Thursday, May 7, 2026

The Month of May: Living By the Seasons - Daily 18th Century Life

Here we are in May...and planting season is nigh.
Let's look at 18th century daily life as it may have been in the month of May
This is one of my most favorite memes of all-time.
You may have seen it before on other blog posts of mine,  and I am sure this won't be the last time I will be including it.
Just let its words sink in a little - it seems today many parents are afraid to teach their children to plant and to do seasonal activities.  They'd rather have them play video games to keep them quiet.
And keep them clean.
Sad.
I am grateful my own children  (now all adults)  have the spirit of the past within them,  and I hope to plant that same seed in the minds of my grandchildren.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Now let's get into...
                                                                         The Month of MAY
According to The Complete Farmer and Rural Economist  (written by Thomas Green Fessenden and published in 1835):
Attend to your pastures.  Do not turn cattle into pasture ground too early in the spring,  but let the grass have a chance to start a little before it is bitten close to the soil.  The 26th of May is early enough...
Cleanse your cellars,  as well as the rest of your premises from all putrescent and other offensive and unwholesome substances.  
 
(The following quote below was taken directly from the book,  "The American Farmer in the 18th Century"  by Richard Bushman).
"God called men and women to perform particular tasks or work in this life:  women were invariably called to be housewives and mothers,  and men were called to specific work as farmers,  carpenters,  store owners,  coopers,  and so on.  This was the colonial thought process."  
This is,  for the most part,  undeniable.  There are some  in our modern times who may not like or agree with that thought process,  for it goes against their contemporary 21st century sensibilities,  but it certainly was the way life was a couple of centuries ago.
Mid-April photo~
My wife and our granddaughter checking out the remnants of the kitchen garden.  After a successful growing season last year,  we are beginning to plan for 2026.  There is plenty of preparation to be done before sowing can begin,  including tilling the soil.
Also in this picture you can see one of my grandsons roaming about.  He's a gamer in modern life,  but while at the cabin,  not once did he ask if he could play a video game.  That's what happens when one spends time with children.  Please check out last month  (click HERE)  to see how our grandkids kept busy as any colonial children may have done.
Springtime truly is the season of rebirth,  and not just for animals,  for thoughts for the majority of the populace in 18th century America was the need to accomplish a successful growing season.  In those long ago days,  Spring was considered a time for preparing for the rest of the year;  a time for a new beginning.  A time for leaving the winter darkness and cold behind to look toward sunny warmth and renewal...rebirth.  It would set the pace for the rest of the year.
Generally,  it was in the month of May when plowing,  harrowing,  and sowing would,  once again,  be on a farmer's agenda  (I encourage you to click the April link at the bottom of this post or the link in the picture comment above  - to see chores and jobs of an 18th century April - there is always some overlapping).  
Caring for the pregnant farm animals was also a top priority,  for this would ensure continued generations of cattle,  pigs,  sheep,  and horses...maybe goats...all necessary to run a farm. 
Plowing the fields.
The process of plowing is an unbroken link to the past,  a link of which is still carried on today,  though with much greater ease than in days of old.  The plow,  of course,  breaks up and turns over the soil to make it smoother for planting.  A plow is one of the oldest farm tools,  beginning with something little more than a strong stick in the BC and early AD period,  then eventually molded into the more familiar plows closer to our time. 
The best ancient historic plowing I've seen yet,  depicting  the way it was done 2000 years ago.
(From the series  The Chosen)

To this plow 1800 years later:
The plow pictured here is from 1775 and is made of wood.
Back and forth,  walking literally mile after mile.  Arms,  as use to plowing as they are,  will still ache nightly,  and they ache even worse come the next morning when the farmer,  once again,  will find himself behind a plow horse or two in the cool of the morning air,  digging the mould-board plow into the ground to turn up - "till" - the soil that had laid dormant and frozen all the long winter.
Men would often hold plowing contests in the spring in which they vied to compete to see who could plow the straightest furrow in the shortest time.
Harrowing in colonial times
(Photo courtesy of Colonial Williamsburg)
It was after plowing that the farmer would use the harrow,  which was comprised of a wooden - sometimes metal - frame with iron or wooden pegs.  The purpose of a harrow was used to break up the ground after plowing or to mix soil and newly sown seed together,  making for better planting and growth.  Back across the field the farmer would go,  and when he finished in one direction,  he would harrow  (or drag)  the field crosswise to smooth it further.  It was a repetitive process:  fields were plowed,  then harrowed,  plowed again and then harrowed again.  Sometimes a farmer would harrow three or four times to break up the earth.
It was the harrow that convinced Henry Ford to create historic Greenfield Village.  This occurred around the WWI era that,  in part,  due to his strong pacifism during that  "Great War,"  and given that Ford knew little about history as taught in schools,  a number of newspaper articles were published expressing Mr. Ford's anti-war sentiment,  called him an anarchist,  among other things,  and quoted him as saying,  "History is more or less bunk..."  which has been repeated often ever since.  What most folks don't know is that this  "bunk "  comment was stated for reasons other than what the press said.  It is here that I quote from the book,  A Home For Our Heritage by Geoffery C. Upward:  "...what  (Ford)  meant and explained many times in later years was that written history reflected little of people's day-to-day existence.  'History as it is taught in the schools deals largely with...wars,  major political controversies,  territorial extensions and the like.  When I went to our American history books to learn how our forefathers harrowed the land,  I discovered that the historians knew nothing about harrows.  Yet our country depended more on harrows than on guns or great speeches.  I thought a history which excluded harrows and all the rest of daily life is bunk and I think so yet.' "
Hear!  Hear!
So,  plowing and harrowing done,  next up in our May chores is sowing  (planting).
Planting the crop was a critical step with no room for error.  For hundreds of years,  farmers sowed grain by hand;   shouldering a bag of seed,  the farmer walked up and down the tilled field,  fingering the seeds from side to side.  Oftentimes he may be on his hands and knees,  dropping seeds into the soil a few at a time,  or perhaps transplanting vegetable plants that were started indoors during the later winter to get a head start.  The farmers who sowed the seed had special skills in these operations.
"On spring-plowed fields it was heavy traveling for the man who carried grain and sowed by hand.  Of course,  it was heavy work,  even traveling over fall-plowed ground,  with the grain hung over the shoulders,  and the steady swing of the right arm throwing the grain as the right foot advanced,  and dipping the hand into the bag for another cast of grain as the left foot advanced."
Or bent over,  hands and knees,  face near the dirt,  fingering a few seeds at a time...two seeds won't work,  nor will three or four...best put in five...
Then there's transplanting those of which had a head start.
Day after day.
No matter which,  it was dirty,  slow,  and back-breaking work.
Sowing in the kitchen garden
The special skill resulted in the seed being sown evenly leaving no bare areas.  Missing a section of a field could cause a huge problem:  no seed in the ground,  no crop.
But the sowing process and outcome could sometimes be frustrating at best.  There is an old proverb that I recall hearing in my youth from my own farming grandfather that best describes the planting of seeds:
One for the mouse,
one for the crow,
one to rot,
and one to grow.
Yep...best plant maybe five or six seeds per hole.
The sack in this photo is filled with flax seeds to plant to eventually be used for linen,  for flax is a plant that is grown for its fibers.

