Hello my Omschooligans! As part of our exploration into American history for the 4th of July American 250 celebration, here's a bibliography of kids books from US history. First, let's begin with the American Girls and Dear America series. This list incorporates classics, time-tested historical series, and highly decorated Newbery and Caldecott winners, organized chronologically by the historical era they cover.
🛶 1. Pre-Colonial & Colonial America (1600s–1700s)
Squanto, Friend of the Pilgrims * Author: Clyde Robert Bulla (1951)
The History: A classic, highly accessible chapter book for younger readers detailing Tisquantum's (Squanto's) life, his early capture and travels to England, and his vital role as a translator and guide for the Plymouth colonists.
The Magic Tunnel
Author: Caroline D. Emerson (1940)
The History: A beloved vintage time-travel tale where two modern New York children pass through a subway tunnel and find themselves in 1664 New Amsterdam, learning about Dutch colonial life, windmills, and early New York history.
The First Thanksgiving
Author: Jean Craighead George (1993)
The History: Illustrated by Thomas Locker, this beautifully painted book by a Newbery-winning author traces the history of the Plymouth thanksgiving feast, focusing on the environmental collaboration between the Pilgrims and the Pokanoket Wampanoag.
The Matchlock Gun 🏅 (Newbery Medal Winner)
Author: Walter D. Edmonds (1941)
The History: Set in 1756 New York during the French and Indian War, this brief, dramatic story showcases the intense perils faced by colonial frontier families. (Note: Great for discussing perspective and historical attitudes).
The Witch of Blackbird Pond 🏅 (Newbery Medal Winner)
Author: Elizabeth George Speare (1958)
The History: Set in 1687 Connecticut, this classic novel follows an orphaned girl from the Caribbean who struggles to adapt to a strict Puritan community, touching heavily on themes of bigotry, superstition, and non-conformity.
Kaya: An American Girl (1764) * Book to look for: Meet Kaya: An American Girl by Janet Shaw.
The History: Explores the deep cultural traditions, horse culture, and seasonal movements of the Nimíipuu (Nez Perce) nation in the Pacific Northwest before European contact.
The Journal of Jasper Jonathan Pierce: A Pilgrim Boy (1620)
Series: My Name Is America
Author: Ann Rinaldi
The History: Written as the diary of an indentured servant aboard the Mayflower, detailing the grueling ocean crossing, the construction of Plymouth Colony, and the fragile early relations with local Indigenous nations.:
The Sign of the Beaver 🏅 (Newbery Honor Book)
Author: Elizabeth George Speare (1983)
The History: Set in the 1760s in the Maine wilderness, this story follows a 12-year-old settler boy left alone to guard his family's new log cabin. After a series of mishaps, he is rescued and befriended by a Penobscot chief and his grandson, leading to a deep lesson in wilderness survival, cultural respect, and what it truly means to belong to a piece of land.
The Revolutionary Era & Early Republic (Late 1700s)
Felicity Merriman: An American Girl (1774)
Book to look for: Meet Felicity by Valerie Tripp.
The History: Set in Williamsburg, Virginia, on the brink of the American Revolution, capturing the severe political divide between Patriots and Loyalists as families are torn apart by loyalty to the King versus independent liberty.
The Winter of Red Snow: The Revolutionary War Diary of Abigail Jane Stewart (1777)
Series: Dear America
Author: Kristiana Gregory
The History: Follows a young girl living in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, whose home is transformed when General George Washington’s Continental Army arrives to set up their famously harsh, freezing winter camp.
- Johnny Tremain 🏅 (Newbery Medal Winner)
- Author: Esther Forbes (1943)
The History: The definitive juvenile novel of the American Revolution. It follows a proud young silversmith’s apprentice in Boston who becomes a messenger for the Sons of Liberty, crossing paths with Samuel Adams, Paul Revere, and John Hancock.
Ox-Cart Man 🏅 (Caldecott Medal Winner)
Author: Donald Hall (1979)
The History: Illustrated by Barbara Cooney, this gently pacing book details the daily, seasonal rhythms of an early 19th-century New England farming family as they pack up their year's goods and journey to market.
🐎 Westward Expansion & Civil War (1800s)
Caddie Woodlawn 🏅 (Newbery Medal Winner)
Author: Carol Ryrie Brink (1935)
The History: Set on the Wisconsin frontier in the 1860s, this novel follows a vibrant tomboy navigating pioneer life and forging friendships with the neighboring Ho-Chunk (Winnebago) tribe amidst local frontier panics.
The Slave Dancer 🏅 (Newbery Medal Winner)
Author: Paula Fox (1973)
The History: A powerful, sober look at the maritime slave trade, telling the story of a white boy kidnapped and forced to play the fife aboard an illegal slave ship in 1840.
