Catalog Search Results
Author
Publisher
Capstone Press
Pub. Date
2011
Description
"Describes the people and events involved during the colonial years before the Revolutionary War. The reader's choices reveal the historical details from the perspectives of an indentured Virginia servant, a Massachusetts colonist, and a resident of Philadelphia just before the revolution"--Provided by publisher.
Series
Publisher
Teaching Company
Pub. Date
c2009
Description
Between 1500 and 1800, the world was transformed. The peoples of Europe, Africa, and America, brought together in an often violent colonial process, created a New World and transformed the old. These lectures examine the relations of the colonies with the native people, the relations between the British colonies and the colonial outposts of Spain, France, and the Netherlands, and how British attempts at colonial governance led, ultimately, to resistance,...
Author
Description
What was life like for women in the American colonies? This classic study suggests that, in spite of hardships, many colonial women led rich, fulfilling lives. Drawing on letters, diaries and contemporary accounts, the author thoroughly depicts the lives of women in the New England and Southern colonies. Thoughtfully written, well-documented account.
Author
Publisher
J.B. Lippincott Co
Pub. Date
1898
Description
"In travelling from Massachusetts to the Carolinas one passed through communities of such distinct individuality that they were almost like different nations," writes author Sidney George Fisher in his preface to Men, Women & Manners in Colonial Times, in which he presented the history and culture of colonial America to his Gilded Age contemporaries, who he felt had lost an appreciation of the fascinating circumstances that created the Founding Fathers...
Author
Description
Excerpt: "In reverent and affectionate retrospective view of the influences and conditions which had power and made mark upon the settlement of New England, we are apt to affirm with earnest sentiment that religion was the one force, the one aim, the one thought, of the lives of our forbears. It was indeed an ever present thought and influence in their lives; but they possessed another trait which is as evident in their records as their piety, and...
Author
Series
Publisher
Heritage Books
Pub. Date
1988
Description
A Major U.S. Historian Series No. 3. “Colonial Dames and Good Wives” by Alice Morse Earle published by Houghton Mifflin 1895.
Note: This book is 'read as written'. It was published in 1895. It is in the public domain.
Alice Morse Earle's writings, beginning in 1890, focused on small sociological details rather than grand details, and thus are invaluable for modern social historians.
CONTENTS:
Chapter I. “Consorts and Relicts”
II. “Women...
Author
Description
Could you identify a sausage gun if you had to? How about a plate warmer or a well-sweep? Any idea how the term log-rolling really originated? Alice Morse Earle (1851-1911), a prolific popular historian and the first American to chronicle everyday life and customs of the colonial era, describes what these and many other obscure utensils were and how they were used. She also conveys a vivid picture of home production of textiles, colonial dress, transportation,...
13) Colonial life
Author
Series
Pub. Date
c1992
Description
In this newly revised edition of Colonial Life, young readers will meet the hardworking people of a colonial community, learn about the importance of family members, and discover the roles that religion and education played in people's lives more than two hundred years ago. They will also learn about: how people traveled from place to place; how adults and children; how a plantation was run, and the impact of the slave trade.
16) Colonial home
Author
Series
Publisher
Crabtree Pub. Co
Pub. Date
c2001
Description
This newly revised edition takes readers into a Colonial Home of the 1600s and 1700s. See inside the kitchen, the fireplace, the bedchamber and the barn. Learn why immigrants from England, France, and Spain were drawn to North America, and how plantations in the South grew and prospered through the slave trade.
Author
Series
Publisher
Chicago Review Press
Pub. Date
2016.
Description
"Using a host of primary sources, author Brandon Marie Miller recounts the roles, hardships, and daily lives of Native American, European, and African women in 17th- and 18th-century colonial America. Hard work proved a constant for most women--they ensured their family's survival through their skills while others sold their labor or lived in bondage as indentured servants and slaves. Even in this world defined entirely by men, a world where no one...
20) Colonial living
Author
Publisher
The World Publishing Company
Pub. Date
[1957]
Description
Describes the industries, schools, society, culture, and growth of the coastal settlements during the colonial period.