Download - Colonial America

Transcript
Page 1: Colonial America

Colonial America

By: Kate Downey

Page 2: Colonial America

• George Washington helped create the foundation of America. He lead the continental army and was our first president.

Founding Fathers:

George Washington

Page 3: Colonial America

James Madison

• James Madison wrote much of the constitution and was the fourth president of the United States.

Founding Fathers:

Page 4: Colonial America

• Thomas Jefferson was unanimously picked to write the Declaration of Independence, and was also the second vice president and the third president.

Thomas Jefferson

Founding Fathers:

Page 5: Colonial America

Benjamin Franklin

• Benjamin Franklin helped correct the Declaration of Independence and negotiated the Treaty of Paris.

Founding Fathers:

Page 6: Colonial America

Jobs and their Typical Work Days

• Some jobs of colonial times are Milliners, Blacksmiths, and Carpenters and joiners. Milliners made things like shifts, gowns, aprons, hats, and cloaks. Blacksmiths were crafters of hardware and tools. Carpenters and joiners made things out of wood, such as cabinets. Some jobs in colonial times included skill, and people would mainly work long hours. People used tools such as anvils, hammers, tongs, chisels, and files.

Page 7: Colonial America

Games and music

• Fifes and Snare Drums were important to music in the colonial era. Harpsichords were used also. People played board games, puzzles, cards, and ninepins. They also walked on stilts and rolled hoops.

Page 8: Colonial America

3 Regions of the 13 Colonies

• One of the regions of the 13 colonies is the New England region, which consist of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island, it has cold winters and mild summers, and it mainly relied on ship building. The others are the Middle region and the Southern region. The Middle region consists of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware, and is a farming society that has cold winters and warm summers. The Southern region consists of Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia, and has mild winters and warm summers, large plantations and slavery.

Page 9: Colonial America

Slavery

• Slavery is a practice of capturing Africans and selling them to paying people. The Southern region became most dependent on slavery because their economy was almost entirely based on farming and slaves were mainly used as laborers on plantations. They could work in the plantation owner’s house, or out in the fields.

Page 10: Colonial America

Education

• Most people in colonial times could neither read nor write. Children who could afford education would use tools such as slate boards, educational puzzles, and eighteenth-century children’s books. Adults that could read mainly read newspapers.

Page 11: Colonial America

Shelter and Furnishings

• If you were poor in colonial times, you would use what you could to build a house, but dugout houses were popular. If you were middle classed you would have a moderate sized house, probably with a keeping room and an attic. If you were rich you would probably live in a big house or mansion. What furnished homes were mainly cabinets, chairs, a clothes press, a desk, a bookcase, a bureau table, a writing table, and a clock. If you were rich you would probably have marble statues in your home.

Page 12: Colonial America

Clothing

• Clothes in colonial times consisted of shirts, shifts, aprons, shoes, neckerchiefs, caps, cloaks, hoods, hats, muffs, gowns, breeches, under petticoats,and hoop petticoats. They also had ruffles and trim for gowns.

Page 13: Colonial America

Food

• There were many dishes in colonial times. Pumpkin gnocchi and tidewater chili are some of them. People could catch lobsters, and fish for salmon and other kinds of fish. They could also hunt or farm.

Page 14: Colonial America

Webliography

• Guterba, Linda. "Colonial Life: Life in Colonial America." Kid Info. 2009. . 30 January, 2013. <http;//americanhistory.about.com/od/revolutionarywar/tp/foundingfathers.htm

• , and East Buchanan Middle School. "Life in Colonial America." . 11/21/2000. . 6 February, 2013. <http://www.east-buc.k12.ia.us/00_01/CA/home.htm>.

• Edit Graphic Organizer Delete Graphic Organizer• Website:• , . "Who Were The Four Most Important Founding Fathers?." Answers. 2012. Answers Corporation. 6 February, 2013.

<http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Who_were_the_four_most_important_Founding_Fathers>.

• Edit Graphic Organizer Delete Graphic Organizer• Website:• , . "The Thirteen Colonies." Roanoke County Public Schools. 2012. RCPS. 6 February, 2013. <http://www.rcs.k12.va.us/csjh/colonies.htm>.

• Edit Graphic Organizer Delete Graphic Organizer• Website:• , . "Colonial America." Awesome Library. . EDI and Dr. R Jerry Adams. 6 February, 2013. <>.

• Edit Graphic Organizer Delete Graphic Organizer• Website:• Kelly, martin. "Top Ten Founding Fathers." About.com. 2012. . 6 February, 2013.

<http;//americanhistory.about.com/od/revolutionarywar/tp/foundingfathers.htm>, . "13 Colonies Regions." Mr. Nussbaum. Nussbaum Education Network. . 13 February, 2013. http://www.mrnussbaum.com/13colonies/13regions.htm#ne

• . "Slavery in the Colonial World." Academic American History. December 20,2010. . 13 February, 2013. http://www.academicamerican.com/colonial/topics/slavery.htm

• , . "Early America." cybrary. 1997-2001. 27Stars.com. 13 February, 2013. http://www.cybrary.org/colonial.htm• "Colonial Williamsburg Trades." Colonial Williamsburg. 2012. Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. 13 February, 2013.

<http://www.history.org/almanack/life/trades/tradehdr.cfm>..• "Thirteen Colonies." Conservapedia. 17, April 2010 at 14:05. Conservapedia. 13 February, 2013.

<http://www.consevapedia.com/Colonial_America>.• . .


Top Related