Chapter 1 - Montana: Where the Land Writes History
Chapter 2 - People of the Dog Days
Chapter 3 - From Dog Days to Horse Warriors
Chapter 4 - Newcomers Explore the Region
Chapter 5 - Beaver, Bison, and Black Robes
Chapter 6 - Montana's Gold and Silver Boom
Chapter 7 - Two Worlds Collide
Chapter 8 - Livestock and the Open Range
Chapter 9 - Railroads Link Montana to the Nation
Chapter 10 - Politics and the Copper Kings
Chapter 11 - The Early Reservation Years
Chapter 12 - Logging in the "High Lonesome"
Chapter 13 - Homesteading This Dry Land
Chapter 14 - Towns Have Lives, Too
Chapter 15 - Progressive Montana
Chapter 16 - Montana and World War I
Chapter 17 - Montanans on the Move
Chapter 18 - The Great Depression Transforms Montana
Chapter 19 - World War II in Montana
Chapter 20 - Building a New Montana
Chapter 21 - A People's Constitution
Chapter 22 - Living in a New Montana
Online textbook: Chapter 19
Worksheet 1: Analyzing a Propaganda Poster
Worksheet 2: World War II Rationing
Click here for a larger version of the "Application for a Special Shoe Stamp" shown on the "World War II Rationing Worksheet."
Learning from Historical Documents:
For Educators: Resources
Interesting Links
See drawings created by Roundup, Montana, native and Bataan Death March survivor Ben Steele, while he was a Prisoner of War.
Learn more about Native American code talkers.
Meet Joe Medicine Crow, who became a Crow war chief through his World War II military service.
Find out about Marine Private Minnie Spotted Wolf, through a comic strip that was published about her in 1944.