OER Recommender

My Tags For This Item

To save your tags,
please sign in
Not a member yet?
Register now

My Review For This Item

To save your reviews,
please sign in
Not a member yet?
Register now

My Notes For This Item

To save your notes,
please sign in
Not a member yet?
Register now

My Saved Searches

To save your searches,
please sign in.
Not a member yet?
Register now.
 

"A Well-Mannered Bandit and a Killer": Little Berta Ballard Remembers Billy the Kid

Rating: Not rated yet
  Rate item
Type: Library or Collection
Grade Level: Secondary, Post-secondary
Author: Center for History and New Media/American Social History Project
Subject: Humanities
Institution Name: American Social History Project/Center for History and New Media
Collection Name: Many Pasts (CHNM/ASHP)

Abstract: The New Deal tried to end the Depression by spending government money to employ the jobless. One of its most ambitious efforts, the Works Progress Administration (WPA), put 8.5 million people to work between 1935 and 1943, mostly on projects that required manual labor, but also on projects for artists, writers, actors, and musicians. At its peak, the Federal Writers Project employed about 6,500 men and women, some of whom later became famous. In the late 1930s the project's writers began a series of "life histories," recording the experiences of diverse Americans from Florida to Alaska. Sometimes they recorded people's words verbatim; other times they rewrote them into narratives. In this example, Berta Ballard Manning recalled meeting the famous outlaw "Billy the Kid" as a child in New Mexico. He was unassuming and gentle, with good manners, but she also remembered him as a bandit and killer who kept their county in turmoil

Details

Specific Types of Materials: Teaching and Learning Strategies
Language: English

Conditions of Use: No License

Tags For This Item

Tags are a way to find OER by keywords added by users

Keywords

Keywords are descriptions assigned by the provider or the OER Commons Team.