Home Life in Colonial Days

Home Life in Colonial Days

by Alice Morse Earle
Home Life in Colonial Days

Home Life in Colonial Days

by Alice Morse Earle

Paperback

$38.50 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Occupations, such as weaving and spinning had their own implements and vocabulary, along with a variety of terms, phrases and names, which have become almost obsolete. Explanation of these old words and phrases rescues them from disuse, and preserves them for future reference. Photographs and illustrations of these rare relics and past days adorn the majority of these pages, bringing to life many items from everyday colonial life.
"Many a curious article as nameless and incomprehensible as the totem of an extinct Indian tribe has been studied, compared, inquired and written about, and finally triumphantly named and placed in the list of obsolete domestic appurtenances. From the lofts of woodsheds, under attic eaves, in dairy cellars, out of old trunks and sea-chests from mouldering warehouses, have strangely shaped bits and combinations of wood, stuff, and metal been rescued and recognized."
A detailed account of Colonial dwellings as they evolved from earthen caves to log cabins, then wooden and brick houses includes references to specific houses. The diverse assortment of topics examined includes: candles and lamps, the kitchen fireside and furnishings, the serving of meals, the importance of Indian corn, food and drink preparation, flax culture, wool culture, spinning, cotton, hand-weaving, girl's occupations, typical dress and accessories of Colonials, the Jack knife, transportation and taverns, churches and Sunday services, the strength and growth of New England built upon neighborliness, Southern hospitality, mutual welfare, the old-time flower garden and more. The text is indexed according to subject.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780788415128
Publisher: Heritage Books, Inc. MD
Publication date: 02/01/2013
Pages: 540
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 1.09(d)

About the Author

Alice Morse Earle was an American historian born in 1851, who wrote many engaging books that cronicled the details of everyday life in colonial America.

Table of Contents

I.Homes of the Colonists1
II.The Light of Other Days32
III.The Kitchen Fireside52
IV.The Serving of Meals76
V.Food from Forest and Sea108
VI.Indian Corn126
VII.Meat and Drink142
VIII.Flax Culture and Spinning166
IX.Wool Culture and Spinning, with a Postscript on Cotton187
X.Hand-Weaving212
XI.Girls' Occupations252
XII.Dress of the Colonists281
XIII.Jack-knife Industries300
XIV.Travel, Transportation, and Taverns325
XV.Sunday in the Colonies364
XVI.Colonial Neighborliness388
XVII.Old-time Flower Gardens421
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews