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Lindsey Hiers Mrs.Early’s 8th Grade S.S Class Colonial Maryland
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Trades /Farming Tobacco plantations Border colony for slavery Home to the Chesapeake Bay ports of Baltimore and Annapolis Had a lot of indentured servants – had to work for their masters mostly for 7 years They mostly farmed corn, wheat, rice, and indigo Their main manufacturing was shipbuilding and iron works
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Family Life Children became enrolled as apprentices as early as age 7 Many families in colonial Maryland were farmers. Families were often large so that children could help the family economically when the parents reached old age. Many of the people were farmers or worked in a skilled trade. Candle makers, blacksmiths and tavern owners were among the professions available in colonial Maryland. Each of the different families had at least one common bond, however: the father was always the head of the home.
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Hobbies/Pastimes They had many games to play Since they didn’t have toys they would make their own things to play with such as kites.
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Communication The family was the basis for social interaction If they needed to talk to someone they would go to their house or they might send a messenger.
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Relations With Other People Economic support and political opinions and ideals in colonial Maryland. Each of the different families had at least one common bond
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Religion In Maryland, the Culverts' set policies which allowed Christians to worship freely Catholics were a minority during the entire colonial period. Eventually, other religious groups, such as Quakers and Presbyterians, settled in Maryland to take advantage of this liberal atmosphere.
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Education The family in colonial Maryland was a person's main source of entertainment and learning. Children were expected to know how to read and write, and boys were taught Latin in grammar school. Puritan families realized that education could help the family become economically stable, and often sent their sons to higher educational institutions. In the colonial period, Maryland attempted to establish free schools. The General Assembly, in 1695, assessed a tax on the export of furs to raise funds for these schools.
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Daily Life An "ordinary" was a combination of a hotel, restaurant, and bar which served as a center for social, economic, and political activity. They played games like hopscotch, cards, marbles, hide- n-seek, and tag.
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Climate The weather varied between 20 degrees Fahrenheit and 90 degrees Fahrenheit annually. Most Marylanders lived in rough conditions on small family farms.
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