~Updated in June 2017~
In the good old colony days
In the good old colony days
When we lived under the king
Lived a miller and a weaver and a little tailor
Three jolly rogues of Lynne...
Lived a miller and a weaver and a little tailor
Three jolly rogues of Lynne...
Back in time we go...to the 1700's... |
I'm
in a colonial mood.
In
fact, I've been in a colonial mood quite often of late.
By
colonial, I don't necessarily mean the earliest years of our country's
founding, such as that period of the pilgrims from the 17th century, but,
rather, I hanker more for the time from around the first stirrings of the American Revolution (early 1760s) through roughly the end of the century, to about 1800.
When
I was a young lad in my teen years, the Bicentennial
celebrations celebrating the signing of the Declaration of Independence were in full swing; it seemed from the early 1970s through the end of 1976, wherever you turned there was
something being written about our colonial roots and the Revolutionary War, with the concentration being on the year 1776, especially in the newspapers. And
the TV had bicentennial programming here and there as well - does anyone else
remember "Bicentennial Minute"? But, with me "coming out of the
womb into history" (my mother's own words - not mine) I also loved to read
books that were about the 18th century. A particular favorite was The Cabin Faced West by
Jean Fritz, which gave a pretty accurate account of everyday life in the
wilderness that eventually became western Pennsylvania ca 1780's. I remember
being a kid and pretending that I was living with the Hamilton family: our dank and dark
basement 'became' the cabin (and it had a real fireplace to boot, which made it
all the more "real" in my mind), and the over-grown brush behind our
garage was the frontier.
I
had a great time!
Did I make it? Am I really in the 1770s? |
Then
there is that wonderful HBO mini-series about our 2nd President and his wife...you know...the one about John Adams.
I
believe both the website and the John Adams mini-series are a part of the
catalyst for the resurgence of my more recent colonial passions.
And
that catalyst propelled me from Civil War reenacting right into Revolutionary
War reenacting. Yes, I now time-travel to both eras on weekends, experiencing,
to an extent, life as it was so long ago. Almost in the way I did while I pretended to live with the Hamiltons - isn't adulthood wonderful?
You see, as passionate as I am about the mid-19th century, I am every bit as passionate about our colonial heritage as well - more so, in fact - and feel that too much from this period in time is no longer being taught to our school children as strongly as it should be.
You see, as passionate as I am about the mid-19th century, I am every bit as passionate about our colonial heritage as well - more so, in fact - and feel that too much from this period in time is no longer being taught to our school children as strongly as it should be.
There
is so much to learn, however...and I would like to think of this posting as a
start on that journey to the past, to bring back a time that too many in our modern society have forgotten about.
There are many many photos, and even a few video clips, that go with the words herein to help get into the colonial mood.
Won't you come along with me for the ride?
Won't you come along with me for the ride?
Here's
something for starters - click the arrow on the following two video clips I took that tells a bit about life in an 18th century New England saltbox-style home to begin your journey:
Part one
Part two
And for reference purposes, let's begin our tour with a few photos of the homes we will visit on our journey into this exciting time of our Nation's history. As you scroll through this post, we will be bopping back and forth throughout the houses pictured here:
A colonial scene at Greenfield Village: 1750 Daggett farmhouse on the left-center, Farris Windmill from the mid-1600s, and the early 1700s Plympton House on the right |
The Plympton House: An early Massachusetts home from the early 1700s. |
Plympton House |
The Plympton Home: Four walls and a loft... |
Plympton House from a third angle |
The Daggett Farmouse: A typical Connecticut Salt Box house built about 1750. |
Daggett House - Great Hall |
The Giddings House: A city home from New Hampshire built around the same year as the Daggett Home - 1750. As you can see, Giddings is a bit more upscale than the others. |
The formal parlor of Giddings House |
The McGuffey Birthplace: A typical log cabin of western Pennsylvania built around 1780 - the same time and place as the Hamilton's from the book mentioned earlier. I imagine this is what their cabin may have looked like. |
The interior of the McGuffey Cabin. |
I
have found it to be a great experience to reenact in the
colonial era. And to have
my wife join me adds to it enormously.
Plus,
my kids like it, too!
Needlepoint at Giddings House |
Needless to say I spend much of my Village-visiting time inside all of the colonial buildings there, just taking it all in, especially when I am in the clothing of the period, which gives me a more personal experience.
They also show the traditional craft and chores of candle dipping, hearth cooking, dyeing of spun wool by way of bark, berries, and flower pedals, learning of the 18th century herbal garden, and winter preparations...being in that setting...wow---just the whole wooden-ness of it all, you know?
Drying plants at Daggett House |
And we shall speak of these things momentarily. First I would like to give you a broader picture of the look of the time.
You just saw a few photos of colonial houses, but what about the people that lived in them? More specifically, what they wore:
Even the well-to-do lady-of-the-house, such as Mehetable Giddings, would keep herself occupied when not entertaining guests |
Yep - I did it! I finally found a way to travel through time to the 1770s! Here I am in my colonial clothing being greeted by Deborah and Dorothy Giddings! Such fine young ladies they are. |
...where I was warmly received by Samuel Daggett himself! |
Inside the Daggett buttery: Pouring water into a leather bag to take with me out into the field. |
The clothing you see in this posting are, of course, replicas of the kind worn by those who
lived in the eighteenth century and, believe it or not, had much in common with us. Not only did
people back then respond to fashion, they also varied their garments based on the
activity and the formality of the occasion. The eighteenth-century words
"dress" and "undress" had meanings quite different from the
way we use the words today, though the basic concepts are still viable.
"Dress" clothing meant formal clothing with a different set of
conventions and accessories from "undress" or informal clothing. In
1775, for example, a woman could still don a pair of exaggerated side hoops, or
"panniers," to support her wide skirt for a dress occasion, while her
undress clothing, although it would appear quite formal to our eyes, had a more
modest skirt size that may not have needed hoops at all.
Similarly, the clothes
in which a wealthy planter conducted his daily business differed significantly
from what he wore to a ball at the Governor's Palace. The garments worn by a
blacksmith, for instance, or even a female dairymaid for their daily work were different from their best outfits,
reserved for Sundays at church and infrequent special occasions. Working
class and yeomen (farmers) dressed in ordinary work clothes: they were
clean-shaven with long hair worn straight or pulled back in a queue
(ponytail tied with a ribbon - a style for middling class men as well)
beneath one of a variety of hats, including soft caps,
felt hats with cut-down floppy brims, and the popular cocked hat (better known in modern times as a tricorn hat), while the younger men wore their
hair with a lock in front of each ear, known as earlocks, fastened with
elegant pins. They wore baggy linen or cotton shirts &
waistcoats, and their breeches came down and fastened below the knee,
with long stockings and cowhide shoes ornamented by large buckles.
The infamous cocked hat became popular throughout the last half of the eighteenth century.
Since I am portraying a middle class (or "middling") man, it is this this style that I choose to wear.
Giddings House: check out panniers that Heidi (or is it Mary Giddings?) is wearing! |
The infamous cocked hat became popular throughout the last half of the eighteenth century.
Since I am portraying a middle class (or "middling") man, it is this this style that I choose to wear.
Springtime plowing is at hand... |
The concepts of comfort and modesty
have always been relative and subject to the influence of fashion and the needs
of the occasion. Like us here in the 21st century, eighteenth-century people needed clothing for warmth
and comfort, but they quickly abandoned those needs if fashion or the occasion
dictated.
Time for milking... |
Someone who had worn stays (the 18th century version of a corset) from girlhood might scarcely have questioned their comfort or lack of it.
(And who is to say that stays were any more uncomfortable than pointed-toe, high-heeled twentieth-century shoes?)
Speaking of shoes... |
Shoes were essential to people who walked as much as the colonials did.
