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Discover the beauty of the Everglades National Park in Florida and iconic sites like Jamestown in Virginia, Memphis in Tennessee, and the French Quarter in Louisiana. Learn about the cultural and historical significance of the Southeast region of the United States.
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The SoutheastRegion of the United States West Virginia, Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida
Everglades National Park, Florida • A vast covers the southern tip of Florida. It is known as the Everglades. • A swamp is a low area of land that is covered by water at least part of the year. Click to start the ride
More than 300 kinds of birds live in the Everglades. • Alligators, crocodiles, turtles, snakes, and otters live in the park as well. • Manatees also live in the Everglades
Everglades National Park, Florida Swamp: Low area of land that is covered by water at least part of the year Hurricane: A dangerous storm with heavy rains and high winds Click the swamp to see a video of the beautiful Everglades
Florida’s climate • Florida is in a part of the United States call the Sun Belt. The Sun Belt stretches across the country from Florida to California. States in the Sun Belt have a mild climate all year long. A mild climate means that it is usually warm and sunny there.
FUN AND SUN • Florida’s sunny climate makes it a popular place to visit. People from all over the world travel to Florida for vacations. • People who travel for fun are called tourists. • About 40 million tourists visit Florida every year. Some come to enjoy the sunshine and beach. Others come to visit places like Disney World.
John F. Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral, Florida Home of the space shuttle Alan Shepard was launched into space from Cape Canaveral. He was the first American in space. Click the space shuttle to see the launch
Jamestown was the first permanent English settlement in America. Most of the settlers died because of mosquitoes and swampy land. Tobacco helped the colony make money. Ancestor: a relative who lived long ago Jamestown, Virginia: England’s First American Colony
A Coal Mine in Appalachia • Minerals: Natural substances found in rocks • Strip mines: Places where minerals are scraped from the surface of the ground.
Bluegrass Music Festival • It is the traditional music of Appalachia. It is played on banjos, guitars, and fiddles. Click the instruments to hear some bluegrass music
Musical Memphis, Tennessee • Memphis is the center of the Mississippi Delta region • Stretches from Kentucky and Arkansas to the mouth of the Mississippi River
Musical Memphis, Tennessee • The soil is very fertile and good for farming. Slaves worked the farms and much of the land was used for cotton farming. • Slave led a hard life and they would sing about their sorrows. These songs are known as the blues. Click the music to hear the song.
The French Quarter in New Orleans, Louisiana • New Orleans is the largest city in Louisiana • It is an important port, where ships load and unload their goods. • Birthplace of jazz and cajun food. • Bayou: a stream that flows through a swamp. Click to hear a Brass Band Jazz
Dixieland Jazz • Dixieland Jazz has brass instruments like the trumpet and trombone. • Louis Armstrong is probably one of the best known trumpet players of Jazz. Click to hear a Dixieland Jazz
The French Quarter in New Orleans, Louisiana • Louisiana’s nickname is the Bayou State • Cajun food is hot and spicy • Cajun Music is very popular too. Click to hear Cajun Music
Mississippi River • The Mississippi river effects our economy • Delta: a triangle-shaped area of land at the end of a river.
Mississippi River • The Mississippi river flows from north western Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico.
An Oil Rig in the Gulf of Mexico • Petroleum: A thick, black, oily liquid found underground • Petrochemicals: Chemicals made from oil, used to make plastics and medicines. • Oil spills can be very serious to our earth
An Oil Rig in the Gulf of Mexico • Maps of oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico
A Cotton Plantation in Natchez, Mississippi • Plantation: A large farm • Slaves worked the the land, and had no rights. • President Abraham Lincoln believed slavery was wrong.
Civil War • More than 600,000 people died in the Civil War. • Many plantations were burned and many lost their lives, yet Slavery was ended forever.
Montgomery, Alabama: Birthplace of the Civil Rights Movement • Segregation: Separation of people because of race. • Civil Rights Memorial honors 40 American soldiers who were killed during the civil rights movement
Civil Rights Movement • The civil rights movement began as a struggle to end segregation. • It started in Montgomery in 1955. • That year, a preacher named Martin Luther King, Jr. led a protest against segregation on buses, and blacks refused to ride buses until they were treated the same as whites.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. • Was an important American who fought with is words and ideas against segregation. He wanted equal rights for all people. Click the picture to hear “I have a dream speech”