The Secret at Jefferson's Mansion
β Scribed by Roy, Ron
- Publisher
- Random House Children's Books
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 2 MB
- Series
- Capital Mystery 11
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780307477927
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
It's a red, white, and blue mystery from popular A to Z Mysteries author Ron Roy!
The Secret at Jefferson's Memorial
In the eleventh book of the Capital Mysteries--an early chapter book mystery series featuring fun facts and famous sites from Washington, D.C.--KC and Marshall are painting a closet in the White House when they come across a forgotten cubbyhole. Hidden inside is an old box of homemade toy horses that one belonged to Thomas Jefferson! KC and Marshall take the historic treasure to Jefferson's home, Monticello, but right after they get there, the box - with all the horses inside - is stolen! How did a thief snatch the horses from right under everyone's noses? KC and Marshall are going to find out!
Each book highlights one of the famous museums, buildings, or monuments from the Washington area and includes a map and a two-page fun fact spread with photographs. Parents, teachers, and librarians agree that these highly collectible chapter...
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Trixie's summer is going to be sooo boring with her two older brothers away at camp. But then a millionaire's daughter moves into the next-door mansion, an old miser hides a fortune in his decrepit house, and a runaway kid starts hiding out in Sleepyside! *From the Hardcover edition.*
The novelβs seamless intertwining of the charactersβ lives with contemporary Philippine and Chinese history brings to life the so-called First Quarter Storm of student activism and the formation of the New Peopleβs Army in the Philippines, and Chinaβs Cultural Revolution in the late 1960s and early
**The untold story of Thomas Jefferson's slave children** Beverly, Harriet, Madison, and Eston are Thomas Jefferson's children by one of his slaves, Sally Hemings, and while they do get special treatment - better work, better shoes, even violin lessons - they are still slaves, and are never to