1758 fashion shoes for men replicated directly from originals found after being sealed in mud for over 200 years. Yes, they are straight-lasted. |
Mules were also popular during this time; mules were the equivalent of today's slippers.
Since slavery is a subject that is covered extensively throughout thousands of books and even more web sites, I would like to speak here, instead, more about the "hired" help. In the 18th century, formal indentured servants and apprenticeships were quite common, and the responsibility of the employers was to not only to provide adequate food and clothing, but the education for the worker as well.
But among more prosperous families, girls from less fortunate families were hired to assist with certain aspects of the household duties. They came with the expectation that in addition to their room and board they would receive modest cash wages or store credits as well as a thorough instruction in reading and housekeeping.
Hired girls usually dressed in simple, practical work clothes during the day. "The dress of those girls consisted of a gown of stuff or calico, with a high-necked and long-sleeved tire which completed the costume. Their hair was cut short or parted neatly and out behind their ears. Bangs and fringes were unknown in those days and would not have been tolerated for a minute."
At the more upscale Giddings home, the servant girl prepares her mistress's tea. |
But this wasn't always the case, for Sarah Anne Emery recalled seeing girls "going to the pump in mid-winter, clad only in a homespun short gown and petticoat, with slipshod shoes, disclosing huge holes in the heels of their stockings, and an old hood tied over their tangled hair."
A great primary source for servant and even everyday wear clothing for women (and a few men) is the book "Wenches, Wives, and Servant Girls: A Selection of Advertisements for Female Runaways in American Newspapers, 1770-1783" by Don N. Hagist. The newspapers of the day provided detailed descriptions of women and men who, for whatever reason, left or escaped their husbands, masters/mistresses, or place of employment (indentured servitude) without anyone's knowledge. And these husbands, masters, and/or employers wanted their "property" back:
Possibly
a found
runaway
servant
girl.
|
Ran away on Saturday the 12th instant, from the subscriber, an Irish girl named Judith Kennedy, about five feet three inches high, near twenty-seven years of age, is tolerable genteel, pock marked, black hair, and has something of the brogue. She had on, when she went away, a red and white calico short gown, a green shirt, brown cloak, black spotted silk bonnet lined with white, and an old pair of black satin shoes. She also took with her a changeable mantua gown, white dimity petticoat, a fine flowered apron, one check ditto, and two shifts.
And another from October 1773:
Run away the 24th of October, from the subscribers in Philadelphia, two Dutch bound servants, a man and a woman; the man's name is Justus Hornschier, a shoemaker by trade, about 5 feet 7 or 8 inches high, pock marked, has got but one eye; had on when he went away, a blue coat and jacket, and buckskin breeches. The woman's name is Catherine Mum, but it is likely she may alter it to that of the man's, and that they will pass for man and wife; she is about 5 feet high, slender bodied, talks or knows very little English; had on and took with her when she went away, a calico short gown, a green camblet gown, two striped camblets petticoats, a Dutch chintz jacket, one white and some ozenbrig aprons, a black bonnet, a white cloth short cloak with a hood to it. Whoever takes up the said servants, and confines them in any gaol, so that their masters may have them again, shall have Three Pounds reward for both, or for the maid alone Forty-five shillings, and all reasonable charges paid...
|
Let's hear more about the tea by clicking below:
Climate also had a significant effect on clothing. In the sultry climate of Virginia many, even the upper classes, chose washable linen or cotton clothing for informal wear. A traveler in the early 1730s described the summer clothing of Virginians: "In Summertime even the gentry goe Many in White Holland [linen] Wast Coat and drawers and a thin Cap on their heads and Thread stockings [knitted linen]. The Ladyes Strait laced in thin Silk or Linnen. In Winter [they dress] mostly as in England and affect London Dress and wayes."
During the hot summer months, men often wore unlined coats and thin waistcoats of cotton or linen fabrics. Advising his brother about what to wear when he attended the College of William and Mary, Stephen Hawtrey wrote, "Your Cloathing in summer must be as thin and light as possible for the heat is beyond your conception . . .your Cloth suit unlined may do for the Month of May, but after that time you must wear the thinnest Stuffs that can be made without lining. some people . . . wear brown holland [linen] Coats with lining –some Crape –You must carry with you a Stock of Linnen Waistcoats made very large and loose, that they may'nt stick to your hide when you perspire."
Back at the Daggett home, there is little time for clothing concern. No idle hands here! |
According to this pamphlet, the “Method
of Curing” would be “First vomit the sick person, by giving half a drachm of
the powder of Ipecacoanha, and work it off with Chamomile tea; then let the
sick person take the following powder:
Of the best Peruvian bark powder’d,
one ounce, of Virginia Snake root, and salt of wormwood, each one drachm; mix
these well together, and divide them into eight doses, one paper to be taken
every two hours in a glass of red wine or any other liquid. This is a certain
and infallible cure; but care must be taken to administer it only in the
intervals of the fits…”From the excellent docu-drama about Martha Ballard called "A Midwife's Tale" |
Here is a minute example of some of
her notations:
August 10, 1787 – At Mrs. Howards.
Her son very sick. Capt Sewall & Lady sett up till half after 4. Then I
rose. The child seems revived.
August 12, 1787 – At Mrs.
McMasters. Their son very sick. I set up all night. Mrs. Patin with me. The
Child very ill indeed.
August 13, 1787 – William McMaster
Expired at 3 O’Clock this morn. Mrs. Patin and I laid out the Child. Poor
mother, how Distressing her Case, near the hour of Labour and three Children
more very sick. I sett out for home.
November 1, 1792 – I was Calld to
see Mrs. Hodges at 4 h pm. Shee was safe delivered at 11 h Evening off a very
fine son her sixth child.
One
of the things I hope to accomplish in colonial reenacting is to
surround myself with those who take it as serious as I do by not only dressing and acting as
authentic as possible and utilizing our knowledge of the period, but by way of language usage as well. I mean, the 1860's verbiage is challenging enough at Civil War reenactments,
so I can just imagine making the attempt to speak as they did 250 years
ago. I have
heard, for instance, that they used to pronounce the "K" in words such as know
(as "k-no") and knife (as "k-nife"), but I don't know for
sure...maybe some of you etymologists can help me on this. However, there is a wonderful book available - Eighteenth Century English as a Second Language - that the presenters in Colonial Williamsburg use as a guide, and I plan to use it as well. It doesn't answer all of my questions, but it is a period language bible in my mind.The docu-drama, A Midwife's Tale, does a remarkable job in presenting the later 1700s verbiage, as does the John Adams HBO series which includes a bit of a British accent in their words.
The way our forefathers and foremothers wrote in letters, diaries, and broadsides is the key.
Speaking of writing, American
colonial handwriting and printing looks strange to us. Why did they use all
those f's instead of s's?
Hey! Dad thinkS he
KnowS about the 'long s. '
Heh heh…
Oh wait – he doeS!
|
The
letter that looks like an "f" actually is called a "long
s." In colonial printing fonts, you can tell it from a printed
"f" because the little cross-bar is only on the left-hand side, or
isn't there at all. In colonial handwriting, the "long s" is written
like an "f," except the bottom loop is written clockwise instead of
counter-clockwise.
The
"long s" wasn't used randomly. Here are the rules for when to use it,
so your handwriting or printing will look like authentic colonial handwriting.
Use
the "long s" at the beginning and middle of words, but use the
regular "s" for the last letter of a word.
If
there are two s's together, use the "long s" for the first one and
the regular "s" for the second one. Use the regular "s"
before and after the letter "f" (the real letter "f"!) Use
the regular "S" whenever the "S" is uppercase.
Not only is this an original example of the colonial style of writing (including the "long s"), but it also gives another wonderful description of clothing (from the excellent book "Wenches, Wives, and Servant Girls" by Don N. Hagist). |
It seems through all of my research on any historical era, one thing that has not changed over these past few hundred years is that life then, as now, tended to center around the kitchen. But, oh! how life in the kitchen has changed!