Planting flax~
Matthew Patton,  a New Hampshire farmer,  planted flax on May 18,  1787,  and recorded in his diary:  "I sowed about 1 of a bushel of flax seed and I suppose near as many pease."   
The very same day,  150 miles away in Hallowell,  Maine,  Martha Ballard's husband was engaged in similar work:  "Clear...Mr.  Ballard ploughed flax in,"  she wrote.  Since the seed was light,  it took skill to distribute it evenly and well. 
~For more information on flax and other textile/fiber arts,  please click HERE ~

In 18th-century New England,  corn  (maize) - also known as Indian corn -  was typically planted in May,  often stretching into early June,  to avoid the last spring frosts.  Following Native American techniques,  planters often waited until the oak leaves were the size of a mouse's ear and oftentimes used alewives  (herring)  as fertilizer,  planting in hills when possible to maximize yields.  Not only corn but peas,  oats,  buckwheat,  and probably most other grains and vegetables.  While early planting was dangerous due to potential rotting in cold,  wet soil,  the month of May was the standard window,  with some planting continuing through early June.
The men plow the fields with horses,  and they set the maize by hand in neat and even rows.  Within a few weeks the fields hold spears of Indian corn,  less than an inch high.
Now,  "maize was the recognized name for corn derived from the Spanish form of the TaĆ­no Indian tribal word mahis  (meaning corn),  while English settlers in North America adopted the phrase  Indian corn  to distinguish it from the generic European term  corn,  which referred to local staples like wheat or oats,  for,  you see,  in the 18th century,  the word corn generally referred to any common,  staple cereal grain—most notably the aforementioned wheat and oats,  as well as rye and barley—rather than the American crop known as maize or  Indian corn."
Whew...got it?
If not,  perhaps re-read it.
Also,  later May is a good time to plant pumpkins,  sometimes utilizing the Three Sisters method.
"The Three Sisters planting method is an indigenous companion planting system using corn,  beans,  and squash together to maximize space and finding a better soil.  Corn provides a sort of trellis for climbing beans,  beans help to fertilize the soil,  and squash covers the ground,  acting as a sort of living mulch to conserve moisture and suppress weeds."
Each pumpkin seed placed in the ground by hand...
Our corn usually doesn't do too well...

"Rog.  Sunday.  After meeting,  we all walked our boundaries,"  wrote Noah Blake in his diary on May 19,  1805.
Now here is something I was not familiar with until recently.  "Rog.  Sunday,"  as Noah wrote,  is actually Rogation Sunday,  which was the day when farmers looked to their land and crops and prayed for a bountiful harvest.  It was on this day when the clergy and his flock walked through the village and out into the fields to bless the planted ground.  In the evening of Rogation Sunday,  farmers and their families walked the boundaries of their own property;  it was a time for giving thanks for the crop that should grow on their land.
Rogation Sunday,  which was the day when farmers looked to their land and crops and have the local minister pray for a bountiful harvest.
I like that we celebrate the old holydays.
"In the 18th century,  Rogation Sunday  (the Sunday before Ascension Day - also known as the 6th Sunday of Easter)  and the subsequent Rogation Days  (days of prayer and fasting in Western Christianity)  marked a significant period for rural communities,  focusing on blessing crops,  praying for good harvests,  and reinforcing boundaries through processions,  which involved walking the perimeter,  reciting psalms,   all while observing fasting and meatless meals as acts of supplication."
Rogation Sunday typically occurs in May,  though it can occasionally fall at the very end of April.  It is the fifth Sunday after Easter  (or the 6th Sunday beginning with Easter)   Many colonials observed Rogation Days in the 18th century,  a tradition brought from England.
These Rogation holydays were ancient church festivals to seek blessings for a community and its sustenance.  The word rogation comes from the Latin verb rogare,  meaning  "to ask,"  which reflects the beseeching of God for protection from calamities.
The core purpose of Rogation Days was and is to ask for God's blessing on crops,  agriculture,  and to pray for protection from natural disasters.  That's it in a nutshell.  This was particularly relevant in a largely agrarian society of the 18th century.
Catholics and some Protestant churches,  particularly the Anglican churches,  also celebrated Rogation Sunday and Rogation Days in the 18th century. 
In essence,  the specific details of the celebrations might have varied between different Protestant denominations,  though the community's well-being in prayer was always present. 

As the days of May went by,  the farm families of the 18th century were genuinely excited to see the fresh-grown asparagus from the kitchen garden popping through the dirt and reaching toward the sky. 
In the 1700s,  asparagus was both a prized food and a medicinal herb,  and was frequently grown in kitchen gardens,  as was what you see here.  It was known for its diuretic properties  (in the 18th century,  diuretics were primarily used to treat  "dropsy" - edema/fluid retention - by stimulating kidney function).  It was believed that asparagus purified the blood,  and was a necessary part of a garden.
Spears of asparagus shooting up through the ground,  reaching for the sky.

