Federal Hall in New York, the country’s first federal capitol, where the Bill of Rights was debated and passed 1789.
You can find a printer friendly version of the Bill of Rights to place in Chapter 5 of your notebooks HERE.
You can read a bit more about them HERE.
The Bill of Rights are housed in the National Archives building in Washington, DC. You can view a copy online in their Digital Vault HERE. Just type 'Bill of Rights' into the search box.
There are also a couple of YouTube videos that could be helpful to you. One is called Mr. Rupert Bill of Rights. It has some movie clips and clips from comedians and contemporary cartoon shows that are not all of my taste. That's why I didn't post the clip! It's not too bad, just fair warning.
The other video is a 2 part series produced by the Freedom Project. It is very thorough and detailed teaching a little mini class on the Bill of Rights. Just keep in mind the bias of the organization that produced these videos. They are a very conservative group that has an online Classical school. It's just good to know a groups bias even if it's one you share!
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