Whereas so many in our modern day eat frozen dinners or will go out to a local fast food joint, the kitchen during colonial times was the heart of the home. When Betsy Phelps, who was visiting friends in Boston, wrote to her mother in Hadley in August 1797, she spoke fondly of the family meal: "Now I fancy you are eating dinner assembled round that jovial table - partaking of a wholesome repast - it makes my mouth water - as the saying is, to think of it - good fatt meat - with green sauce is too delicious."
"The kitchen in all the farmhouses of all the colonies was the most cheerful, homelike, and picturesque room in the house; indeed, it was in town houses as well. "
Giddings kitchen |
Giddings kitchen |
Preserving methods were limited to drying, smoking, pickling, and salting, so the cold months of the year saw a more limited diet than warm months."
What people chose to eat and how they cooked their meals was what they considered to be edible and familiar. Colonists cooked many dishes from memory and experience, eventually acquiring an 'American' character, and they certainly encountered new foods which, in some cases, came from the local Indians."
Working in the Daggett garden |
Let's visit the Daggett kitchen and see what's cooking:
Though cookbooks did exist, most colonial women cooked many dishes without the use of one; they learned from their mothers how to make the everyday foods that the majority of people in their area ate, therefore, unless the dish to be served was for a special occasion or an important guest, it was done by memory as she was taught.
In a colonial homestead, a circuit-riding preacher might be served a chicken pie, a mess of greens, and sweet apple dumplings. Of course, to prepare such a meal the housewife would have to first "pick and clean six chickens, (without scalding), take out their inwards and wash the birds while whole, then joint the birds, salt and pepper the pieces and inwards..." (from The First American Cookbook, originally printed in 1796 as AMERICAN COOKERY, or The Art of Dressing Viands, Fish, Poultry and Vegetables by Amelia Simmons.
Daggett House kitchen |
Daggett House - cooking on the hearth |
Daggett House kitchen |
By the way, what we call pot holders here in the 21st century were originally called kettle-holders. Pot holders then were the metal stand suspension equipment designed to hold pots off of the ground mentioned above. (Thanks to Stephanie Ann at World Turned Upside Down for this pot/kettle holder information).
Giddings kitchen and servant girl |
Now would be a good time to hear from the Giddings hired servant girl and listen as she tells about her life in the home:
'As soon as she stepped inside, she had a sinking feeling in the bottom of her stomach. She had forgotten about the fire. Quickly she ran over to the hearth and sank down on her knees before a pile of black ashes and a half-burned log. In desperation she blew into the fireplace, hoping to revive a hidden spark. Ashes flew out into the room and up in her face, but there wasn't a tiny glow of red anywhere. She looked at the tinderbox beside the fireplace with its piece of steel and flint. She had never made a fire from the beginning. She walked back and forth in the cabin, holding the baby while she talked to herself. "Maybe I could borrow some. But if I went down the hill to Uncle John's, I'd have to take the baby. It wouldn't be so bad going, but coming back, carrying the baby and a pot of fire - I don't know if I could manage." '
Just for a fire...imagine...(by the way, young Miss Hamilton did eventually head down to her uncle's place to 'borrow' fire. But something very interesting happened on the way...
The Cabin Faced West is really a fine book on colonial life - you should get it, even if it is for young kids).
Daggett House |
Plympton House |
No they weren't.
Well, maybe slightly...like about an inch or so. But the myth that the average height of a colonist was 5'4" or whatever is just that - a myth. Just like today, people came in all shapes and sizes.
"But the ceilings were so low and the beds were so small!"
The ceilings (and doorways) were lower to retain the heat from fireplaces in the cold months - this is a proven fact. I needn't go further on this.
So, you think the doorways were shorter in 1760 because the people were smaller? Think again! |
"According to measurements taken of Revolutionary War soldiers compared with recruits from the 1950's, the modern soldier is actually only about 2/3 of an inch taller. Our current soldiers could blend in quite easily with George Washington's recruits."
Rosch also pointed out research done on antique bedding owned by Colonial Williamsburg:
"Since there were no standardized beds until the Industrial Revolution, that should prove revealing. No bed was shorter than 6'3" and many were 6'8" long, the same length as today's 'king'!"
But why do the beds look so short?
"Optical illusion!" writes Rosch.
With all of the posts, testers, drapery, canopies, etc., that surrounded the bed vertically, it made them look smaller horizontally.
Giddings House bed chamber |
Here's the article as was written in Early American Life. Yes, they used MY picture!
taking all of this into account, and considering the other myths that have been dispelled, I have to agree with the proof that our colonial ancestors slept in the same horizontal position that we do today.
I think what I enjoy most in having Early American Life magazine use my photo is being associated with Greenfield Village - and with American history in general - which is something I take great pride in. And now with this issue of Early American Life I accomplished both; Tess Rosch needed a photograph to accent her story, so while reading one of my blog postings she came across a picture she thought would work well.
So there you go - my passion for history, Greenfield Village,
and even my love of photography all rolled into one!
I'm pretty proud!Daggett House parlor and bed chamber |
Mrs. Daggett looks for her husband to return. |
Upon my own visitation to the Daggett farm I have also witnessed the carding, spinning, and dyeing of wool.
It's here at Daggett where one can watch as the raw wool being carded by use of paddles before actually being spun into yarn (unless you have a wife like I have who also spins on the large walking wheel as well as a Saxony wheel). As this process is done, the presenter explains every step, from the twisting of the wool onto the bobbin, to plying two single bobbins of thin thread to make one stronger thread, to winding the finished thread into a skein by using a yarn winder (also known as a clock reel) or on a niddy noddy.
Here is a video clip of the spinning process:
The
spinner begins to slowly turn the drive wheel clockwise with the right hand,
while simultaneously walking backward and drawing the fiber in the left hand
away from the spindle at an angle. The left hand must control the tension on
the wool to produce an even result. The process is continuously repeated. Thus
the name "walking wheel."
Here's another short video of the Daggett Farm walking wheel being used:
It's here at Daggett where one can watch as the raw wool being carded by use of paddles before actually being spun into yarn (unless you have a wife like I have who also spins on the large walking wheel as well as a Saxony wheel). As this process is done, the presenter explains every step, from the twisting of the wool onto the bobbin, to plying two single bobbins of thin thread to make one stronger thread, to winding the finished thread into a skein by using a yarn winder (also known as a clock reel) or on a niddy noddy.
Here is a video clip of the spinning process:
According
to author Alice Morse Earle in her wonderful book, Home Life in Colonial
Days, The wool
industry easily furnished home occupation to an entire family. Often by the
bright firelight in the early evening every member of the household might be
seen at work on the various stages of wool manufacture or some of its necessary
adjuncts, and varied and cheerful industrial sounds fill the room.
The
skeins could then be washed before use.
Carding
wool: every
member of the family played an important role to keep the household running
like a well-oiled wheel. |
The
grandmother, at light and easy work, is carding the wool into fleecy rolls. The
mother, stepping as lightly as one of her girls, spins the rolls into woolen
yarn on the great wheel. The oldest daughter sits at the clock-reel, whose
continuous buzz and occasional click mingles with the humming rise and fall of
the wool-wheel, and the irritating scratch, scratch, scratch of the cards. A
little girl at the small wheel is filling quills with woolen yarn for the loom,
not a skilled work. The father is setting fresh teeth in a wool card, while the
boys are whittling hand-reels and loom spools.
My
wife has found carding and especially spinning to her liking and it has become
a relaxing part of her day. |
The
large walking wheels were very common in colonial homes. The fiber is held in
the left hand and the wheel slowly turned with the right. This wheel is then
good for using the long-draw spinning technique, which requires only one active
hand most of the time, and can free a hand to turn the wheel.