Freshly picked late April/early May lay on the Daggett table~~~

Bundling asparagus - tying them together in a bundle before cooking - was one way they would have cooked them back in the 1700s, and was likely done to make it easier to handle and retrieve the asparagus from the boiling water. Bundles also ensured that the asparagus cooked more evenly and that the stalks remained intact during cooking.

Chopping a few spears up,  perhaps for a stew of some sort.

Speaking of planting,  did you know that our first President,  George Washington,  was a fan of Jethro Tull?
It's true!
Though it wasn't until the late 18th century and into the 19th century that the seed drill's popularity grew,  it was Jethro Tull,  an English agriculturalist,  who is credited with inventing that first practical planting machine back in 1701,  allowing farmers to plant their crop much easier and more uniform,  if they had the money to buy one.   Though I do not know whether or not he owned a seed drill,  George Washington did own a book called  "Horse-Hoeing Husbandry"  written by Jethro Tull,  and Washington became a practitioner of Tull's ideas.
I think it would be kind of funny for me,  as one from the 21st century,   to see and hear George Washington having a conversation about Jethro Tull!
On the left we see the original cover of the Jethro Tull agricultural book that George Washington swore by,  and on the right we have Ian Anderson,  founding member and flautist of the rock group Jethro Tull,  performing at the grave of the original Jethro Tull.



Not much left in the root cellar
(photo courtesy of Hobby Farms)
As the daylight increases as the month of May continues on,  hens begin to lay eggs faster.  And with calving season taking place in the earlier part of the year,  the cows are giving plenty of milk.  By May,  diets transitioned from stored winter foods and fruits that were dried,  pickled,  or oftentimes preserved with methods of vinegar,  to later May giving fresh spring produce,  featuring early greens like spinach,  asparagus,  and lettuce,  herbs,  and even enjoying lamb and veal,  meaning if one of the calves didn't make it,  they were not to be wasted.  Common 18th century meals included stews,  fresh fish  (cod,  salmon - depending where you lived),  poultry,  and dairy.  Cooking heavily utilized rendered pork fat,  and meals often relied
Smoked and salted meat
 on bread,  butter,  and pickles.
In the meat category,  besides lamb and veal,  ham was popular since it was getting warmer,  and whatever was left in the smokehouse wasn't likely to keep much longer.  The sow has farrowed and now piglets were to be raised.  
There could be a suckling pig to eat for Sunday dinner.  There could still be fresh beef maybe,  but most probable there wouldn't be any left.  Salted beef would be much more likely.  



Being that it's May,  and the weather is getting warmer,  it's time to give the sheep a haircut!
Sheep shearing done by hand.

Sheep Shearing at Colonial Williamsburg
(found on the CW page a number of years ago - no name listed)
Written in 1765:  "The proper time to shear your sheep is in the increase of the moon,  in May;  and,  if you have the conveniency,  make a pen near some water course or pond,  and wash your sheep before you shear them:  As soon as they are washed turn them into a small enclosure that has plenty of grass,  and let them run on it two or three days,  or until you see the fatty or oily substance shedding amongst the wool.  Then is the proper time to shear them,  for that is a great preservation to the wool."
Wool after being shorn from the sheep.
Shearing sheep is usually done only once a year so that the sheep are free of their heavy wool coats for the hot summer months.  You would not want to shear the animals too early in the spring,  however,  for fear of freezing weather for the animals.  Going from a full thick winter wool coat to almost no coat can be a bit stressful,  and more so if the weather hits a late season cold spell.  But,  since lambing occurs in the late spring or early summer,  shearing often takes place anywhere from late April or early May,  if one lives in the middle colonies,  or possibly into mid-to-later May or even early June if the chore is done in the northern colonies.  Most farmers prefer to have their sheep sheared before lambing commences - usually about a month before.  The ewes are still a few weeks away from full pregnancy so the process is a little easier on them.  
A sheep without her fleece is pretty naked looking!  This annual ritual also has the benefit of producing salable wool or,  if you're like my wife,  spinning it herself on her spinning wheel to make yarn.  During the American Revolutionary War,  homespun textiles were associated with domestic necessity and patriotism,  as the idea of  American independence was merged with self-sufficiency,  which was often expressed as a goal.  Like tea,  boycotting the importation of wool wasn't a problem if one could process,  spin,  and then weave or knit it.
Spinning wool into yarn...