The Journal of Jesse Smoke: A Cherokee Boy (1838)
Series: My Name Is America | Author: Joseph Bruchac
The History: A deeply impactful diary tracking the tragic geography, cultural resilience, and harsh reality of the Cherokee nation's forced relocation along the Trail of Tears.
Josefina Montoya: An American Girl (1824)
Series: American Girl | Author: Valerie Tripp
The History: Showcases Spanish colonial and Mexican heritage in New Mexico, focusing on traditional rancho life and trading on the Santa Fe Trail before the Mexican-American War.
🏭 4. Industry, Immigration, & Turning Points (1900s)
Out of the Dust 🏅 (Newbery Medal Winner)
Author: Karen Hesse (1997)
The History: Written entirely in free-verse poetry, this masterpiece immerses readers into the grit, poverty, and raw determination of a young girl surviving the Oklahoma Dust Bowl during the Great Depression.
The Great Wheel 🏅 (Newbery Honor Book)
Author: Robert Lawson (1957)
The History: Follows an Irish immigrant boy who travels to Chicago and ends up working on the construction of the very first, massive Ferris Wheel for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition.
Grandfather’s Journey 🏅 (Caldecott Medal Winner)
Author: Allen Say (1993)
The History: A beautifully illustrated, cross-cultural memoir tracking a man's migration from Japan to the United States and back again, perfectly capturing the deep love for two countries and the immigrant's dual identity.
Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry 🏅 (Newbery Medal Winner)
Author: Mildred D. Taylor (1976)
The History: Set in rural Mississippi at the height of the Jim Crow era, this profound novel explores family unity, land ownership, and emotional autonomy in the face of deep-seated racial injustice.
🚂 2. Westward Expansion & A Divided Nation (1800s)
Kirsten Larson: An American Girl (1854)
Book to look for: Meet Kirsten by Janet Shaw.
The History: Chronicles the immigrant experience of a Swedish family carving out a new life, dealing with wilderness survival, a language barrier, and the hardships of pioneer farming on the Midwestern frontier.
The Journal of Wong Ming-Chung: A Chinese Miner (1852)
Series: My Name Is America
Author: Laurence Yep
The History: Chronicles a young boy who travels from China to California during the height of the Gold Rush, highlighting the extreme labor, engineering skills, and intense anti-immigrant discrimination faced by Chinese miners.
Addy Walker: An American Girl (1864)
Book to look for: Meet Addy by Connie Porter.
The History: A gripping look at a young girl’s courageous escape from slavery on a North Carolina plantation during the Civil War, followed by her family's struggle to build a new life as free citizens in Philadelphia.:
Prairie Songs 🏅 (Spur Award Winner / ALA Best Book for Young Adults)
Author: Pam Conrad (1985)
The History: Set on the stark, isolated Nebraska prairie, this beautifully written but haunting novel follows young Louisa, whose life is transformed by the arrival of a refined doctor and his wife from New York. Through their friendship, the book vividly portrays the stark beauty of the American frontier alongside the crushing loneliness, psychological toll, and severe hardships faced by homesteaders.
⚠️ Content Warning for Educators/Parents: This book deals with mature and heavy themes, including the tragic death of an infant and a character suffering from severe "prairie madness" who subsequently freezes to death in a blizzard. It is highly recommended for mature middle-schoolers or young adults (YA), and is best approached with opportunity for guided discussion.
🏭 Immigration, Industry, and World Conflict (1900s)
Samantha Parkington: An American Girl (1904)
Book to look for: Meet Samantha by Susan S. Adler.
The History: Set during the industrial boom of the Edwardian era, contrasting wealthy high society with the severe realities of the time, including child labor in factories, orphanages, and the early Women’s Suffrage movement.
Dreams in the Golden Country: The Diary of Zipporah Feldman (1903)
Series: Dear America
Author: Kathryn Lasky
The History: Follows a young Jewish immigrant girl arriving at Ellis Island from Russia, detailing life inside a crowded Lower East Side tenement house and the vibrant, bustling cultural mosaic of early 20th-century New York City.
Kit Kittredge: An American Girl (1934)
Book to look for: Meet Kit by Valerie Tripp.
The History: Captures the economic hardships of the Great Depression, focusing on how everyday families learned to adapt, scrimp, garden, and "make do" with minimal resources after sudden job losses.
The Journal of Ben Uchida: Citizen 13559 (1942)
Series: My Name Is America
Author: Barry Denenberg
The History: A deeply moving account of a Japanese-American boy whose family is forcibly removed from their California home following the attack on Pearl Harbor and placed behind barbed wire at the Mirror Lake Internment Camp.
Molly McIntire: An American Girl (1944)
Book to look for: Meet Molly by Valerie Tripp.
The History: Explores the American home front during World War II, illustrating ration books, scrap metal drives, victory gardens, and the emotional toll of having a parent deployed overseas as a military doctor.
The Little House on the Prairie Series🪵 The Little House Series (Chronological Order)
Little House in the Big Woods
Author: Laura Ingalls Wilder (1932)
The History: Set in the deep woods of Wisconsin in the early 1870s, this book introduces 4-year-old Laura and her pioneering family. It beautifully details the self-sufficient rhythm of frontier life, focusing on traditional food preservation, maple sugaring, storytelling, and the deep safety of family.
Farmer Boy
Author: Laura Ingalls Wilder (1933)
The History: Stepping away from the Ingalls family, this book chronicles the childhood of Laura’s future husband, Almanzo Wilder, growing up on a prosperous, established family farm in upstate New York in the late 1860s. It focuses heavily on 19th-century agricultural techniques, animal husbandry, and heavy seasonal labor.
Little House on the Prairie
Author: Laura Ingalls Wilder (1935)
The History: The Ingalls family packs their covered wagon and leaves Wisconsin, traveling southwest to settle in the Osage Diminished Reserve in Kansas. The narrative captures the intense physical labor of building a log house from scratch, surviving malaria, and encountering the local Osage people.
⚠️ Content Warning for Educators/Parents: This volume contains outdated colonial terminology, racial slurs, and highly prejudiced attitudes toward Native Americans expressed by frontier characters (specifically Ma Ingalls and the neighbor, Mr. Scott). It provides a crucial, though sensitive, entry point for discussing the historical realities of Manifest Destiny and indigenous displacement.
On the Banks of Plum Creek 🏅 (Newbery Honor Book)
Author: Laura Ingalls Wilder (1937)
The History: Set near Walnut Grove, Minnesota, the family experiences living in a sod dugout before building a wonderful new timber house. This book vividly captures the devastating economic impact of the 1870s Rocky Mountain locust plague, which destroyed entire seasons of frontier wheat crops overnight.
By the Shores of Silver Lake 🏅 (Newbery Honor Book)
Author: Laura Ingalls Wilder (1939)
The History: The family moves to the Dakota Territory just as the railroad boom begins. Laura witnesses the rapid transformation of the wilderness into a bustling railroad camp and eventually the birth of the town of De Smet, South Dakota, while adjusting to her sister Mary's sudden blindness.
The Long Winter 🏅 (Newbery Honor Book)
Author: Laura Ingalls Wilder (1940)
The History: A gripping masterclass in historical survival. It details the legendary, brutal Dakota winter of 1880–1881, during which a series of relentless blizzards cut off all railroad supply trains, leaving the town of De Smet to survive on the brink of starvation by grinding seed wheat in coffee mills and twisting slough grass for fuel.
Little Town on the Prairie 🏅 (Newbery Honor Book)
Author: Laura Ingalls Wilder (1941)
The History: Tracks the rapid social growth of De Smet as a settled community. A teenage Laura begins working as a seamstress in town to help pay for Mary's tuition at the College for the Blind, attends her first social socials, and earns her teaching certificate at age fifteen.
These Happy Golden Years 🏅 (Newbery Honor Book)
Author: Laura Ingalls Wilder (1943)
The History: Chronicles Laura's time teaching school at a lonely, distant settlement, her courtship with Almanzo Wilder, and their eventual marriage. It serves as the traditional, heartwarming conclusion to Laura's childhood journey.
The First Four Years
Author: Laura Ingalls Wilder (Published posthumously in 1971)
The History: Found as an unedited draft after Laura’s death, this shorter, more adult-toned book covers the early years of Laura and Almanzo's marriage, dealing with severe debt, a devastating house fire, crop failures, and the joy of their daughter Rose's birth.
📖 Recommended Non-Fiction Companions
Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder 🏅 (Pulitzer Prize Winner)
Author: Caroline Fraser (2017)
The History: An incredible, thoroughly researched adult biography that unpacks the gritty, unvarnished truth of the Ingalls family's poverty, the severe environmental cycles of the Great Plains, and how Laura and her daughter, Rose Wilder Lane, collaborated to transform hard-edged memories into cozy children’s classics. Great background reading for the teacher!
The Little House Cookbook
Author: Barbara M. Walker (1979)
The History: An educational treasure trove for homeschool lessons. It features over 100 authentic recipes based on the foods mentioned in the series (from hasty pudding to pancake men), complete with historical descriptions of 19th-century cooking tools and pioneering methods.