The walking wheel in action |
Here's another short video of the Daggett Farm walking wheel being used:
The ingredients were boiled in water until the liquid becomes the desired shade, then skeins of yarn were simmered in the vat of dye. |
From sheep to shawl and then some! |
Here is a run-down of what the folks at Daggett use for their presentation (from a Daggett Farm presenter):
Brown~black walnuts. The walnuts have to be allowed to rot, the longer they rot the darker brown you will get.
Blue~the best dye for this is Indigo. There is a plant called woad that could be used but it is highly invasive.
Yellow~ The inner bark from the osage orange tree works, but the easiest to find is calendula petals. Some people call the flower a pot marigold as well.
Green~ the best way to get green is an over dye of blue and yellow. Dye the yarn yellow first and then dip it in the blue.
Red~The cochineal beetle gives the best reds. With these a little goes a long way.
Pink~Pokeberry (it's nice that these can be used for something as the seeds of this plant are toxic) Daggett has one of these plants in the garden.
Orange~Madder root. The madder plant needs to be taken out and the root actually broken open (it will appear bright orange) I believe there is also a madder plant at Daggett.
Purple~ Logwood
Black~This is an over dye of logwood and black walnut.
Before dyeing any wool yarn it needs to soak in a mordant; Alum is the one that is used at Daggett.
As with washing the wool one has to use the same temperature water and not stir or agitate it or it will felt.
Also these items get tied up in
cheesecloth so that nothing sticks to the yarn.
Knowing this, an answer that I found on Got Questions.org opened my eyes further to the ways and even the thought process of our colonial ancestors:
"Though the statement is not found verbatim in the Bible, “idle hands are the devil’s workshop” has its roots in Scripture. The apostle Paul notes that those who waste their time in idleness or in a non-productive manner are easily led into sin: “We hear that some among you are idle. They are not busy; they are busybodies”(2 Thessalonians 3:11). By not using their time productively, these people were tempted to meddle in other people’s business and stand in the way of their progress. “They get into the habit of being idle and going about from house to house. And not only do they become idlers, but also gossips and busybodies, saying things they ought not to” (1 Timothy 5:13).
These idlers and busybodies were wasting time that could have been used to help others. In essence, their lack of activity was leading them into sin.
And now let's think of all the time we spend on Facebook and Twitter..."idle hands" indeed!
To learn more about entertaining your 18th century friends inside the Giddings home, click the clip:
One of the essential skills
throughout the colonial period was brewing beer for family use. Diaries of
rural housewives reveal that they baked and brewed on the same day with both
activities requiring yeast. But brewing also depended on barley (grain) for
malting, and hops for flavor and fermenting. Much of the beer brewed in the
home was called “small” or “near beer” – that is, it had a low alcohol content
– and was consumed by both young and old. According to the book, Tidings From the 18th Century by
Beth Gilgun, it was considered dangerous to drink too much water so cider and
beer was served at meals. Small beer offered nourishment and kept the drinker
from being “feeble in the summer.”
To
learn in greater detail of the colonial brewing of beer, please watch the
following clip (sorry about the wind sound you hear - it was a windy day!):
Here's another beer brewing clip:
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Wife
make thine owne candle,
Spare
pennie to handle.
Provide
for thy tallow, ere frost cometh in.
And
make thine owne candle, ere winter begin
(Thomas
Tusser - 16th century English poet)
Alice Morse Earle wrote, "The making of the winter's stock of candles was the special autumnal house-hold duty, and a hard one too, for the great kettles were tiresome and heavy to handle. An early hour found the work well under way."
An autumn tradition |
Artificial light in the 18th century was truly a luxury. People were used to working by daylight, so lighting a candle while the sun was up was rare. It was customary for folks to move from room to room to get the most out of the day's light. In most homes candles were lit only during the nighttime hours, and sparingly so, due to the lengthy candle-making process. According to one source, a typical middle class home in the 1750's would go through nearly 500 candles a year. And that may even be a conservative view - it would not be a surprise if many homes went through at least a third more than that!
Dipping candles was a top priority - does this family have enough for the coming dark months of winter? |
Candle-making season was usually in early-to-mid November. It had to be just cold enough for quick hardening, and followed shortly after fall hunting, where the waist fat from the animals was used to make tallow candles. The animal fat was cut into pieces and rendered (melted). The fat was boiled, caked, pressed, sieved, and purified several times. Wicks were made from cotton or, less often. from milkweed. The wicks were dipped repeatedly into a tub of tallow, and with each dip the candles became larger and larger until the desired length and width was had.
It's here that we can quote Susan Blunt, a woman from the early 19th century,
who remembered her 18th century mother candle dipping:
"Mother used to dip candles in the fall, enough to last all winter. When a beef was killed in the fall, she would use all the tallow for candles. On the evening before, we would help her prepare the wicks. The boys would cut a lot of rods and she would cut the wicks the length of a candle and then string them on the rods."
"Mother used to dip candles in the fall, enough to last all winter. When a beef was killed in the fall, she would use all the tallow for candles. On the evening before, we would help her prepare the wicks. The boys would cut a lot of rods and she would cut the wicks the length of a candle and then string them on the rods."
Ms. Blunt continues, "In the
morning she would commence her day's work. (She would) dip each one in the hot
tallow and straighten out the wicks so the candles would be straight when they
were finished. By raising the candles (out of the kettle) at just the right
speed and working on a day with a moderate temperature, the fine quality of the
candles would be assured. The candles would be cooled overnight and the bottom
ends cut off nearly. The finished candles were packed away in a mouse-proof
container for safe storage."
A candle lit McGuffey Cabin |
Some scented candles, such as the above-mentioned bayberry candles (made during the late autumn when the berries were ripest), burned slowly and gave off a fine incense, particularly when the candle was snuffed out.
Each morning it was the hired girl or one of the children's jobs to clean and fit the candlesticks with new candles long enough to last an evening and then stored in the kitchen, where they would be easy to find when darkness fell.
If there was a fire in the hearth that had been for cooking or for warmth, candles might not even be used; as long as one could see well enough to eat, spin, knit, whittle, or do any number of other duties by the light from the fireplace, a candle would be considered wasteful. I've also read that on a bright moonlit night, especially when there was snow covering the ground, the reflection of light from outside could be bright enough for one to read while indoors!
~ (The above candle information came from a variety of sources, including an on line source by
McGuffey Cabin with camera flash. I like the softer candle-lit light better, don't you? |
Betty Lamp |
Though
candles were far and away the most popular form of lighting (aside from the
hearth), Betty Lamps, commonly made of brass or iron, first came into being in
the 18th century and were occasionally used in a colonial home or
workshop.
With
fish oil or fat trimmings for fuel and twisted wicks of cloth, they were the forerunner
of the oil lamp used later in the 19th and 20th
centuries.
The three main months of autumn - September, October, and November - is when the fall harvest time takes place. What I hope to show here is not only the labor of these hard-working people, but of the satisfaction our ancestors received for a job well done. The fruits of their labor ensured their survival, and there was no time for "sick days," nor did they have a "sick bank" to enter if they felt 'stressed out' and needed time off to 'get their head together.'
If one didn't put their time in, they, and possibly others, didn't eat.
I am also hoping that the reader will find a deeper appreciation for the way our ancestors lived and maybe even be enticed to grow their own kitchen garden by way of non-gmo heirloom seeds.
I
would like to quote from Senior Manager of Creative Programs at Greenfield
Village, Jim Johnson, as I feel I cannot explain this aspect of harvest time
any better than what Mr. Johnson has written:
The Daggetts would have stored away
a variety of root vegetables in stone-lined pits that would have prevented hard
freezing for turnips, potatoes, beets and other similar vegetables. The earth
is a great insulator, especially a small hillside. These outside “root
cellars,” dug deep enough and lined with stone, provided the protection needed.