How about the ever-popular  "spring cleaning"  ritual?
Springtime is here...
Though it may not have been called  "spring cleaning"  at the time,  oftentimes there was a  "turning out of the winter dirt"  when warmer weather finally hit after months of winter;  an annual spring cleaning as we know it to be,  if only by action and not by name.  
The constant fires for cooking and warmth combined with long hours of candlelight all winter long deposited ashes,  smoke,  and soot on nearly every surface...the kitchen had been the center of activity for months,  and the remnants of spinning,  sewing,  whittling,  cooking,  and other wintertime activities are in desperate need to be cleared away.  The great hall,  shut up during the cold weather months,  was also in dire need of a cleaning as well,  many times due to inactivity,  mice droppings,  and the lack of a going over before being closed up last fall.  Colonial houses were inadequately swept,  certainly by today's standards,  for there were no brooms made of broomcorn yet,  so they did a  "meh"  job at best.
Knowing that sweeping floors is a primary function of cleaning,  we must remember it wasn't always thought of in that manner:
Brooms of Colonial Williamsburg
Picture courtesy of  LeeAnn Ewer
"American brooms were hand made prior to 1797.  They were an unrefined round broom made from fibrous materials such as grass,   straw or hay,  fine twigs or corn husks.  The broom sweep was tied onto a tree branch for a handle.   Cordage used to tie the broom was retted from hemp and flax.  Rougher fibers were used to make the cordage that tied a broom.  The refined fibers were used for linens.
Cooking at the time was often done in a large open fireplace,  so dust and ashes were a factor of life.  Wood was carried inside the home for heat and cooking.  Dust,  debris and ash were always left behind from this chore.  The homemade brooms swept as clean as could be at the home & hearth and kept the rooms a more pleasant place to be.
The unrefined brooms were inferior and fell apart easily.  Their crude nature did not allow them to sweep well.  Changes started to come about in the form of a farmer from Massachusetts in 1797."
Levi Dickenson used the tassels from his harvested sorghum to make a broom.  His sorghum broom  "swept better than previous materials used,  but the broom still fell apart after a time of use."
     Now,  to give wooden floors a deeper cleaning,  the wife or servant could scour it with sand,  using a brush or a cloth.  This job of physical labor may have been done by the same poor women who did other people's laundry,  so there is not much written about it.  The only information comes from the household accounts of wealthy homes and a couple of 18th century domestic advice manuals written by housekeepers.
In 1753 Mary Johnson gave her views on best practices in cleaning.  She described herself as a  "Superintendent of a Lady of Quality's Family"  (in York,  England).  "Housemaids working under her may have found her high standards a little daunting.  Her book,  Madam Johnson's Present,  tells us how  "very industrious"  they should be.  She wanted them to use sand for scrubbing dirty stoneware,  the outside of copper pots,  pewter  (using sand mixed with lye),  and more,  but they must never use sand on wooden dressers."
In that same book,  floor cleaning is explained at length.  If you were going to clean a wooden floor you must start the night before by putting ox-gall,  which is still used today,  on greasy spots.  Next morning a  "strong hot Lye,  made of Wood-Ashes"  went on the whole floor.  After spreading clean sand over that,  the maid was to get on her knees and scour the boards with a hard brush.
"A second tour of the floor with a clean cloth was required before the final wipe with yet another cloth to speed up drying and keep the wood light in color.  Then they were through except for oiling the skirting boards,  as long as the floor wasn't dirty enough to need a longer treatment with more sand and cold water."
This picture and the one below are actually of a scene from the John Adams 
mini-series showing Abigail Adams scrubbing the floor of their home.  
In actuality,  the Adams'  had a servant to do this sort of work.
Note that she is putting  (I believe)  water on the floor,  and right after  (as the 
scene continued)  she poured some liquid from the bottle - possibly ox-gall? - sitting 
near her over the same spot.
Mrs.  Adams then began to scrub the floor with what looked like a brick.
I've searched for information about using a brick to scrub the floor,  to no avail.  
Perhaps she did not have a hard brush readily available?
From the blog Boston 1775:
"The Adams’  never had slaves,  but as a genteel family they were used to having servants.  There are letters John and Abigail exchanged in 1764 as they were setting up their household and hiring help.  There is  (also)   a receipt from Rachel Marsh,  who received  “one pound six shillings and eight pence lawful money for a quarters wages”  from Abigail in May 1765.  Most modern Americans are unfamiliar,  even uncomfortable,  with the idea of personal servants,  but that was an essential element of eighteenth-century genteel life.  John Adams did work in his fields.  Abigail did clean her house.  But they didn’t do that work all alone."
Now,  though there were housekeepers who were hired to do house cleaning,  in general,  farms were somewhat dirtier,  with more bugs and mice droppings,  and a bit smelly,  too.  Doors that did not shut tightly,  those floors without rugs or carpets,  and large open fireplaces guaranteed that dust,  dirt,  insects,  rodents,  even barnyard animals,  would invade the house.  Manure from the barn & stables and the mud of fall & winter covering the soles of shoes are now ground into the floors and rugs,  firewood chips and slivers lie throughout,  especially in corners.
This is not to say,  however,  that they did not clean,  during the shut up winter month. They did,  but usually not too deep of a cleaning for they had too much other work to do.
By May,  the want to remove the dirt of winter from the rest of the house would have commenced in other areas,  including  the cleaning of chimneys of the soot build up,  and pantries & bins to help keep it as clear of bugs and rodents as possible.
The bedchamber of the more urban and
prosperous Giddings family.
And feather beds would have been aired outside for a couple days so each side could be moistened by the dew and dried by the sun.
Beds and bedding were a bit different in the colonial period as compared to today.  A prosperous American of the 18th century slept on a bed made up of several layers.  At the bottom was a simple,  firm  “mattress”  pad or cushion filled with corn husks or horsehair.  Next came a big featherbed for comfort,  plus feather-filled bolsters and pillows.  People who lived on farms,  or close to them,  may have made their own from goose and duck feathers,  while town- and city-folk could have bought professionally made feather mattresses from someone like Betsy Ross  (yes,  she made these as well).
Besides the featherbeds,  blankets and linens,  too,  were to be washed and hung out for drying.
"Spring is particularly the time for house cleaning and bleaching linen"  states a quote I found,  though I do not know the year of it.
Scrubbing cloth on the scrub board~
Each room of the house is emptied and scrubbed and freshened with new whitewash and the furniture rubbed and polished.  Susan Leslie recalled her mother awaking before dawn to begin her housecleaning.  “The two parlors,  dining room,  entry and staircase are all carefully and thoroughly swept before six o’clock.  She then calls up her domestics,  if they are not already up.”
Heavy drapery is to be taken down and be replaced with the summer curtains,  fresh blinds replace the filthy ones that have taken on the winter's grime,  and the windows need to be washed.
Woolen clothing worn for weeks on unwashed bodies did not smell their best.  Flannel undergarments began to itch instead of providing comfort.
From 1812  (just barely into the 19th century,  so I suppose we can use it),  there is a letter written by Anne Kane to her mother as she described the effect of spring cleaning:  "...we have been so engaged in white washing and cleaning house and such a large smoky house as ours with so much woodwork that I have been fatigued to death both in mind and body."
Meanwhile,  outside the house,  the banking around the foundation,  put there the previous fall,  would be decaying at this point,  harboring mice and other vermin amid the hay,  dirt,  leaves,  and rotted vegetable matter,  and needed to be pulled away.
However,  for those who chose to farm,  I note a line I found in the Benson Ford Research Center Daggett House information folder:
"While sanitation was not unknown,  most  (farmers)  felt no urgency about cleaning up.  In fact,  hardworking farm families saw dirt as something positive,  even healthy,  as it gave life and livelihood in the form of crops."
Cleaning was not the top priority,  not just for looks but for survival.  Those who lived in the 18th century did understand what caused diseases or infections,  but they were understanding that cleanliness was important in keeping many such health risks at bay.

