tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post4196607492589125157..comments2022-03-27T14:05:24.040-04:00Comments on Livin' in the Future: Sophs- Green Class respond here...M Alb.http://www.blogger.com/profile/00354423847648479400noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post-4412827396479702972010-09-13T09:58:38.852-04:002010-09-13T09:58:38.852-04:00http://www.capecodtoday.com/blogs/index.php/2010/0...http://www.capecodtoday.com/blogs/index.php/2010/04/15/1912-cape-listens-as-titanic-sinks?blog=161<br /><br />http://www.news.harvard.edu/guide/content/history-harvard-university<br /><br />http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/religion/revolution/low_bandwidth.html<br /><br />http://www.cityofboston.gov/freedomtrail/firstpublic.asp<br /><br />http://en.allexperts.com/q/U-S-History-672/2008/1/Puritan-school-punishment-1.htmGarrett, Brock, Kelseynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post-43042263296718643692010-09-13T09:56:47.797-04:002010-09-13T09:56:47.797-04:001. Puritans found the first free public school.
2....1. Puritans found the first free public school.<br />2. The first public school was focused on grammar.<br />3. The puritan’s goal was to have a devout and well-educated community.<br />4. Harvard University was established in 1636, in the Massachusetts Bay Colony.<br />5. Harvard University was named after John Harvard of Charlestown.<br />6. John Harvard left his estate to the use of Harvard University.<br />7. The Massachusetts Bay Colony passed the first law in the new world that required children to be taught to read and write.<br />8. The puritans thought that people of the colony had to be able to read the bible and their laws of the land to be a successful colony.<br />9. Massachusetts Bay Colony established another law in 1647 saying that each town was required to establish and maintain a public school.<br />10. The puritans believed that children’s welfare on earth and in the after life depended on their ability to read and understand the bible.<br />11. Well into the 19th and 20th century U.S. public schools remained Christian institutions.<br />12. During classes there was virtually no critical thinking and no freedom of expression.<br />13. Classes were almost year round with almost no summer break or off days.<br />14. The school system had no organization with any sub division such as divisions.<br />15. Capital punishment in The Puritan Public schools was not uncommon such as smacking hands with the ruler. <br />16. At first the majority of the teachers were men but by the 1800’s women became more common.<br />17. Teachers often ate at their students homes and sometimes lodged there on a rotational schedule.<br />18. The teachers were only slightly more educated than the students, only being a page or so ahead in the text book. <br />19. The only school subjects were reading, writing, and arithametic. <br />20.Garrett,Brock, Kelseynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post-79059520161297279672010-09-13T09:55:48.511-04:002010-09-13T09:55:48.511-04:00www.answers.com
www.pilgrimhall.org
Gale Database
...www.answers.com<br />www.pilgrimhall.org<br />Gale Database<br /><br /> )William Bradford was born in March of 1590 in a small farming community of Austerfield, Yorkshire.<br /> )Known for drafting the Mayflower compact document. Which was the start of the idea of freedom to worship without government intrusions.<br /> )Member of the Separist movement in Amsterdam in 1609 which had some relation to Puritism.<br /> )Fostered and created system of self Government in America.<br /> )Helped organize a group of one hundred plus pilgrims to sail to the New World.<br /> )He had three known wives, named Alice Carpenter, Dorthy, and Mary.<br /> )It was believed that Dorthy fell overboard on the way over to the New World and drowned.<br /> )He wrote Plymouth Plantation a book that details the struggles of Puritist in a New World.<br /> )It tells about incounters with Indians and how they fight to survive the cold, hunger of food, shelter, and economically.<br /> )Hugh Hufer maker of Playboy is a tenth direct descendant of william bradford, Hugh claims his puritist ways of life impacted the way his family raised him to achieve and accomplish goals.<br /> )New World Press calls William an example of Individual knowledge.Joey W, Mark L.noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post-13699811017488313992010-09-13T09:53:18.325-04:002010-09-13T09:53:18.325-04:001. Squanto belonged to the Patuxet Indians.
