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Chapter 3 I. The Rhythms of Life II. At Home III.At Work IV. At Play
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Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Jan 19, 2018

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Stephen Robbins

Population Germans Germans Often Protestant Often Protestant Pennsylvania Dutch Pennsylvania Dutch Most immigrants adapted to English ways Most immigrants adapted to English ways
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Page 1: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Chapter 3

I. The Rhythms of LifeII. At HomeIII. At WorkIV. At Play

Page 2: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Population• Non-English• Scots-Irish• Germans

• Frontier• Great Wagon

Road

Page 3: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Population• Germans• Often Protestant• Pennsylvania

Dutch• Most immigrants

adapted to English ways

Page 4: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Marrying• 1700: 250,000• 1775: 2,500,000• High birthrate• Women married at

younger ages

Page 5: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Marrying• Large families

helped provide farm labor

Page 6: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Burying• Childbearing was

dangerous• Infant mortality

rate was high• Even higher in

Europe

Page 7: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Burying• Epidemics became

more common with growth of cities

• Colonies generally flourished

Page 8: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Housing

• The first homes built in an area were usually primitive

• “colonial style”

Page 9: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Housing

• Materials used often depended on location

• Most lived in simple homes

Page 10: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Diet

• One’s diet often related to his social standing

• Frontier foods• Hard cider and rum

Page 11: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Diet

• Foods transplanted from other parts of the world included potatoes, coffee, and farm animals

Page 12: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Education

• The purpose behind education was to provide basic skills and the ability to read the Bible

Page 13: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Education

• Puritan New England had many college graduates

• Education was highly valued in New England

Page 14: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Education

• Hornbook• New England Primer• Some taught at home• Dame schools

Page 15: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Education

• Outside New England, literacy and education were limited• Geography• Less enthusiasm

Page 16: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Education

• Some hired private tutors

• Charleston, SC• Free schools• Public library

Page 17: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Rice Farmer

Louis TimothyEdisto Island, SC

1718

Page 18: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

House Servant

Debora RiedhauserGermantown, PA

1747

Page 19: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Slave

AkachiVirginia

1720

Page 20: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

Wigmaker

Jeremy ShrimptonBoston, MA

1735

Page 21: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

At Play• Leisure time existed• Americans did enjoy

life in colonial times• Different leisure

activities in cities and on frontier

Page 22: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

At Play• Worship services

were also social occasions

• Newspapers

Page 23: Chapter 3 I.The Rhythms of Life II.At Home III.At Work IV.At Play.

At Play• Children usually

had few toys• Homemade• Highly prized