May was quite the busy month.  Whereas in our modern times,  folks dream for a sunny day to perhaps plant a garden,  not out of necessity but more of being a hobby,  take a walk,  go shopping,  and maybe even carry on the ancient tradition of spring cleaning.  But I do hope this post,  and the others in this series  (so far)  will help you to understand the daily lives of our early American ancestors.

Until next time,  see you in time. 


This monthly series will be a year in the making.
To check out my first two months in this,  please check out the links below.
For the month of March,  please click HERE
For the month of April,  please click HERE
To learn about ancient farming practices,  please click HERE

The following are links to our spring 18th century daily life cabin excursions.
~To read about our 2021 springtime excursion at the cabin - click HERE
~To read about our 2022 spring excursion at the cabin - please click HERE
~To read about our 2023 spring excursion at the cabin  (Rogation Sunday) - please click HERE
~To read about our 2024 spring excursion at the cabin - please click HERE
~To read about our 2024 late spring with just Patty & I - click HERE 
~To read about our 2025 spring/early May Rogation Sunday excursion - please click HERE
~To read about our 2025 Memorial Day/Late May visit,  please click HERE
~To read about our 2026 late winter/early spring visit,  please click HERE
~To read about our 2026 early spring with two of our grandkids,  please click HERE  (scroll down a bit
We have actually spent a total of 36 days experiencing life in the 18th century at this cabin.  And,  God willing,  these adventures will continue for a long time to come.
In the links here I centered on our spring visits,  since this posting centers on the spring month of May.  To see other colonial cabin excursions,  please check out the links in the cabin posts here.

Sources for this post include:
Seasons of America Past by Eric Sloane
Holidays and Celebrations in Colonial America by Russell Roberts
Early Farm Life by Lise Gunby
The American Farmer in the 18th Century by Richard Lyman Bushman  (though not nearly as much of this book is actually about farming practices of the time as I had hoped...it is a bit of a let down)
Diary of an Early American Boy by Eric Sloane
Diary of Mary Cooper
Some information came from my presenter friends at Historic Greenfield Village as well as Colonial Williamsburg 

I do not hide the fact that much of what you have read came,  word for word in some cases,  from the above sources.











































~~ -- ~~

Friday, May 1, 2026

Patriot's Day for 2026: 251st Lexington & Concord: Every Picture Tells A Story

"Every picture tells a story"  I stole from Rod Stewart.  That's because in previous posts on this event I gave the history of what occurred.  So,  aside from a few bits here and there,  I'll let the pictures tell the story.
Last year - 2025 - was the 250th anniversary of the Battles of Lexington & Concord.
This year,  of course,  it's the 251st anniversary.
This year is also America's Semiquincentennial - America 250 - of the Declaration of Independence.  Meaning a year-long celebration of being American!
And I'm a ready teddy!
Group shot~
Thank you to the many photographers for taking so many wonderful pictures!
Lisa Arseneau
Barb Baldinger
Charlotte Bauer
Karen DeCoster/KDC
Karen Dunnam
Michele & Stu Eddy
Brent Kemmer
Jennifer Long
Marko Tomko
Knute Wales
Chris White - Representative of the Detroit Metro Chapter SAR  (Sons of the American Revolution)

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The official flyer for 2026~
Well,  we did it again!
Last year,  2025,  was our commemoration of the 250th anniversary of the beginning of the American Revolution,  and it went like gangbusters - better than I could ever imagine  (click HERE).
This year?
Man!
We did it again!
After a week of pretty fair weather - sun and 60s & 70s temps - the night before the event we had rain.
Of course!
But on the morning of,  the rain ended.  It remained cloudy all day,  and the temperature was on the cooler side...in the lower-to-mid-50s - but it stayed dry!
Imagine my happy surprise when I showed up about 90 minutes early and there were already two dozen or more reenactors there for this one day event.  I mean,  that's probably my biggest worry:  how many participants will show.  One never knows...but perhaps the idea of this year being America's 250th birthday added to the excitement of celebrating our great US history.  We know last year - 2025 - was the 250th of Lexington & Concord,  which we did up very well,  but this year is the Semiquincentennial of our country!
It wasn't just the large amount of reenactors that showed up,  but a great many spectators also came out as well!  I believe for both this was one of our grandest Patriot's Day events yet!
And none of it could have been done without the help of so many people,  especially the reenactors who participated,  and those who willingly took charge of different segments:  Tony Gerring & Brent Kemmer oversaw the American Militia,  while Doug and Dalton Lee oversaw the Redcoats.  Charlotte Bauer was in charge of the Tavern - our rendition of Buckman's Tavern - as well as a historic scenario of some of the ladies of Concord hiding their valuables from the King's Regulars for fear of ransacking and theft.  And,  of course,  the fine people of historic Mill Race Village in Northville,  Michigan,  including Sue Marie and Traci.
Toward the end of the event I was even interviewed
by the local news station,  WXYZ!
Man!  Am I looking old.

First,  let's check out some other scenes:
It was a proud moment for me to be interviewed by our local TV news station,  WXYZ.  I received plenty of messages from friends on my Facebook page who saw the clip as they watched the news - most were unaware and were shocked to see me on the news.  A former co-worker actually snapped a picture of her TV with my mug larger than life!  She wrote to me,  "I just sat down to drink my tea and watch the news this morning and seeing your smiley face,  we're so proud of you!!"
I must admit,  this was a proud moment for me.  I was honored and am so glad to be recognized in this manner.
Charlotte captured me  "in action"  as I was being interviewed by channel 7 news!

And from there we'll move to the Buckman Tavern.
Charlotte's sign~
The original Buckman Tavern still stands in Lexington,  Massachusetts.  So,  between a few of us,  we did our utmost best to give Mill Race Village's Cady Inn that very same look and feel.
If you haven't already done so,  please meet Charlotte,  our own proprietress.
She asked for,  and received,  snack donations:
Cider,  wassail,  and nuts,  berries,  breads...and other snacky-stuff.
No...there was no liquor there - we cannot do that.  But the men/patrons
did not seem to mind.
The ladies truly did a marvelous job in all they did!
I love when we have the best!
And I mean you!

