- This will be an introductory paired learning activity. The students, working in teams, analyze the rapid rise in automobiles and the growing need for a stable road system in the United States/Missouri. The students will use the various pictures of roads and communities to show the need for roads and how the promise of better roads led to Harry S. Truman's rise in politics in the Interwar Years.
- This lesson can be used within several different units of study: Missouri politics, Executive Branch, etc.
- I enjoyed listening to Dick Kirkendall's presentation on Harry S. Truman as road builder in the Interwar Years.
- I believe my students will be able to judge the importance or need for better roads in Missouri.
- Students will also be able to view the development of the automobile.
- The student will view various primary source photographs from the Interwar Years in Missouri and view the development of roads, bridges and urban developments.
- The student will link the need for better roads and bridges to the campaign of Harry S. Truman for Jackson County Judge.
MISSOURI SHOW ME Standards:
2. continuity and change in the history of Missouri, the United States and the world
4. economic concepts (including productivity and the market system) and principles (including the laws of supply and demand)
5. the major elements of geographical study and analysis (such as location, place, movement, regions) and their relationships to changes in society and environment
6. relationships of the individual and groups to institutions and cultural traditions
7. the use of tools of social science inquiry (such as surveys, statistics, maps, documents)
Kansas Standard
Benchmark 5: The student engages in historical thinking skills.
1. (A) analyzes a theme in United States history to explain patterns of continuity and change over time.
Results of County Planning: Jackson County Missouri
- Photographs #1-6 came from the book: Results of County Planning: Jackson County Missouri
- Photographs #7-10 came from the Truman Library and Museum website
- The lesson activity should be used as a supplement or hands on activity in providing the students with a visual acitivity on the importance of road development in Missouri during the Interwar Years and the development of the New Deal programs.
- The lesson begins with students examining the specific photographs of the time period:
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- Photo #1: early photo of the Van Horn Road
- photo 3 of Jackson County highway and orchards
- Photo #4: photo of "a street scene"
- photo of 5 "a modern community facilities"
- Photo #6: photo of U.S. Highway No. 50
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- After examining the photographs, teacher should lead the students with a discussion concerning the following questions:
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- Compare and contrast the roads shown in the photo’s #1, 2, and 3.
- What differences do you see in the pictures?
- What challenges might the roads in pictures #1 and #2 present?
- What advantages would the roads, in pictures #3 and #6, present?
- Why would the campaign promise of better roads in Jackson County help Harry S. Truman’s bid for Jackson County Judge?
- Compare the street scenes in the photo’s #4 and #5. What similarities and differences do you see?
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- To conclude the lesson activity, share with the students the following pictures of Harry S. Truman:
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- Photo #7: National Old Trails Road Association (Be sure to point out Harry S. Truman’s membership as President at the top)
- Photo #8: Harry S. Truman in front of a new Ford Model A
- Photo #9: Truman with fellow judges at Jackson County barbeque.
- Photo #10: Harry S. Truman with a 1929 Studebaker 8 car.
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- After the students have had a chance to examine the photographs (#7-10), discuss the following:
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- How do photograph’s show Harry S. Truman’s lifelong love of automobiles? How might this love lead Truman into new road building legislation?
- Analyze photograph #9. Explain to the students that the picture was held a barbeque that Truman and fellow judges after completion of first road project. Why would the judges host a barbeque for the public? What in the photograph shows the link between the judges and the road system completion? Why would the completion of the road system benefit the political career of Harry S. Truman?
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To assess student comprehension would be relatively easy for this lesson. The assessment method would be one of participation in the lesson. I have found a good cross-curricular assessment of journal writing to be a very useful way of assessing student learning. I have the students write their responses to the lesson thought questions in their journal.