A compact teaching tool with the presence of a museum object, this deck of Library of Congress–sourced Knowledge Cards invites readers to step directly onto the landscapes of the American Revolution. The light‑green box, printed with a stylized map of the eastern seaboard, signals its purpose immediately: to reconnect modern readers with the physical places where independence was contested, negotiated, and won.
Inside are 48 cards, each built around a pinpoint question on the front and a concise, well‑researched narrative on the reverse. The effect is part field guide, part seminar—an accessible way to revisit the war’s turning points, from battlefield maneuvers to home‑front resilience, from espionage networks to the contributions of women, enslaved Black Americans, and Native nations.
The deck’s strength lies in its structure:
• A question that sparks curiosity
• A location that anchors the event in real geography
• A clear, authoritative explanation drawn from Library of Congress holdings
It’s equally suited for solo study, classroom use, or family table conversations—any setting where American origins deserve more than a passing glance.
As a gift, it’s persuasive because it offers something rare:
a portable, beautifully designed way to learn where the Revolution unfolded and why those places still matter.













Reviews
There are no reviews yet