In history,  the militia gathered over night.  I don't think we could get our reenactors or even the public to come out in the nighttime.  And I don't blame  'em!
So daytime it was for us.

What I did like seeing were some of the smaller details most don't notice but adds accuracy to the eye:  wonderful period-looking chairs!

Tavern Talk.

Hey - a Red Coat in the tavern!
I wonder what he wanted?
No problem---all reenacting participants are welcome~

My son Robbie took advantage of some quiet time to do a bit of writing with quill & ink.

Meanwhile,  in the next room...
Period toys and pamphlets were displayed in the next room inside the tavern.
Tom is not only known as Dr.  Bloodsworth,  but a toyman as well.

The display caught the eye and interest of many patrons.

Some of the period pamphlets for sale inside the other room of the tavern.

Capturing moments as may have been 251 years ago.

Uh oh - when you see a King's Regular posting something to a tree,  you know it can't be good.
Well,  here it is!

So here I am as Paul Revere
Unfortunately,  due to extenuating circumstances,  there was to be no horse for me to ride as Paul Revere this year.  However,  Revere's story of his famous ride was told by me,  and I tried to make the story as exciting as if there was a horse in the picture as well~~~
I also was the narrator of the two battles that took place.
More on that to come later in this post.
Walking into our  "Lexington"  with lantern in hand...
I let the spectators know that when this originally happened 251 years ago,  it was very late at night.

It is always my honor to represent my founding hero,  Paul Revere.
If it weren't for him,  much of what occurred on this April 18th and 19th in 1775 may not have happened.

So I explained what lead up to the first  "official"  battles of the American Revolution,  and the role Revere played in it.

So,  I still had townsfolk ring the church and school bells as a warning to the citizens that the King's Regulars were coming out - - they were on the march!

There were a good many interested history-loving spectators.

Accuracy as best as we can,  and teaching the public,  especially to the kids,  is of utmost importance.  I had a number of questions directed my way,  and I gladly answered them the best I could.  And if I did not know the answer,  I directed them to the one who knew.

The Lexington Militia taking the Oath.
Our man Ken is convalescing from surgery but still wanted to be there and be a part of this,  so he gave the oath.

Portraying the Lexington Militia

The Lexington Militia
Later on in the day they will be portraying the various militias that fought at Concord.

After hearing the warning bells,  the Lexington militia formed up on the Village Green.

Marching all night long from Boston,  the Red Coats saw the Militia and went to the opposite side of the Village Green. 

Major John Pitcairn,  commander of the British advance guard,  ordered the militiamen to lay down their arms. 
"Stand your ground,"  Militia Captain,  John Parker,  ordered.  "Don't fire until fired upon!  But if they want to have a war let it begin here!"
Frustrated that the Militia would not throw down their guns,  Pitcairn went back to his men filled with frustration.
Then suddenly,  seemingly from out of nowhere,  a shot rang out!
The shot heard  'round the world!

(The following is from The Andy Griffith Show - Season 3,  Episode 23):
Andy - "Yeah, they had the craziest gun."
Opie - "What gun?"
Andy - "Oh, they had, they had a gun that fired a shot that was heard clear  'round the world."
Andy - "One time,  a long time ago this country was a part of England,  and we wasn't gettin'  along with  'em too good.  Fact, we was thinkin'  about breakin'  away and startin'  our own country but the king over there in England he says, "you do that,
and I'm gonna send my redcoats.  They was British soldiers and he was gonna send 'em over here to whup us."
Barney - "Of all the nerve!"
Andy - "Well, so, your great-great-great-great-great-granddaddies all got together,  you know,  to think about it,  and they argued about it back and forth a while and finally one of  'em says,  'let's do it.  Let's start our own country.'
Somebody says,  'how you do that?'
Says,  'I don't know.  I reckon you just start."
'What'll we call it?'
'Let's call it... Let's call it the United States of America!'
Now, about that time up in Boston, Massachusetts,  there was a fella livin'  up there named Paul Revere.
He was a pretty good ol'  fella,  just as poor as Job's Turkey,  but he was a pretty good ol'  fella and he owned a real good ol'  horse named Nellie.  Now,  Paul,  he was wandering around the streets up there one night and he come up on a friend of his and he says,  'howdy. What's new?'
His friend says, 'what's new?'  Says, 'the British is coming.  That's what's new.  What's the matter with thee?'
And Paul says,  'you're kidding.'
He says,  'it's a fact.'
Paul says,  'what we gonna do?'
Fella says,  'I'm gettin'  outta town.'
Paul says,  'we got to spread the word.'
He says,  'you spread it.  I'm gettin' outta town.'
It happened that they had planned if the British was ever to come over here that they'd put a light
up in this high church steeple and Paul went down there to look and sure enough,  there was the light burning brighter'n day.
Well,  Paul,  he jumped on his ol'  horse and he lit out.
He didn't know where he was a-going but he knew he had to go somewhere.
Oh, I wish you coulda seen it.  That ol' horse with his ears laid back and his nostrils wide open was suckin'  in wind like a jet engine,  feet poundin'  on them cobblestones,  a-strikin' off sparks,  Paul a-holdin'  on for dear life and a-hollerin'  at the top of his lungs.  He says,  'the British is comin'!  The British is comin'!  Get you a gun!  We gonna have us a revolution!'
And them farmers come a-pilin'  outta the hay like bees out of a beehive.  Minutemen,  they was called.
They grabbed their squirrel guns...They was fellas that had to be ready at a minute's notice."

Okay,  so they gotta few things wrong,  but this is one of my very favorite episodes of The Andy Griffith Show,  and I wanted to include a bit of the script here for a bit of traditional American fun.
The Regulars,  who thought they were being fired upon,  retaliated.

A few Americans were struck and fell to the ground.

The Americans fired back.
They,  too,  did not know who fired the first shot.  While the Redcoats thought it was the Militia,  the Militia,  in turn,  thought it was the Redcoats,  so they,  too,  retaliated.

