.

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2 mins  |
July/August 2017
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Extra! Extra! Newsboys Strike!

Kid Blink, a teenage boy small for his age and blind in one eye, buttoned his shirt and brushed back his hair as he took the stage.

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4 mins  |
July/August 2017
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Give The Kids A Break! Crossword Puzzle

Can you solve this puzzle about the people and events connected to child labor and the issues it generated? All the information to help you can be found in this issue. Answers on page 48.

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1 min  |
July/August 2017
The Race Is Set
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

The Race Is Set

In 1857, Abraham Lincoln was the lawyer in a case for the Rock Island Bridge Company. The company had built one of the first railroad bridges across the Mississippi River. When a ship crashed into the bridge, the ship owner sued the company, claiming that the bridge obstructed free navigation of the river. The case was dismissed after the jury was deadlocked, but during it, Lincoln made an argument for the national support of “rail travel from East to West.”

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4 mins  |
February 2017
Building The Line
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids

Building The Line

Grenville M. Dodge, the Union Pacific’s chief engineer, had the following to say about building the first transcontinental railroad: “To supply one mile of track with material and supplies required about forty cars, as on the plains everything—rails, ties, bridging, fastenings, all railway supplies, fuel for locomotives and trains, and supplies for men and animals on the entire work—had to be transported . . .” to the railhead.

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2 mins  |
February 2017