The stone lining not only insulates, but keeps the items stored away cleaner.
The wooden cover/door with added straw insulation made access throughout the
winter possible. A heavy layer of snow would further help to keep the storage
area from freezing. This would normally be in addition to the cellar of the
house, also used for food storage.
Cabbages would have been pulled
roots and all and also stored in similar ways. Pumpkins and other winter squash
would have been kept in house cellars or possibly garrets (attics), to prevent
freezing, allowing them to be used well into the winter months. Several other
root vegetables like parsnips and salsify would have just been kept in the
frozen ground of the garden and dug out as needed.
By this time of year, beans and peas
would have been dried and stored away in sacks in cool dry locations. Dried
peas and beans used in soups, stews, and baked bean dishes were simply left to
fully mature on their vines or stalks in the field. Once completely dry, they
were pulled by the roots and loaded into a cart or wagon and hauled back to the
barn. In some cases, the partially dried plants were attached to long poles
set-up in the field, once fully dried, the “bean” poles were hauled back to the
barn to await further processing. This allowed a nice compact way to store
them.
Much like threshing grain (more on
this later), beans and peas were laid out on a flat surface, usually on
a tarp, and hit with a wooden flail (two lengths of wood connected by a leather
lace). The wooden flail would break apart the pods and loosen up the dried
beans or peas. Once loose from pods, the beans and peas were carefully scooped
up and then cleaned by a process called winnowing. Using the breeze, the bean
and peas were flipped up and down in a large shallow basket. The dust and
lighter debris would blow away leaving the beans or peas behind. Once clean,
they would be stored away in barrels or clean sacks. Dried green beans were
re-constituted and added to soups or stews in the winter and early spring when
nothing green was available.
With careful planning, all these
sorts of vegetables would carry over the family’s needs until the new summer
produce became available again. It’s no wonder that the first early greens from
the garden were so looked forward to after a winter of starchy root vegetables.
Early autumn harvest |
The great thing about visit the Daggett farm throughout the fall, we can see the presenters harvesting and storing away a variety of garden produce.
Fruit,
especially apples, was another important food item carefully preserved for the
winter. The Daggetts had very limited technology when it came to “canning” as
we know it today. Fruit jams or preserves were kept in small crocks or glass
jars and sealed with bees wax, spirit soaked parchment, or animal bladders that
when tightly drawn over the jar opening, would dry and seal off the jar (they
were reusable). Lots of fruit was dried by slicing and lying out in baskets or
on wooden racks. Fresh fruit was carefully packed in barrels whole to keep in a
cool spot.
As autumn gave way to winter, darkness became king of the 24 hour day, and it dictated daily activities.
As autumn gave way to winter, darkness became king of the 24 hour day, and it dictated daily activities.
The winter time sure looks cold to me, coming up around the bend, but the Daggett Farm House has withstood nearly 300 years of winter weather! To learn more about how our ancestors survived winter, click HERE |
The kitchen at Daggett: the hearth fire and candle flame for light to stave off the cold and night time darkness. |
The light at it's brightest |
Low level of light - - - A solitary candle to light the night - anymore than that would be wasteful. |
And Frederick Law Olmstead, in 1853, was chastised by the servant when he asked for a candle so that he might write a letter (I am quoting it here the way it was originally written): "Not if you hab a fire," the servant told him. "Can't you see by da light of da fire? When a gentleman hab a fire in his room, dey don't count he wants no mo' light 'n dat."
And that's all the light I need. |
Two lanterns? Well...I brought one of my own, you see, so we could double the brightness. |
The coldness of the winter time was as tough for the good folks of the colonial era as we can imagine. Thomas Jefferson, 3rd President of the United States, commented in a letter to his friend John Adams that he "shudder(s) at the approach of winter, and wish I could sleep through it with the doormouse, and only wake with him in spring..."
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The
gathering of neighbors was just as important in the colonial times as it is
today, and folks would come together for a number of different reasons. House
and barn raisings, for example, required a large amount of people - young and
old - and were often concluded with refreshments. Lively frolics would sometimes
follow such an activity and kept some up later than usual, keeping the next
day's chores, shall we say, impaired.
Travel
in colonial America was hazardous and fatiguing. It is assumed
ordinary middling people traveled more than likely by foot to get from home to village and, in many cases, elsewhere as well. In rural areas, strangers
were welcomed into the homes of the locals where no tavern existed. Travelers
relied on word of mouth to find taverns for overnight lodging.
Food
at a tavern was generally fair, serving such delights as bread and
cheese, pigeon fricassee, roast fowl, pasties, and pie, all washed down
with a tankard or mug of cider. At times, however, the servings could be
rather awful. Sara Knight wrote in her diary about her travels by horse
from Boston to new York and a stay at the local ordinary (tavern): "We
would have eat a morsell, but the Pumpkin and Indian-mixt Bread had
such an aspect, and the bare-Legg'd Punch so awkwerd or rather awfull
that we left both."
Mention a tavern today and the immediate reaction is a bar - a place to drink. As Alice Morse Earle wrote in her book Stage Coach and Tavern Days: "Though today somewhat shadowed by a formless reputation of being frequently applied to hostelries of vulgar resort and coarse fare & ways, the word 'tavern' is neverless a good one..."
With that in mind, the tavern has ever played an important part in social, political, and military life, and has helped to make history. From the earliest days when men gathered to talk over the terrors of Indian warfare through the renewal of these fears in the French and Indian War, and through all the anxious but steadfast years preceding and during the Revolution, these gatherings were held in the 'ordinaries' or taverns.
A tavern conversation might revolve around local events, gossip, or turn to a discussion of the acts of Parliament in distant England. As was written in 1732: “To avoid conversation is to Act against the Intention of nature. To live then as men we must confer with men. Conversations must be one of the greatest pleasures of life.”
Information at taverns was also gathered through newspapers, notices, and broadsides. And the conversations and discussions continued loudly into the wee hours. As Alexander Hamilton observed, “I returned to my lodging at eight o’clock, and the post being deliver’d, I found a numerous company at Slater’s reading the news. Their chit-chat and noise kept me awake 3 hours after I went to bed.”
The Revolutionary War affected nearly every person in the colonies, and due to the loyalties of either side of the conflict, the subject was on every tongue and caused many friends to become enemies. Now, I don't plan to get too much into the conflict here, for I have already done a blog post about that (With Liberty and Justice For: The Fight For Independence at Henry Ford Museum), but my article here would not be complete if I didn't at least touch a little upon this.
So, how about a little fife and drum music fitting for a Revolution:
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Sleeping
with another person was a way to generate warmth in the bed chamber. From
earliest childhood, our ancestors had slept together – infants with their
parents, then with their siblings, cousins, or even friends, and then with
apprentices, or domestic help of the same sex. So used to sleeping with others
that sleeping partners were often sought out.
Of
course, sleeping with a marriage partner was the most desirable way of keeping warm; in January
of 1775 Esther Burr wrote, "Pray what do you think everybody marrys in, or
about Winter for? 'Tis quite merry, isn't it? I really believe 'tis for fear of
laying cold, and for the want of a bedfellow. Well, my advice to such is the
same with the apostles, LET THEM MARRY---and you know the reason given by Him,
as well as I do---TIS BETTER TO MARRY THAN TO ______."
Plympton and Daggett - colonial neighbors surviving winter. |
Bed-warmer |
Harriet
Beecher Stowe remembered her Aunt Lois setting a candle in their room and
“admiring the forest of glittering frost-work which had been made by our breath
freezing upon the threads of the blanket.”
Using a long-handled brass warming pan filled with the hot coals from the hearth was one way to warm a bed before slipping in. It would be placed between the sheets and rubbed along the length of the bed quickly and steadily, as to not spill the burning coals. In this manner the bed would become sufficiently warm enough to climb in.