Major Pitcairn tried to get his men to stop firing.
One of the Lexington Militia who met his fate on this day.

With gun smoke still wafting in the air,  the Lexington Militia,  made up mostly of farmers,  scattered for fear of another possible attack. 

Off toward Concord the King's Regulars then marched...

Following this first battle of the American Revolution,  the Regulars continued to march toward Concord while the citizens of Lexington were left to figure out just what had happened.  Eight of their own were killed while ten more were wounded.
Lydia and Charlotte attended to those who were shot.

It's this sort of thing that adds that extra bit of realism.
The engagement at Lexington on April 19,  1775,  is best described as a skirmish rather than a full-scale battle,  often referred to as the opening act of the  "Battles of Lexington and Concord".  It was a brief,  chaotic encounter involving roughly 80 militia and over seven hundred British regulars,  resulting in a quick dispersal,  rather than a prolonged fight.
Following this first encounter at our reenactment,  we took a group picture.  Sadly,  not everyone who participated is in the photo - the greater majority are,  but some either didn't hear the call or were not at the reenactment yet.  I apologize for those who missed it.  Next year we'll have a re-do.
The image captured is at the bottom of this post.

So,  next up on the agenda was a bit of period musical entertainment by the always amazingly wonderful Plymouth Fife & Drum Corp,  made up of kids aged 12 through 18:
Plymouth Fife & Drum Corps

The Plymouth Fife and Drum Corps are made up of 40 to 50 students ranging in ages 12 – 18.

Their music spans actually the 17th to the 20th centuries,  though there is an emphasis on the music played during the Revolutionary War.

The citizens of Concord and surrounding areas hid their valuables and even military supplies before the Redcoats arrived on the morning of April 19,  1775.   With advance warning,  they actually were able to bury cannons,  muskets,  and,  what we are showing here,  family valuables,  such as silver,  money,  and even important document in fields,  as well as in the woodlands and swamps to keep them from being captured or destroyed.
Charlotte organized a few of the ladies to follow in the footsteps of the brave women of 1775:
Charlotte,  Jennifer,  Amy,  Lydia,  and Abby heard about the Redcoats soon to be marching into their fair town of Concord and decided to hide their valuables so the King's men would not steal them.

I so appreciate Charlotte setting this scenario up.

(from left):  Charlotte,  Lydia,  Abby,  Amy,  and Jennifer. 

Charlotte began to dig.

Off to the local fields and near the stream.
Another interesting historical story is that Colonel James Barrett was instructed by the Provincial Congress to hide cannon,  musket balls,  powder,  and other supplies on his farm.  So it was on April 19 in 1775  that colonists at the Colonel James Barrett farm in Concord,  Massachusetts,  hid weapons and ammunition from the searching British troops by burying them in freshly plowed furrows,  hiding some items in the attic,  and also concealing them in local fields.  According to accounts,  muskets were buried in furrows to resemble a freshly planted field.
It was later April - planting season---such a great idea!
Though the Regulars aimed to seize these stockpiles,  the weapons had been largely removed and well-hidden following a warning from Dr.  Samuel Prescott,   who rode for a bit with Paul Revere the night before,  making the search unsuccessful.
Afterward,  Mrs. Rebeckah Barrett fed the soldiers breakfast but refused payment,  calling it  "the price of blood".  

Since we're in between battles,  let's take a moment to see many of the reenactors...without whom...
Ken and Xavier.
Ken normally has portrayed Captain John Parker of the Lexington Militia,  but time and a hip replacement has forced him to cut back a bit.  And 
Xavier comes here from Canada to take part.

Deb and Mark

Opposite sides of the conflict,  yet still friends.

Conversations occurred throughout Mill Race Village

Norm portrayed Lexington minister Jonas Clarke
He just got an awesome new robe - talk about perfection!

A thorn between two roses~~
(Yep--that's me betwixt Theresa and Abby)

I don't feel like I say it enough,  but I do so very much appreciate every single
reenactor who came out and participated.  It is an honor for me.

Jenny and Amy.

EJ,  on the left,  came out for the first time in years.
Good to see him!
And there Doc Bloodsworth,  who is also a toyman.

Ben Franklin chattin' up the ladies...

There's my lovely wife spinning at her heat's content.

Spinning was a patriotic act in the later 1760s and through the Revolutionary War.
Spinning wheel boycotts,  known as the  "homespun movement,"  began in earnest around 1767–1768.  These protests directly responded to the Townshend Acts of1767,  which imposed taxes on British imported goods,  prompting colonial women to produce their own cloth,  or  "homespun,"  to protest British taxation by holding these  "spinning bees". 
This continued during the Revolutionary War,  and the spinning wheel became a potent symbol of American patriotism and a tool for economic resistance.  
Robbie and Theresa watched the homespun movement in action.

This is Kim.
She mentioned her husband oversees the Plymouth Fife & Drum Corps.

My wife and I---I'm so proud of her patriotism!

My son,  Robbie,  with good friend Abby.

Folks were enamored with the medical practices of the 18th century.
Except the little boy in the brown jacket---him,  not to much  lol.

Jennifer with Knute.

Karen joined us as well.

Shannon sits with Ken.

Some fine folks here who often  (mostly)  represent the Ste.  Claire Voyageurs.

Shortly before the Redcoats came marching in to Concord.

Out of everything that happened throughout this day,  what you see here in the picture below made it for me.  This and a young lady who read the Longfellow Poem  "Paul Revere's Ride"  to me.  I was honored,  and I felt bad when I had to cut her short due to me having to be everywhere at once.  But all the kids who took the extra step made me feel so honored.
Thank you.
Here are true patriots!
"Chase  'em  Redcoats back to Boston!!!"
and
"Yankee Doodle keep it up!"

  It was wonderful to have these  (and other)  kids there.

The Redcoats marched into Concord at approximately 7:00 a.m.  to 8:00 a.m.  on April 19,  1775.  After marching from Boston and engaging with militia in Lexington around 5:00 a.m.,  the main British force continued to Concord to search for hidden military supplies.
If you look,  you can see the Redcoats a-marching into town.
They made a  "noble appearance"  as they approached,  noted colonial militia from afar.

