Map
of the Month: Heroes of the American
Revolution
The
Ball State University Libraries’ GIS Research and Map Collection (GRMC) has a “Map
of the Month” exhibit in the windows on the second floor of Bracken Library featuring
a unique map from the collection. For
2016, each map will be related to Indiana history as a celebration of the state’s
bicentennial anniversary on December 11.
The
“Map of the Month” for June is Revolutionary
Friends: General George Washington and the Marquis de Lafayette. This map was created by the GRMC in
collaboration with a social studies teaching methods class. Students in Dr. Dorshell Stewart’s Social
Science 397 class are learning to create maps based on popular children’s
books. This map was created using locations
mentioned in the book by the same name by Selena Castrovilla. (The youth book is available from the
Educational Technology and Resources Collection in the lower level of Bracken
Library).
The
Marquis de Lafayette became a hero during the Revolutionary War. The native of France volunteered to help Americans
fight for independence. Lafayette
returned to the United States in 1824 and visited every state in the new
Union. Hundreds of places are named
Lafayette in his honor, including Lafayette, Indiana. The city was platted and named during the
Marquis de Lafayette’s tour, although he never visited the city.
The
map is available in digital format from the Ball State University Libraries’
Cardinal Scholar and the original paper map may be circulated from the GRMC. (Other maps in the children’s book series
include maps about Babe Ruth, Sojourner Truth, Elizabeth Blackwell, the
Underground Railroad, and the Japanese internment camps of World War II).
For more information about using maps in the
classroom or in the study of Indiana history, please contact the GRMC at
765-285-1097.
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