Using a long-handled brass warming pan filled with the hot coals from the hearth was one way to warm a bed before slipping in. It would be placed between the sheets and rubbed along the length of the bed quickly and steadily, as to not spill the burning coals. In this manner the bed would become sufficiently warm enough to climb in.
But
not everyone had this sort of warming luxury, for Mrs. Stowe recalled a family
taking their leave to "bed-chambers that never knew a fire, where the very
sheets and blankets seemed so full of stinging cold air that they made one's
fingers tingle; and where, after getting into bed, there was a prolonged
shiver, until one's own internal heat-giving economy had warmed through the
whole icy mass."
Mrs.
Stowe also warned that “whoever touched a door-latch incautiously in the early
morning received a skinning bit from Jack Frost,” while Harriet Martineau
recalled those winter mornings when even with a good hot coal fire in her
chamber stove “everything you touch seems to blister your fingers with cold.”
James Stuart found it “difficult to preserve the body in sufficient warmth,
even wrapped in two suits of clothes, and everyone kept on stockings and
flannel garments during the night."
"The
ink froze in my pen in lifting it to the paper from an ink-horn, placed within
the fender in front of a good fire." - James Stuart
|
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Family and friends gather together |
The
young folk preferred to frolic, and it was at the husking, quilting, and
apple-paring parties that were most fondly remembered due to the festivity of
the occasion as well as the opportunity for courtship. These were all
time-consuming tasks that could be easily divided among a large group of
people, giving ample time for getting to know one another a little better.
Spinning
frolics, church socials...nearly any reason for the gathering of friends and,
at times, the mixing of couples, would be cause for a party, though they needed
to be organized and planned well ahead in order to prepare ample refreshments
and to make sure useful work could be accomplished.
But
frolics were not necessarily only for working; a "slaying frolic"
took place in York, Maine in 1792: "27 young men and women had an
entertainment after a Slaying Frolick and returned well."
As
author Jane C. Nylander wrote in Our Own Snug Fireside: "These
community rituals encompassed sanctioned forms of courtship behavior. By
combining them with work, people fulfilled their sense of duty and (mollified)
their guilt at entertaining for pure pleasure."
~ ~ ~ ~ ~Preparing my horse for travel |
Weather
was an uncertainty and bad conditions could delay the best laid plans of any
traveler. William Palfrey wrote in 1773 of “a most tedious Journey occasion’d
by heavy Rains and high Winds which prevented my crossing the Ferries.”
Women
traveled infrequently, most often under the protection of fathers, brothers,
husbands, or male escorts. A lone female traveler was a rarity, though not
unheard of. There is a story of a woman who showed up at a tavern alone one
evening and was asked by the keeper, “What in the world brings You here at this
time of night? I never saw a woman on the Rode so Dreadfull late in all the
days of my versall life.”
In
1778 Katherine Farham wrote about traveling alone: “I was in great distress,
but what could I do in a publick House, no person to take care of me?”
At the tavern... |
Mention a tavern today and the immediate reaction is a bar - a place to drink. As Alice Morse Earle wrote in her book Stage Coach and Tavern Days: "Though today somewhat shadowed by a formless reputation of being frequently applied to hostelries of vulgar resort and coarse fare & ways, the word 'tavern' is neverless a good one..."
With that in mind, the tavern has ever played an important part in social, political, and military life, and has helped to make history. From the earliest days when men gathered to talk over the terrors of Indian warfare through the renewal of these fears in the French and Indian War, and through all the anxious but steadfast years preceding and during the Revolution, these gatherings were held in the 'ordinaries' or taverns.
The
tavern was the rendezvous for patriotic bands who listened to the stirring
words of American rebels, and mixed dark treason to King George with every bowl
of punch they drank. The story of our War for Independence could not be
dissociated from the old taverns, they are a part of our national history, and
those which still stand are among our most interesting Revolutionary relics.
A tavern conversation might revolve around local events, gossip, or turn to a discussion of the acts of Parliament in distant England. As was written in 1732: “To avoid conversation is to Act against the Intention of nature. To live then as men we must confer with men. Conversations must be one of the greatest pleasures of life.”
Information at taverns was also gathered through newspapers, notices, and broadsides. And the conversations and discussions continued loudly into the wee hours. As Alexander Hamilton observed, “I returned to my lodging at eight o’clock, and the post being deliver’d, I found a numerous company at Slater’s reading the news. Their chit-chat and noise kept me awake 3 hours after I went to bed.”
The Revolutionary War affected nearly every person in the colonies, and due to the loyalties of either side of the conflict, the subject was on every tongue and caused many friends to become enemies. Now, I don't plan to get too much into the conflict here, for I have already done a blog post about that (With Liberty and Justice For: The Fight For Independence at Henry Ford Museum), but my article here would not be complete if I didn't at least touch a little upon this.
Common Sense is a
pamphlet written by Thomas Paine, who, at the time, was a recent political activist immigrant from
England, and was published anonymously on January 10, 1776. It explained the
advantages of and the need for immediate independence in clear, simple
language. It was sold and distributed widely and read aloud at taverns and
meeting places.
What I have to
present to you is a clip so you can see and hear "ordinary" colonial folk discuss the events of this Revolutionary War, and more specifically, how patriotic fervor from a
simple-yet-powerful pamphlet caused much discussions inside the taverns of
the day:
Here is an exact replica of the January 1776 pamphlet that caused all the commotionAnd, of course, we proudly hung the flag out the window of the house. |
Even the Giddings girls were impressed with the fine work the ladies did in making the flag. |
So, how about a little fife and drum music fitting for a Revolution:
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Of course,
learning of the every day lives of any past era has always been my main course
of study, but reading of our colonial ancestor's survival through even harsher
terms than the Civil War era makes me admire these folks even more.
We
can look back today and say, "oh, how awful our ancestors had it. What
miserable lives they lead!"Chopping wood was not just a man's chore... |
...everybody pitched in. |
And our future descendents may say the same of us 200 years from now. But, just as our ancestors didn't think of their lives as miserable, neither do we of our own. Well, at least most of us don't. Just as the people of the future should not condemn our morals and actions as not being like their own, neither should we condemn those in the past for living the lives of their time with their own morals and actions.
Instead of condemnation, we can learn from them.
Plain and simple, we need to stop placing our modern sense and sensibilities upon those from the past. We need to look at their world through their eyes and mind, not ours. Just like we have no true idea of what comforts the future may bring us - therefore not missing what we do not have - the same goes for our ancestors who knew absolutely nothing of future comforts that we now take for granted. In all honesty, it would not surprise me one bit if our forefathers and foremothers would not think very highly of our lifestyle at all.
I would be willing to bet they were probably much happier than many today give them credit for.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~Heading home... |
I do consistently add to this post so please make return visits.
And you can see that my excursion into the Colonial period, not unlike my passion for the mid-19th century, also centers on the social history of the time. I've always loved social history; the wars and battles, although I realize were important and I do read about every-so-often, never interested me nearly as much as everyday life.
The greater majority of the photos included throughout this posting are some that I took of the colonial era homes at Greenfield Village, my solace from the 21st century. Except for the picture of Daggett at the very top of this post. That one was taken by historical presenter Larissa Fleishman.
And, yes, I'm in many of them. Not an ego thing, it's just that the photos fit what I was looking for. Plus there aren't that many colonial men at Greenfield Village.
It really amazes me just how historically blessed I am to have the opportunity to visit the numerous eras of American history, from the colonial period through the 20th century, in places very near to where I live.
Almost, but not quite, as good as living in a historical house!
Colonial dancing at the Raleigh Tavern located in Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia.
And here's another video about child life in colonial times:
~ ~ ~
Home Life in Colonial Days by Alice Morse Earle
Stage Coach and Tavern Days by Alice Morse Earle
Welcome to Felicity's World 1774
A Midwife's Tale - Laural Thatcher Ulrich
Diary of Anna Green Winslow - with an introduction by Alice Morse Earle
Our Own Snug Fireside: Images of the New England Home 1760 - 1860 by Jane C. Nylander
Your Travel Guide to Colonial America by Nancy Day
Tidings from the 18th Century by Beth Gilgun
Early American Tavern by Kym S. Rice
What Clothes Reveal: The language of Clothing in Colonial and Federal America by Linda Baumgarten
Everyday Life in Colonial America by Dale Taylor
Daily Life in Colonial New England by Claudia Durst Johnson
Colonial Food - Ann Chandonnet
Food in Colonial and Federal America - Sandra L. Oliver
And here are a few colonial era movies. Not all are necessarily historically accurate, and a couple concentrate on war, but I do still enjoy watching them. By the way, the reviews have been taken from various movie review sites, and I included my own personal small observations as well:
John Adams -
"Based on David McCullough's
bestselling biography, the HBO miniseries John Adams is the furthest
thing from a starry-eyed look at America's founding fathers and the brutal path
to independence. Adams (Paul Giamatti), second president of the United States,
is portrayed as a skilled orator and principled attorney whose preference for
justice over anti-English passions earns enemies. The first thing one notices
about John Adams' dramatizations of congress' proceedings, and the
fervent pro-independence violence in the streets of Boston and elsewhere, is
that America's roots don't look pretty or idealized here. Some horrendous
things happen in the name of protest, driving Adams to push the cause of
independence in a legitimate effort to get on with a revolutionary war under
the command of George Washington.
Besides this peek into a
less-romanticized version of the past, John Adams is also a story of the
man himself. Adams' frustration at being forgotten or overlooked at critical
junctures of America's early development--sent abroad for years instead of
helping to draft the U.S. constitution--is detailed. So is his dismay that the
truth of what actually transpired leading to the signing of the Declaration of
Independence has been slowly forgotten and replaced by a rosier myth. But above
all, John Adams is the story of two key ties: Adams' 54-year marriage to
Abigail Adams (Laura Linney), every bit her husband's intellectual equal and
anchor, and his difficult, almost symbiotic relationship with Thomas Jefferson
(Stephen Dillane) over decades."
Ken's Observation: "the furthest thing from a starry-eyed look at America's founding fathers" as is quoted here does not mean they make our Founding Fathers look like bumbling idiots, sex fiends, or 21st century people thrown into an 18th century world. There is no modern PC to make it contemporary. It's a very well-done historical drama that shows people as they were in a very natural way. Hands down as authentic as it gets!
A Midwife's Tale - “In 1785, America was a rough and chaotic young nation, and Maine its remote northern frontier. That year, at the age of 50, Martha Ballard began the diary that she would keep for the next 27 years, until her death. At a time when fewer than half the women in America were literate, Ballard faithfully recorded the weather, her daily household tasks, her midwifery duties (she delivered close to a thousand babies), her medical practice, and countless incidents that reveal the turmoil of a new nation -- dizzying social change, intense religious conflict, economic boom and bust -- as well as the grim realities of disease, domestic violence, and debtor's prison.
In "A Midwife's Tale" the daily activities, the physical feel of the people and buildings involved, and the historical verity that helps us envision late 18th century life, are always conscious - these eighteenth-century details are overlooked treasures that are rich in the texture of everyday life.
The actors were unfamiliar. They look like real people, not movie stars. Family dynamics were more believable and souring relationships took on terrific poignancy.
George Washington Mini-SeriesKen's Observation: "the furthest thing from a starry-eyed look at America's founding fathers" as is quoted here does not mean they make our Founding Fathers look like bumbling idiots, sex fiends, or 21st century people thrown into an 18th century world. There is no modern PC to make it contemporary. It's a very well-done historical drama that shows people as they were in a very natural way. Hands down as authentic as it gets!
A Midwife's Tale - “In 1785, America was a rough and chaotic young nation, and Maine its remote northern frontier. That year, at the age of 50, Martha Ballard began the diary that she would keep for the next 27 years, until her death. At a time when fewer than half the women in America were literate, Ballard faithfully recorded the weather, her daily household tasks, her midwifery duties (she delivered close to a thousand babies), her medical practice, and countless incidents that reveal the turmoil of a new nation -- dizzying social change, intense religious conflict, economic boom and bust -- as well as the grim realities of disease, domestic violence, and debtor's prison.
In "A Midwife's Tale" the daily activities, the physical feel of the people and buildings involved, and the historical verity that helps us envision late 18th century life, are always conscious - these eighteenth-century details are overlooked treasures that are rich in the texture of everyday life.
The actors were unfamiliar. They look like real people, not movie stars. Family dynamics were more believable and souring relationships took on terrific poignancy.
Martha
Ballard is played by actress Kaiulani Sewall Lee, a direct descendant of the
Sewall family of Maine -- people the real Martha Ballard knew, aided in
childbirth, and nursed through illness.”
Ken's Observation:
This docu-drama just brought the historic colonial homes I often visit
(like the 1750 Daggett Farmhouse inside Greenfield Village in Dearborn,
MI) to life. This is one
of the most amazing films about everyday 18th century life - - wow----it
authentically and accurately brought the era and people of the Founding
Generation to
life like I've never experienced. Seriously...this struck a strong chord
in me. After the first 15 minutes or so, it played more like a movie
than a docu-drama. Real life history.
“A sweeping eight-hour, three-part miniseries chronicling the life of Washington from ages 11 to 51, beginning just after the death of his father in 1743 and taking him through his journeyman days as a young surveyor, his hidden love for Sally Fairfax (the wife of his best friend), his marriage to widowed Martha Custis, his involvement in the French and Indian Wars, his premature retirement from military life and his return to uniform to head the American colonists in the Revolutionary War. It concludes with his emotional farewell to his officers and his return to Mount Vernon following war's end. Barry Bostwick heads an all-star cast in this dramatization of historian James Thomas Flexner's four volume "George Washington" biography."
Ken's Observation: I was seriously blown away by this mini-series. It put flesh on the bones of the Father of our Country like no other, which, from what I've read on various sites, is unlike the new movie about Washington that is supposedly being released in 2015. This one from 1984 sticks to the truth by following documents and letters, whereas the new one, I hear, will be taking a few extreme 21st century liberties and fallacies in hopes to show Washington "as a real man." Yeah...as a real 21st century Hollywood man. If this is true then I'll stick to this one, thank you.
Mary Silliman's War -
"Often forgotten when we think of the Revolutionary War is the involvement of non-combatants. In this case, General Silliman was not commanding troops but rather served as a state’s attorney. He was caught up in the intense conflict between the Tories, Whigs and those who tried to remain neutral. Silliman was abducted during the night by Tories and taken to Long Island and imprisoned.
His wife, wonderfully portrayed by Nancy Palk, rises to the occasion and works to obtain his freedom through various plans of exchange. Time and time again she is thwarted. Wonderfully depicted is the neighbor vs. neighbor clashes of civilians as well as conflict with those in authority who find General Silliman a convenient political bargaining chip.
This
is a wrenching tale. Absent are the ranks of soldiers firing in
battle. Instead, there is the struggle of a woman to overcome the myriad
of obstacles in her way. Eventually, she very reluctantly resorts to
desperate measures." (This review from All Things Liberty web site)
Ken's Observation:
This was a very impressive, well-made movie. Who needs Hollywood when
independents can show history much more accurate? Yes, an excellent
movie about a part of the Revolutionary War rarely shown.
April Morning"
"This is simply a gem of a movie based on Howard Fast's excellent 1962 novel of the first day of hostilities between colonists and Britain.
