• Login
  • Register
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • Documents
  • Activities
  • Activity Tools
    • All Tools
    • Analyzing Documents
    • Discussion Topic
    • Compare and Contrast
    • Zoom/Crop
    • White Out / Black Out
    • Spotlight
    • Finding a Sequence
    • Making Connections
    • Mapping History
    • Seeing the Big Picture
    • Weighing the Evidence
    • Interpreting Data
  • Popular Topics
    • See All
    • National History Day
    • The Constitution
    • Sports: All-American
    • Rights in America
    • American Indians
    • Women's Rights
    • American Revolution
    • The Civil War
    • World War I
    • World War II
    • The Vietnam War
    • 1970s America
    • Congress
    • Amending America
    • Elections
    • What Americans Eat
    • Signatures
    • Nixon and Ford Years
  • Resources
    • Getting Started
    • Document Analysis
    • Activity-Creation Guide
    • Manage Assignments
    • iPad App
    • Presentation Materials
    • Webinars
      • Recorded Webinars
      • Live Webinars
MENU
DocsTeachThe online tool for teaching with documents, from the National Archives National Archives Foundation National Archives

of primary sources for use in classroom activitiesChoose from Thousands

Refine by Historical Era or Document Type
16 documents found
 Letter from Johnny Cash to President Gerald Ford Regarding Amnesty and Pardons
Letter from Johnny Cash to President Gerald Ford Regarding Amnesty and Pardons
9/10/1974
 Country and Western Singers Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash Visit President Gerald R. Ford at the White House,
Country and Western Singers Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash Visit President Gerald R. Ford at the White House,
11/21/1975
 Declaration of Michael J. Jackson in Support of Establishing Status of Triumph International, Inc as a Small Entity
Declaration of Michael J. Jackson in Support of Establishing Status of Triumph International, Inc as a Small Entity
8/25/1992
Letter from Frank Sinatra to George H. W. Bush
Letter from Frank Sinatra to George H. W. Bush
6/29/1989
Letter from Gregory Peck to President Lyndon B. Johnson
Letter from Gregory Peck to President Lyndon B. Johnson
10/27/1965
Letter from Katherine Hepburn to G. G. Killinger, U.S. Board of Parole
Letter from Katherine Hepburn to G. G. Killinger, U.S. Board of Parole
9/1/1950
 Letter from Laura Ingalls Wilder to Rose Wilder Lane
Letter from Laura Ingalls Wilder to Rose Wilder Lane
1/28/1938
Letter from M. K. Gandhi to President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Reply,
Letter from M. K. Gandhi to President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Reply,
7/1/1942 - 8/1/1942
Letter from Marie Curie to President Herbert Hoover
Letter from Marie Curie to President Herbert Hoover
11/3/1929
Letter from President George H. W. Bush to Ronald Reagan
Letter from President George H. W. Bush to Ronald Reagan
1/11/1991
  • Start
  • Prev
  • 1
  • 2
  • Next
  • End
  • Explore Primary Source Documents
  •  
  • Discover Activities You Can Teach With
  •  
  • Create Fun & Engaging Activities
Follow us on Twitter:twitter
Follow us on Facebook:facebook
Please enter a valid email address

View our webinars:youtube

Get our iPad app:apple
New Documentsshare
New Activitiesshare

The National Archives

DocsTeach is a product of the National Archives education division. Our mission is to engage, educate, and inspire all learners to discover and explore the records of the American people preserved by the National Archives.

The National Archives and Records Administration is the nation's record keeper. We save documents and other materials created in the course of business conducted by the U.S. Federal government that are judged to have continuing value. We hold in trust for the public the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights — but also the records of ordinary citizens — at our locations around the country.
  • All Education Programs
  • Student Visits
  • Distance Learning
  • Professional Development
  • National Archives Museum
  • Presidential Libraries
  • Archives.gov
  • National Archives Foundation




Creative Commons License

Except where otherwise noted, DocsTeach is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Primary source documents included on this site generally come from the holdings of the National Archives and are in the public domain, except as noted. Teaching activities on this site have received the CC0 Public Domain Dedication; authors have waived all copyright and related rights to the extent possible under the law. See our legal and privacy page for full terms and conditions.