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URL: https://www.ncanchor.org

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Welcome to ANCHOR

Welcome to the newly created website dedicated to ANCHOR! A North Carolina History Online Resource has all the same great articles just a new web home. 
If you can't find a resource here you can always visit NCpedia. 

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Table of Contents

A North Carolina History Online Resource

This online resource covers all of North Carolina history and is accessibly-designed for readers of all ages. Content starts with the arrival of the first people some 12,000 years ago and spans to the 21st century. This resource is organized into eleven chapters, presented chronologically and thematically, and includes secondary source readings, primary sources and multimedia. The resource is designed to model historical inquiry and help students build critical thinking and literacy skills.


What's new in ANCHOR?

ANCHOR is routinely adding new pages of content to its chapters. New pages contain robust information along with a considerable number of supporting outsources. These new pages can also include relevant primary sources and related historical materials, along with numerous classroom and student activities. Lesson plans are also often included. Please visit these new resources and consider adding them to your classroom toolkit!

Artifacts

👁 A large, metal anchor sits on a display table. It has four large hooks that stick out from each side.

Anchor of the U.S.S. Monitor, an ironclad warship from the Civil War. The anchor was recovered in August 1983 off the coast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, where the ship sank in December 1862. The anchor is housed at the Mariners' Museum in Newport News, Virginia. Image courtesy of Fospeh, Wikimedia Commons, 2010.