
Story of the Great Lakes by Marie E. Gilchrist is a beautifully illustrated public domain ebook.
The story begins before the arrival of Columbus to the New World and covers:
- The arrival of European explorers.
- The War of 1812.
- Steamboats.
- The Soo Canal.
- The timber industry.
- Mining.
- A tour of various cities.
Story of the Great Lakes is a 40-page book. The book was published in 1942, and quite a bit has happened since the book’s publication. We have provided suggestions below to help you learn more. However this is a great introductory start to learning more about the Great Lakes region! And it is free.
Free eBook
Suggestions

- There are eleven sections. By covering one section each week you will have enough material for a semester.
- The book lends itself very well to notebooking.
- Read one section and have your student narrate (orally or in written form).
- Name and map the five Great Lakes.
- Create a flip book listing them by size.
- Explore the Indians who lived in the region.
- Learn more about glacial drift. (You may also want to address the various opinions on the geological history of the area.)
- Learn more about Niagara Falls. In the 58 years since the book was written, how closer (if at all) is it to becoming a “mere geologic memory”?
- Make a list of the explorers of the area mentioned. Add a page in your notebook for each.
- What countries sent explorers to the area?
- Learn more about the War of 1812.
- Learn about Robert Fulton and his steamboat.
- How do locks and dams work?
- View the Soo locks in action.
- Read Newbery Honor book Swift Rivers by Cornelia Meigs.
Additional Resources

The Great Lakes: A Unit Study
You will find many more resources that go with the book in our free unit.
Keep Reading
A History of Navigation ~ Free Interactive
A History of Navigation is a BBC interactive that explains the era of exploration in the 15th and 16th centuries.
Nat the Navigator ~ Free eBook
Nat the Navigator: The Life of Nathaniel Bowditch for Young Persons is a biography of Bowditch written by his son.
The Steam Locomotive: A Unit Study
On July 25, 1814, George Stephenson completed the Blucher, a steam-powered locomotive. Unit resources.