2. Th...1. Squanto belonged to the Patuxet Indians.<br /><br />2. They ate berries, beans, corn, and fish. Also, they hunted animals.<br /><br />3. After trading with the Indians, they sailed to England.<br /><br />4. They sailed to the new world.<br /><br />5. He was taken by Captain Hunt and sold in Spain<br /><br />6. When Squanto was in England, and sailed on a fishing boat to Newfoundland.<br /><br />7. After staying for many months in Newfoundland, he found a ship going back to New England<br /><br />8. Once he reached the village of Chief Massasolt, he told Squanto that Squanto that sickness killed his entire tribe.<br /><br />9.Squanto lived alone in the forest.<br /><br />10.Samoset told Squanto, village called Plymouth was built by people from england and it was built where his home was.<br /><br />11.they came as friends to plymouth and the leaders agreed to talk to them.<br /><br />12.he stayed with pilgrims and helped them grow crops, hunt, and fish for food.<br /><br />13.when fall came they had a thanksgiving feast and invited the indians.<br /><br />14.Squanto felt proud and at peace after helping the pilgrims.<br /><br />15. They ate seafood, wild foul,meat,grain, vegatables, fruit,nuts, herbs, and seasonings. <br /><br />16.they didnt have ham, sweet potatoes/potatoes, corn on the cob, cranberry sauce, pumpkin pie, chicken, or milk.<br /><br />17.although this feast is considered by many to be first thanksgiving celebration it was actually in keeping with a long tradition of celebrating the harvest and giving thanks for a successful bounty of crops<br /><br />18.this harvest meal has become a symbol of cooperation and interaction between English colonists and Native Americans.<br /><br />19.Native American groups throughtout the Americas included, the Pueblo, Cherokee, Creek, and many others.<br /><br />20 Lobster, seal, and swans were on the pilgrims menu<br /><br />http://library.thinkquest.org/J0110072/famous/squanto.htm<br /><br />http://www.history.com/topics/thansgivingAlexa and Anthonynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post-77728844165192765712010-09-13T09:51:35.500-04:002010-09-13T09:51:35.500-04:001. Puritan was first known as a taunt or insult.
...1. Puritan was first known as a taunt or insult.<br /><br />2. Puritan was also applied to those who criticized or wished to purify the church of England.<br /><br />3. Puritan groups separated from the church of England in the early 17th century.<br /><br />4. Divine providence refers to god's preservation of creation.<br /><br />5. The Puritans settled in America in 1558.<br /><br />6. Puritans built new society based on biblical laws and teachings<br /><br />7. The Puritans of the seventeenth century contributed to our contry's mission, work ethic, and moral sensibility.<br /><br />8. The Divine Providence was founded in New England.<br /><br />9. The Divine Providence was later known as the capital of Rhode Island. <br /><br />10. Puritans felt that the church of England was too close tot Catholicism and needed to be reformed further.<br /><br />11. Through out the period of Puritanism pilgrims became apart of the Puritans religion and honored them.<br /><br />12. English Puritans were also known as Calvanist's in England until they crossed the Atlantic. <br /><br />13. The Puritans settled in Rhode Island which was known as the Divine Providence.<br /><br />14. The Divine Providence colonies had no royal governors from England.<br /><br />15. Because of conditions in England, immigration declined sharply for the next two centuries.<br /><br />16. Providence was chosen as the capital of Rhode Island because of the merging of 2 colonies "Providence Plantations" and "Rhode Island".<br /><br />17. The poor soil and rough terrain precluded development of large estates or staple crops.<br /><br />18. The largest Native American tribe that was found in Rhode Island were known as the Narrangansetts. <br /><br />19. The first person to set foot on the shores of Rhode Island was an Italian explorer Giovanni Verazzano who settled there in 1524.<br /><br />20. The first explorer to make a permanent settlement in the Divine Providence was Roger Williams in 1636.<br /><br />Sources:<br />http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/colonial_america_retired/35747<br /><br />http://www.wsu.edu/~campbelld/amlit/purdef.htm<br /><br />http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/database/article_display.cfm?HHID=674Paul and Alexnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post-75581035721899088132010-09-13T09:51:28.097-04:002010-09-13T09:51:28.097-04:00Jonathan Edwards
