

5. Heroes and Villains of the Reconstruction Era: Safer Food and Consumer Protection
My Name is Dr. Harvey Washington Wiley: A Chemist Who Fought for Safe Food I was born in 1844 in Indiana, at a time when America was still growing and finding its identity. From a young age, I was fascinated by science and the natural world. I studied chemistry with great dedication, believing that understanding substances and their effects could improve people’s lives. My education eventually led me to become a professor and later a government scientist, where I would find m
Historical Conquest Team
Mar 31


5. Lesson Plan from the Progressive Era: Safer Food and Consumer Protection
The American Food Supply Before Regulation - A Nation Eating in the Dark Before laws protected what went onto the American dinner table, people across the country lived in a strange contradiction—food was abundant, yet often unsafe. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, Americans trusted what they bought simply because they had little choice. There were no consistent standards, no federal inspectors, and very little understanding of what was truly inside the food they consumed.
Historical Conquest Team
Mar 30


4. Heroes and Villains of the Reconstruction Era: Unequal Focus on Urban vs Rural America
My Name is Theodore Roosevelt: President, Reformer, and Champion of the American People I was born in 1858 in New York City, a frail child plagued by asthma. Many nights I struggled just to breathe, but my father challenged me to build my body as well as my mind. Through discipline, exercise, and determination, I transformed myself into a stronger young man. Those early struggles taught me that weakness could be overcome with effort and courage, a lesson I carried throughout
Historical Conquest Team
Mar 25


4. Lesson Plan from the Progressive Era: Unequal Focus on Urban vs Rural America
The Urban Lens of Progressivism—Why Reformers Focused on Cities A powerful truth about the Progressive Era: reformers did not spread their attention evenly across America. Instead, they focused intensely on cities, where problems were loud, visible, and impossible to ignore. Between 1890 and 1905, cities like New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia became the stage where reform movements took shape. Overcrowded tenements, polluted streets, political corruption, and struggling wor
Historical Conquest Team
Mar 25


3. Heroes and Villains of the Reconstruction Era: Racism and Segregation Continued
My Name is Mary Church Terrell: Educator, Activist, and Voice for Justice I was born in 1863 in Memphis, Tennessee, at a time when freedom for my people was just beginning to take shape. My parents had once been enslaved, but through determination and success in business, they built a life of opportunity for our family. Because of them, I received an education that many could only dream of. I attended Oberlin College, where I learned not only academics, but the importance of
Historical Conquest Team
Mar 24


3. Lesson Plan from the Progressive Era: Racism and Segregation Continued
The Legal Foundation of Jim Crow—How Segregation Became Law In the years following the Civil War, the United States faced a defining question: would freedom truly mean equality? During Reconstruction, new amendments promised citizenship and voting rights to formerly enslaved people, and for a brief moment, a more equal society seemed possible. But as federal troops withdrew from the South in 1877, power shifted back to state governments that were determined to restore control
Historical Conquest Team
Mar 24


2. Heroes and Villains of the Reconstruction Era: Political Corruption and Political Machines
My Name is William “Boss” Tweed: Leader of Tammany Hall I was born in 1823 in New York City, a place growing faster than anyone could truly control. My father was a chairmaker, and like many boys of my time, I did not grow up with wealth or privilege. I learned early that success in this city did not come from schooling alone—it came from knowing people, understanding power, and taking opportunities when they appeared. I found my way into local clubs, volunteer fire companies
Historical Conquest Team
Mar 23


2. Lesson Plan from the Progressive Era: Political Corruption and Political Machines
Political Corruption: What Is It and Why It Matters Imagine trusting your leaders to make fair decisions for everyone—then discovering that some of them are secretly making choices for their own benefit instead. This is the heart of political corruption, a problem that shaped many American cities during the late 1800s and early 1900s and pushed reformers to demand change. What Is Political Corruption? Political corruption happens when people in power use their position for pe
Historical Conquest Team
Mar 23


1. Heroes and Villains of the Reconstruction Era: Industrialization and Urban Poverty (c. 1890–1905)
My Name is Andrew Carnegie: The Industrialist’s Perspective I was born in 1835 in Dunfermline, Scotland, into a family that knew hardship well. My father was a handloom weaver whose trade was fading as machines replaced traditional work. When opportunities disappeared, my family made the difficult decision to immigrate to America. We arrived with very little, settling in Pennsylvania, where I began working at a young age to help support my family. Early Work and Determinati
Historical Conquest Team
Mar 21


1. Lesson Plan from the Progressive Era: Industrialization and Urban Poverty (c. 1890–1905)
The Rapid Growth of American Cities This was one of the most dramatic transformations in United States history, as millions of people flooded into urban centers in search of opportunity, forever changing how Americans lived, worked, and built their future. A Nation on the Move In the late 1800s, the United States began shifting from a rural, farm-based society to an industrial powerhouse. Railroads stretched across the country, factories rose along rivers and rail lines, an
Historical Conquest Team
Mar 21





