While the first shots of the day occurred earlier at Lexington,  the firing at Concord escalated the fighting.

While the fighting began with a small,  local group at Concord's North Bridge, 
they were part of a collective response to a regional alarm.

Here is the engagement at the  "North Bridge."
Well,  at least,  our version of The North Bridge.

Shocked by the sudden gunfire,  Major John Buttrick of Concord screamed out the fateful order  "Fire!  For God's sake,  fire!"  This was the first time colonial militiamen were ordered to fire on British soldiers.  In all,  two colonists were killed and four wounded.  Twelve British soldiers were hit,  three of them fatally.

oooo---my son displays a very dramatic death!

While the North Bridge was the site of a key 11:00 AM confrontation, the  "Concord Fight"  involved several locations.

Great shot!

An awesome flash in the pan capture!
"Keep your powder dry and your hatchet sharp"  is a 17th century idiom urging one to remain calm,  vigilant,  and fully prepared to act.  It combines the need for maintaining dry gunpowder  (readiness for action)  with a sharpened tool. 

Redcoats~
British soldiers searched for supplies,  and some skirmishing occurred during the arrival and departure of the troops,  specifically around locations like the Wright Tavern.
While the main fighting was at the bridge,  other British companies searched for munitions at Colonel James Barrett's farm,  about a mile from the bridge,  before returning to the main force.
The Retreat/Battle Road:  Following the bridge fight,  the British began their march back to Boston.  The fighting became a running battle  (known as the Battle Road)  lasting for hours as militias attacked from behind trees,  stone walls,  and houses along the road back through Lincoln and into Lexington. 
These men were not a disorganized mob but rather local companies,  such as the Acton Company led by Capt. Isaac Davis,  who answered the alarm and operated under the authority of colonial leaders.

Little did the King's Army know that there was buried valuables right beneath the ground they tread upon.

Again,  another fine capture of a moment.
As are all the photos posted here.

A bit of a tussle occurred during the Redcoat's retreat.

I've always liked window shots,  for to me it adds a large touch of realism.
It gives the impression of you are there.

One of the houses on the road back to Boston witnessed some of the carnage the Redcoats received from the militiamen hiding behind fences,  houses & barns,  brick walls,  and trees.

With the Concord Battle over and the Redcoats making their way back to Boston,  Lydia dug up the buried valuables that the King's military had no idea of:
The family silver was in this linen sack.

Unfortunately,  not everyone thought to hide their family treasures,  and lost some of their personal items.

Scurrying back to her house with the hidden family valuables.

My wife speaking to enthralled kids.

Jonas Clarke  (1730–1805)  was a highly influential clergyman and Patriot leader in Lexington,  Massachusetts,  during the American Revolution.  He is best known for hosting John Hancock and Samuel Adams at his home on the night of Paul Revere's famous ride. 
Norm did a stupendous job as the Reverend Clarke!
The pastor served as the minister of the Church of Christ in Lexington for 50 years.  He was a vocal advocate for colonial liberty,  often using his sermons to inspire resistance against British oppression.


Clarke helped shape the 1780 Massachusetts Constitution and the United States Constitution.
Norm will once again present himself as Jonas Clarke during our 4th of July bash at Mill Race Village this Semiquincentennial year~

Right after Reverend Clarke ended,  up came Ben Franklin.
And he gave a speech on what he was doing during the beginnings of the Revolutionary War.
Yes,  that's my friend,  Bob,  depicting Ben Franklin.

Channel 7 News also filmed Dr.  Franklin!

Here is the 49th Regiment of Foot
Many,  many thanks to the Lee family and all involved!
Even though Historic Mill Race Village is solidly Victorian,  it can still pass as a colonial town to a certain degree,  especially the Cady Inn,  which we use as Buckman Tavern.

Of course,  we had to have our group picture!  You should have seen all of the cameras and phones come out for this.  Hundreds of this same photo are floating about.
I think a few folks may be hiding behind the "Liberty Tree"!
But I believe this is the largest group of reenactors we've had participate in this event so far!

The 1st of two group shot sections.

The 2nd of two group shot sections.

Many do not understand all of the hard work that goes into hosting an event.  I am literally blessed with the good folks who help me out,  and I am very proud of all who played a part - as far as I know,  this is the only reenactment in Michigan commemorating this historical event.  But it would not happen without the following:
Brent  (The Massachusetts Provincial Battalion),  Charlotte  (Citizens of the American Colonies),  Dalton & Doug  (49th Regiment Of Foot),  and Tony  (1st Pennsylvania)  for all of the behind the scenes work and participation they do and did.  
I also need to thank SueMarie and all the folks who run Historic Mill Race Village in Northville,  Michigan.  If it wasn't for them,  none of this would happen.
Celebrate America!!
And every single person who participated.  Yes,  I may head it up but it's all of us together.   Unless one has hosted such a reenactment,  I don't believe most realize just what it takes to put an event like this on.  It's everyone working together that makes it a success - every single participant made this a success.  And I thank each from the bottom of my heart.

Thank you  (again)  to the many photographers for taking so many wonderful pictures!
Lisa Arseneau
Barb Baldinger
Charlotte Bauer
Karen DeCoster/KDC
Karen Dunnam
Michele & Stu Eddy
Brent Kemmer
Jennifer Long
Marko Tomko
Knute Wales
Chris White - Representative of the Detroit Metro Chapter SAR  (Sons of the American Revolution)

Until next time,  see you in time.


Here are a few links you may be interested in checking out:

April 18th & 19th, 1775 - The Battle of Lexington & Concord: As Seen Through the Eyes of Those Who Were There - click HERE

The True Story of Paul Revere's Ride - HERE

The Midnight Riders of April 18, 1775: Prescott, Cheswell, and Dozens of Others - HERE

Lexington & Concord - Massachusetts Vacation - Click HERE

Concord Museum - Massachusetts Vacation - Click HERE

Patriot's Day 250 - Semiquincentennial - at Mill Race Village: 1775 - 2025 - click HERE



































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