There may have been bigger blockbusters made about the American Revolution (The
Patriot, etc.) but this under- rated
1988 film is a true classic, capturing the quintessential decency of American
colonial village life in Lexington and the developing tensions and conflict on
that fateful day of 19th April 1775.
April
Morning is also effective because it does not glamorize war or demonize
the redcoats. In fact, a Patriot and a Redcoat are both seen, at various
stages, to be scared witless by the whiff of grapeshot and of battle. Yet
overall, in what is truly a momentous day for the villagers of Lexington and
Concord, we see how the events mature a young colonist, and this is brilliantly
illustrated at the end of the film when he leads his family in prayer for their
food and life. This very subtle approach makes it evident that the boy, like
colonial America, is gone forever and has been replaced by a decent man who
would, with humility, be worthy of his emerging new leadership role-in young America."
Ken's Observations: This is another movie that took me by surprise when I discovered it a couple years ago. We now make it an annual watch on either April 18 or 19. I highly recommend this you-are-there movie.
Ken's Observations: This is another movie that took me by surprise when I discovered it a couple years ago. We now make it an annual watch on either April 18 or 19. I highly recommend this you-are-there movie.
There are more out there but, to me these are the best.
I do advise you to stay away from such trash as "The Story of US" put out by the History Channel. So much is glazed over or not even touched upon. In fact, so little time is spent on the early years of our nation that one would think the great explorers came over in the year 1800!
And here are a few of my other postings that pertain to the colonial era of our Nation's history:
Civil War vs Colonial Reenacting
Why I do two eras and the difference between reenacting and living history. Plus my complaints about so-called historians who have degrees.
Collecting History - The Old North Church Lantern
Yep - I got the Bicentennial replica of this oh-so-important piece of American History!
Colonial Christmas
A history of Christmas in America's colonial past.
Colonial Cooking: On the Hearth
A post dedicated solely to colonial-era kitchen and cooking - lots of pictures!
Colonial Ken on a Horse 2015 (Part of the 5 Senses post):
I wore full colonial garb and rode a horse for photo opps. Pretty cool! (End of article is where you'll find the pictures)
Colonial Ken Visits Greenfield Village
My first outing dressed in colonial clothing - and on the 139th anniversary of the start of the Revolutionary War to boot!
Colonial Ken Visits Greenfield Village on Patriots Day
April 19 - Paul Revere and the beginning of the Revolutionary War must never be forgotten. I will do my part.
Colonial Ken & Friends - 4th of July 2014: Celebrating Independence Day in a Colonial Way
For the first time, a few of us celebrated our Nation's birth as if it were 1776.
Colonial Ken Visits Greenfield Village for the 4th of July 2015
A repeat of 2014, but different. And every bit as patriotic! As an extra bonus: Bastille Day!
Colonial Ken Visits Greenfield Village for the Fall Harvest
I'm at it again, only this time I was able to enjoy the season of fall during the 1770s while in my period clothing. I even got to make beer!
Colonial Ken Visits Greenfield Village on Black Friday
My annual anti-Black Friday excursion to Greenfield Village. In colonial clothes!
Colonial Ken Visits Greenfield Village for New Year's 2015/16
I again wore my colonial clothing for Holiday Nights, only I concentrated on the new Year's aspect of the Holiday season. Oh what fun!
Colonial Kensington 2014: Spending Time in the 1770's
Our first foray as a family reenacting the Revolutionary War
Colonial Kensington 2015
One of the best colonial reenactments in the area! And...I met Ben Franklin!
The Daggett House
a wonderful history that bring the house and family to life
Dept. 56: Colonial Williamsburg Lighted House Collection
Ceramic lighted houses based on actual historic buildings from America's colonial period - how cool is that?
Dept. 56: My Own Personal Daggett Farm House and Farris Windmill
Home sweet colonial home
Detroit: A True Colonial City
Would you be surprised to learn Detroit was being settled at the same time as the 13 colonies?
Faces of History: Original Photographs of Revolutionary War Vets
Yes, you heard right! Actual photos of the men who fought in the Revolutionary War
Flags of Our Founding Fathers
Learn the history of the early flags of our United States
Fort Wayne 2014
My first *real* colonial reenactment (with a little Civil War to boot).
I did the 1860's on Saturday and the 1770's on Sunday
Fort Wayne 2015
It was a rain out, but I still got a few cool pictures before it hit. Plus, Kristen's first time as a colonial!!
Future Colonial Reenacting Plans
My plans to expand reenacting beyond Civil War.
Greenfield Village: Colonial Ken Visits Greenfield Village 2014
My first time ever in public wearing colonial clothing
In the Good Old Colony Days
A concise pictorial to everyday life in America's colonies
It's the Little Things
Another post that touches on a variety of subjects, such as Shadow Portraits, Bourdaloues, Revolutionary Mothers, and a few other interesting historical odds & ends.
Kensington Reenactment 2014 - Spending Time in the 1770's
Our first large colonial/Rev War reenactment - what fun we had!
Kensington 2015
One of the best colonial reenactments in the area! And...I met Ben Franklin!
Noah Webster: Forgotten Founding Father
Yes, the man of the dictionary fame was actually a Founding Father. We almost lost his house to history in exchange for a parking lot. Read all about it here.
Paul Revere: Listen My Children and You Shall Hear...
The true story of Paul Revere's Midnight Ride
Meet Paul Revere & Sybil Ludington
Back to the Future Day!
Here is a presentation my friend Larissa and I put together for school kids studying the founding of our nation.
Revere: Collecting History - The Old North Church Lantern
I finally got an exact replica of the Old North Church Lantern - and it only took 40 years! Here's how it happened...
Reenacting Early American History
Pre-Civil War era reenacting
Revolutionary War History - Preventing Tyranny at Salem in 1775
How the townsfolk pulled together and beat the British - true pre-RevWar story!
Ste. Clair Voyageurs at Metro Beach: Life on the Frontier
My first time participating as a reenactor here. In fact, my first time attending. It was awesome!
Thanksgiving in Colonial Times
Just how did our colonial ancestors mark this holiday? Read on, my friends!
Travel and Taverns
To help you understand what it was like to travel and stay at a tavern in colonial times.
With Liberty and Justice For All: The Fight for Independence at the Henry Ford Museum
Telling the story of America's Fight for Independence by way of the amazing collection of artifacts in the Henry Ford Museum.
You Say You Want a Revolution
The 240th and 250th anniversary of the beginning of the Revolutionary War is at hand. How will it be handled?
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Thank you so very much for this! I love colonial,and always appreciate your blog~
ReplyDeletePam - You are very welcome! I enjoy your postings as well.
ReplyDeleteMary - I appreciate the additional movie information. I will have to search out "The Awakening Land."
Your blog has re-kindled my interest in colonial America, which hasn't happened in many years, so I must give credit where credit is due.
Thanks again!
The people of that period really lived simple. I guess they did not know a lot different. Not much media to spread the word about people who had much finer things. I can just imagine how cold it must have been in those homes and how hot in the summer. All they did was work.Is good people like you keep all this a live. Thanks for sharing and stopping by. Richard from My Old Historic House.
ReplyDeleteI love the way you phrased this: "just the whole woodeness of it all!" I know exactly what you mean. :)
ReplyDeleteI don't think there's anything wrong with taking forays into other eras that are not your main focus. So many things overlap from era to era that it would be impossible to "only" be one era in particular. I look forward to reading more colonial posts.
In the Plympton house, there is a metal apparatus on one of the beams in front of / above the fireplace. Do you know what that is? There is so much good info. here.
ReplyDeleteThis was an interesting article on one mans perspective of early American life with footnotes. Not fully remembering the past we are sure to repeat it. Your next article might be an indepth study of the affects of colonization on the native peoples of this land we call America and black slavery. I hope such an indepth study will be as light hearted. It is our duty to judge the past when genoside and slavery are major adpects of the development of a new world.
ReplyDelete