School Programs


CD-ROM Information

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[Programs and Resources] [Teachers and Learners]

As a service, the New Hampshire Historical Society provides client schools and other appropriate groups a CD-ROM containing the contents of the School Programs section of its Web site.

cdimageGiven free of charge in advance of a scheduled lesson or guided tour, the CD-ROM does not replace the Web site; rather, it is intended as a convenience to the user, allowing for easier and quicker retrieval and distribution of the lessons, classroom activities, slide shows and documents of
background information available on our Web pages.


Current Version
NHHSCD09


Updates

New versions of the CD-ROM are created at least once a year more often, perhaps, as conditions dictate. You will know at a glance that your CD-ROM is current if its label matches that listed above. If we add or change materials on our Web site between yearly versions of the CD-ROM, the changes will be itemized here so that you will always have access to the latest information.

New to the Web site (to be incorporated into the next version of the CD-ROM):
Nothing at this time.

New to NHHSCD09 (and available on the Web site for those with earlier versions of the CD-ROM):
Where New Hampshire's People Come From: How Diverse Is Our Population? [Slides]

 

Frequently Asked Questions
We will address issues pertaining to the use of the CD-ROM as they arise.

  • May others who have not signed up for a Society program or lesson receive the CD-ROM?
    The CD-ROM may be purchased for $10.00.
  • What images appear on the CD-ROM?
    Clockwise from the top are . . .
    John Burgum's painting An Express Freight Shipment of 30 Coaches by Abbot, Downing & Co., Concord, N.H. to Wells, Fargo Co., Omaha, Neb., April 15, 1868
    A mezzotint titled Major Robert Rogers: Commander in Chief of the Indians in the Back Settlements of America, published by Thomas Hart in 1776
    Sarah Josepha Hale, from an engraving in the N.H. Historical Society collection
    Cardroom Employees, Amoskeag Mill No. 5 (c. 1855) from the tintype group portrait, courtesy of the Manchester Historic Association
    President Franklin Pierce, portrait by Adna Tenney
    "King Philip" (Metacom) in Henry Trumbull's History of the Indian Wars (1846)


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For more information, contact the
New Hampshire Historical Society (sskenyon@nhhistory.org)

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Last Modified July 16, 2008.

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