Hero image

Historia Victoria

Average Rating3.68
(based on 453 reviews)

I have a passion for History and communicating knowledge in an engaging form. I have 20 years experience of teaching History, Geography, English, Religious Studies and Citizenship.

6k+Uploads

1584k+Views

600k+Downloads

I have a passion for History and communicating knowledge in an engaging form. I have 20 years experience of teaching History, Geography, English, Religious Studies and Citizenship.
Abraham Lincoln and the Bixby Letter
HistoriaVictoriaHistoriaVictoria

Abraham Lincoln and the Bixby Letter

(0)
The Bixby letter is a brief, consoling message believed to have been written by President Abraham Lincoln in November 1864 to Lydia Parker Bixby, a widow living in Boston, Massachusetts, who was thought to have lost five sons in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Along with the Gettysburg Address and his second inaugural address, the letter has been praised as one of Lincoln’s finest written works and is often reproduced in memorials, media, and print. Controversy surrounds the recipient, the fate of her sons, and the authorship of the letter. Bixby’s character has been questioned (including rumored Confederate sympathies), at least two of her sons survived the war, and the letter was possibly written by Lincoln’s assistant private secretary, John Hay.
Tommy Tucker World War Two Squirrel Word Search
HistoriaVictoriaHistoriaVictoria

Tommy Tucker World War Two Squirrel Word Search

(0)
Tommy Tucker World War Two Squirrel Word Search Tommy Tucker (died June 25, 1949) was a male Eastern gray squirrel who became a celebrity in the United States, touring the country wearing women’s fashions while performing tricks, entertaining children, and selling war bonds. A Washington Post columnist called him “the most famous squirrel ever to come from Washington.”