Title: Life As a Colonist
1Life As a Colonist
2Colonial Diet Food and Drink
Corn was the stalk of life. Could be dried
and kept for a year. It was popular in bread,
meat stews and vegetable dishes.
- A very bland diet
- Did not eat vegetables
- The exceptions were root vegetables, herbs and
grains. - Beans became very popular
3Colonial Diet Food and Drink
Spring/Summer Fresh fruits and vegetables.
Wild berries such as strawberries, huckleberries,
blackberries, and blueberries.
- A balanced nutrition was not a concern.
- It was more important to just have enough food to
eat. - Diet was determined by availability and custom
4Colonial Diet Food and Drink
Winter Colonists ate dried corn, and beans,
salted pork and fish, and by the early eighteenth
century corned beef
- Fall
- This was a time of harvest. Corn, beans, and
squash were fresh along with rye and barley.
Apples were used in an abundance of dishes
5Colonial Diet Food and Drink
- Meats
- Game, fish, and seafood provided diets colonists
would not have had in England. - Wild turkeys came in flocks of 400 500.
- Chickens, goats, sheep, cattle, and pigs were
eaten. Hogs made the best type of livestock.
Cows were used for their milk but never
slaughtered.
6Family Life
- Typical families were different then today.
- Colonial families was generally made up of
parents or stepparents, many children,
grandparents, servants, and others that may have
been taken in out of charity - After a couple was married, children would be
born approximately every 2 years
7Marriage
- Different from today
- Marriages were more of a convenience and usually
arranged by parents - Weddings were simple and performed by a
magistrate - A small reception followed
8Wanted
- Wanted a woman of singular beauty and virtue
and unspoiled reputation to attended a home must
be industrious and pleasant, and able to run a
household including cooking, cleaning, churning,
combing, carding, spinning, knitting, pickling,
candle making, as well as take part in the
running of a farm as from time to time is
necessary by milking, bee keeping, harvesting,
threshing, and raising small livestock must be
willing to educate one young lady in the practice
of economy, who with her father will compose a
family.
9Daily Life for Women
Chores Fireplace Candles Cooking
Clothes Cleaning Children
- Everything a family had was produced in the home
and most likely by the women. - Life was an unending series of chores.
10So where were the men?
- Men were responsible for
- Planting crops
- Cutting down trees
- Harvesting
- Mending tools
- Keeping the house weather tight
- Digging Wells
11Colonial Children
Chores Weeding the garden Churning butter
Cooking Many children were sent off to become
apprentices
- Hard times for children
- Infant mortality was high
- Many children died from diseases or other
accidents
12Crime and Punishment
- Punishment for a crime usually revolved around
humiliation - Stocks
13Crime and Punishment
T D A
- Wear large letters to represent crime
- For example if you were a thief, you would have
to wear a large T.
14Crime and Punishment
- Ducking Stool
- This involved being tied to a stool that was
lowered into a lake or river
15Crime and Punishment
Prisons was usually not an option Punishment
was not as bad as in England
- Whippings
- Ears cut off
- Branded
- Execution by hanging and burning