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(H)our History Lesson: Lewistown, Montana: Comparing and Connecting WWII Home Front cities

Black and white photo of a large military truck driving in front of an airport hangar
Photograph of the Airport in Lewistown, Montana during World War II.  Pictured is one of the airfield’s hangars, 1942-1943

Credit: Lewistown Public Library; Central Montana Historical Photographs

About this Lesson

This lesson is part of a series teaching about the World War II home front, with Lewistown, Montana designated as an American World War II Heritage City. The lesson contains photographs, two readings, optional media activity, and a culminating mastery project. The first reading shares a brief summary of Lewistown’s contributions as a Heritage City, and the second reading connects the region to the designation of a Heritage City. There is a media activity to watch a local news clip highlighting the city’s designation. The culminating project contributes to learners’ understandings of the city as a WWII Heritage City, with the opportunity to combine lesson themes from the three other lessons in the Lewistown lesson collection. This is to summarize the city’s contributions and encourage connections to the overall U.S. home front efforts.

To see more World War II resources, see the Teaching with Historic Places' WWII Page.

Objectives:

In a culminating product:

  1. Identify important World War II home front locations and organizations in Lewistown, Montana and describe their historical significance
  2. Explain the significance of the Lewistown Army Airfield in the training of B-17 Flying Fortress crews and Allied Forces successes
  3. Summarize the contributions and volunteerism of Lewistown civilians
  4. Describe life on the home front for children and their contributions within Lewistown, Montana
  5. Optional: Describe similarities and differences of Lewistown and other Heritage city(s) / World War II home front(s).

Materials for Students:

  1. Photos
  2. Readings 1, 2 & media activity link
  3. Maps, project materials (as needed)
  4. Student graphic organizers (See photo 5 at end of lesson, for reference)

Black and white overhead photo of the tarmac  with a plane in the bottom left hand corner
Photograph of the Airport in Lewistown, Montana during World War II. The airfield was used for training pilots;” 1942.

Credit: Lewistown Public Library; Central Montana Historical Photographs

Getting Started: Essential Question

Why was Lewistown chosen as an American World War II Heritage City, and what are its similarities and differences to other home front cities?

Quotation to consider:

“When they very first started, they flew one of the B-17s over Main Street in Lewistown, which didn't take very long, but with the bomb doors open and everything, I can't imagine how excited those people were at that time and how welcoming they must have been to all of our servicemen to come and train . . . The history would have been different. The war would have ended differently and it [Norden bombsight] developing out of something that looks like a small little shack that made such a huge impact; to me is inspiring.”

- Doug Day, member of the Lewistown Historic Preservation Board, quoted in “Lewistown named Montana’s only WWII American Heritage City,” August 18, 2023, Montana Right Now

Read to Connect

Questions for Reading 1 and 2, Photos

  1. What was the purpose of the bill (H.R. 6118) according to the report?

  1. Why do you think Lewistown, Montana was designated as a World War II Heritage City? Connect details from the bill and the first reading.

  1. Are there other cities you think of when considering home front contributions during wartime? Which, and why?

Media Activity

Heritage City Local News Coverage

Watch the local news clip (2:54) about Lewistown’s Heritage City designation.

(Date: August 18, 2023, by Nonstop Local, of Central and Western Montana)

  • What imagery and details stood out to you in the news clip? How does this connect to the history you have learned about Lewistown?

  • Are there other details you would have included in the news story to describe the home front contributions of Lewistown?

Rubric with one column labeled "Areas for Improvement," one labeled "Proficient: Meeting Standards," and "Areas of Exceeding Standards"
Single-Point Rubric (Standards; Blank) [Teacher selects priority standards for assessment.]

Courtesy of Sarah Nestor Lane

Culminating Activity/Mastery Product

To demonstrate student understanding, support students in creating a final product that meets the following objectives:

  1. Identify important World War II home front locations and organizations in Lewistown, Montana and describe their historical significance
  2. Explain the significance of the Lewistown Army Airfield in the training of B-17 Flying Fortress crews and Allied Forces successes
  3. Summarize the contributions and volunteerism of Lewistown civilians
  4. Describe life on the home front for children and their contributions within Lewistown, Montana
  5. Optional: Describe similarities and differences of Lewistown and other Heritage city(s) / World War II home front(s).

Mastery products should be:

. . . student-led; Students work as individuals or in collaborative groups.

. . . student-directed; Students are offered a variety of choices for product type.

. . . student-organized; Teacher facilitates by providing students with the comparison matrices and/or resource links from throughout the series of lessons.

. . . student-assessed; Teacher supports student self-assessment and reflection by providing students single-point rubrics to assess for meeting standards and/or lesson objectives.

Note: Depending on time and scope, the comparison of Lewistown to another WWII Heritage or home front city(s) within the mastery product (objectives) may be omitted. However, comparing cities is recommended, as it connects students to a deeper understanding of the WWII home front.

Examples of mastery product choices include, but are not limited to:

  • Written: Letter (opinion or informative), essay, poem, narratives, biography, articles, class book or children’s book, speech or debate (then presented orally), blog / website, plaque or historical displays, pamphlets or rack cards

  • Graphic Organizers: timeline, flowcharts, mind or concept content maps, Venn diagrams, comparison matrices, posters

  • Artistic Expression: song, dance, theater (ex. skits), 3-D models, dioramas, photo journal, stamp and coin designs, visual art, architecture/building or monument, museum design

  • Media design and creation: podcast, historical markers, social media content, interactive virtual maps or tours, infographics, video, comic strips or graphics, game design, slideshows, digital scrapbook

Please view the American World War II Heritage City Lesson Page for information and resources on other cities.


This lesson was written by Sarah Nestor Lane, an educator and consultant with the Cultural Resources Office of Interpretation and Education, funded by the National Council on Public History's cooperative agreement with the National Park Service.


Part of a series of articles titled Lewistown, Montana, WWII Heritage City Lessons.

Last updated: September 18, 2024