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Update: Thanks to a generous sponsor, we are pleased to offer additional FREE print copies of Remembering the Children. Delivery in June, in time for Indigenous History Month. Sign up & get your FREE copies PLUS educational resources! https://t.co/LAz5fL15WT #cdnhist #eduhist
On April 1, 1999 the map of Canada was re-drawn: the Northwest Territories divided into two territories to allow for the creation of Nunavut, a homeland for Canada’s Inuit. read more: https://t.co/mPfEolOJrn
If you're a #BookLover, check out our latest #ReadingDen newsletter, which features book reviews from the April-May 2023 issue of Canada's History! https://t.co/NpJ9B02XDD #CdnHist
#Booklovers, check out some of our latest #bookreviews in this month's Reading den newsletter! Also, find out how you can win one of three copies of Through Their Eyes: A Graphic History of Hill 70 and Canada’s First World War. https://t.co/yFtEr1ORd5
Right(s) On! Students can participate in this Kayak #contest by designing a poster based on their understanding of the #CanadianCharterofRightsandFreedoms. #TeacherTwitter https://t.co/BAN28sGuoz
This edition of Kayak shares some amazing stories of the ways #BlackCanadians built and shaped this country. #BlackHistoryMonth https://t.co/MwWbi7ZeMe
Before the late 1800s, Canadians would mostly have looked to the bear to “predict” how much longer winter would last based on whether it saw its shadow. But by the 1930s, the groundhog had pretty much won. Read this fun fiction piece to know more: https://t.co/uSAcJO4PZF
Our most popular episode of History Bits is Remembering Africville. It tells the story of how the city of Halifax bulldozed a Black settlement that had stood for 150 years. They destroyed a community but not its spirit. #BlackHistoryMonth #Africville https://t.co/aV0vkbxDw2
Don’t miss out on the #BlackHistory in Canada issue of Kayak — complete with access to free lesson plans and resources. #BlackHistoryMonth https://t.co/3SjaRyFIrQ
When Europeans came to North America, they brought a bit of folklore with them. The roots of #GroundhogDay lie in medieval Europe, where the Roman Catholic feast of Candlemas on February 2 was associated with winter’s midpoint. Read more: https://t.co/UeLu5PvRGc