Hartwell Tavern (photo from www.concordmass.com) |
For Anna Winslow and her rather pampered life, it dictated what cloak and bonnet she'd select and/or if it was too cold or snowy to attend school. In Abner Sanger's world, what it was like outside pretty much dictated his activities for the day. And to Martha Ballard, much like Mr. Sanger, the severity of the elements determined if she could do her job. In Mrs. Ballard's case, it was reach a a patient in time to aid in the delivery of their baby.
A look at our Facebook pages tells much the same story -- it's always appropriate to talk about the weather. So next time you don your 18th century kit, and you don't know what to say to a visitor - mention the weather, knowing that it was just as important to the people we are portraying as it is today.
Some additional books based on the diaries of 18th century New Englanders for your reading list...
Earthbound and Heavenbent - Elizabeth Porter Phelps and Life at Forty Acres (1747-1817) by Elizabeth Pendergast Carlisle, Scribner 2004
The Way of Duty: A Woman and Her Family in Revolutionary America, Joy Day Buel and Richard Buel, Jr. W.W. Norton & Company 1995
The Years of the Life of Samuel Lane 1718-1806 - A New Hampshire Man and His World by Jerald E. Brown, University Press of New England 2000
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