Between 1957 and approximately 1977, this was the 4th grade Alabama history textbook used in many Alabama schools (there were different editions but this is the first edition). I have scanned the chapter Plantation Life. I think you are going to be very surprised at what we taught school children just a few years ago! In your first paragraph, discuss the myth and reality for slaves after reading the chapter. You will need to include how whites justified slavery to explain the myth. I have included articles and a video below to help. I also pulled in two primary sources from Hammond and Fitzhugh in the Chapter Module for research. For your second paragraph, discuss what you read in Know Alabama Download Know Alabama. How is it different to your textbook material today? In other words do we teach history this way today. Explain. Did your reading in Know Alabama support the myth or reality for life in the Antebellum South for whites and slaves? What did you think after you read the Plantation Life? I am looking for some heartfelt discussion on this one. Don’t forget to respond to a classmate too!Class, every semester there are students who say they were glad to know after reading Know Alabama Plantation Life chapter, slaves were happy and treated well. I want each of you to understand the reality for slaves. You need to do your research. Know Alabama supports the propoganda spread after the Civil War about slave life. Articles to help:https://www.ushistory.org/us/27f.asphttp://encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/h-1643https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4p2956.htmlTo gain more information about the reality of slavery, besides the textbook, go to 1:50 and watch the Seeds of Destruction episode in this documentary–Slavery and the Making of America. I want you to incorporate what you learned in the video into your discussion. I would love it if you could watch the entire video but its long. Just watch the Seeds of Destruction Episode for this assignment.Watch the episode Seeds of Destruction Go to 1:53.10 to find this Episode in Slavery and the Making of America.