1. Biography
-1703-1758
-His par...Jonathan Edwards<br /><br />1. Biography<br />-1703-1758<br />-His parents were Timothy and Esther Edwards<br />-Only son out of 11 children<br />-Went to Yale in 1716 at the age of 13<br />-Graduated as valedictorian 4 years later <br />-Jonathan Edwards married Sarah Pierpont <br />-Edwards had 3 sons and 8 daughters<br />-Jonathan Edwards died of small-pox inoculations on March 22, 1758<br />-He was buried in Princeton Cemetery <br /><br /><br />2. Great Awakening<br />-From 1730 -1745 there was a religious rebirth in the American colonies called the great awakening<br />-The revival movement promised the grace of God to all who wanted a desire for it<br />-Jonathan Edwards received a letter inviting him preach in Connecticut which at this time was one of the most extreme moments during the Great Awakening <br /><br />3. Sinners in the Hand of an Angry God<br />-Is a famous speech preached by Edwards<br />-Edwards preached the sermon on July 8, 1741<br />-It was a typical sermon of the Great Awakening<br />-It says that hell is a real and functional place<br />-Edwards wanted the message of his sermon to awaken his audience<br />-One of Edwards considerations was "God may cast wicked men into hell at any given moment."<br />-Another consideration states that the wicked will not escape the wrath of God unless they repent<br />-Jonathan Edwards' sermon continues to be the leading example of The Great Awakening and is still used in religious and academic setting todayTori and TJnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post-3034609583261780712010-09-13T09:50:25.171-04:002010-09-13T09:50:25.171-04:00my bad peoples i forgot to write down the websites...my bad peoples i forgot to write down the websites so.....<br />www.u-s-history.com<br />www.damninteresting.com<br />www.smitsonianmag.com<br />:) again myy bad <br />Nic an dannynic an dannynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post-83182951625679066812010-09-13T09:49:16.426-04:002010-09-13T09:49:16.426-04:001. Anne Hutchinson was expelled from the Bay Colon...1. Anne Hutchinson was expelled from the Bay Colony by John Winthrop.<br />2. Anne was a deeply religious woman.<br />3. She was a leader for people against the Puritans.<br />4. The clergy felt that Anne was a threat to the Puritan experiment.<br />5. Roger preached separation of church and state.<br />6. In 1636 he purchased land from the Narragansett Indians and founded the colony of Rhode Island.<br />7. Two big ideas got him into big trouble in Massachusetts.<br />8. Thomas Hooker was the minister of Cambridge.<br />9. Tom led 100 settlers from Cambridge to the Connecticut River.<br />10. He established Hartford in order to fight the Pequot War.<br />11. He strongly advocated extended suffrage to include Puritan worshipers.<br />12. He argued for greater religious tolerance towards Christians.<br />13. Roger Williams was a protestant.<br />14. He was born into the Church of England.<br />15. He was also a witness to Christianity.<br />16. Anne was a pioneer settler in Rhode Island.<br />17. She was an unauthorized minister in the dissident church.<br />18. She also held Bible meetings for women.<br />19. She is a symbol for religious dissenters and for women in America.<br />20. Roger Williams took orders in the church in 1629.<br />http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~sam/roger.html<br />http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_Williams_%28theologian%29<br />http://www.usahistory.info/New-England/Massachusetts.htmlRachel&Jonnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post-60948407896392551972010-09-13T09:48:00.904-04:002010-09-13T09:48:00.904-04:001.they didn't have sex till married
2.they enj...1.they didn't have sex till married<br />2.they enjoyed recreations<br />3.worked hard<br />4.blue law- an edict designed to regulate public activities on the sabbath <br />5.blue law first passed in 1620's<br />6.no public entertainment or meetings were permitted<br />7.(2) hour church service/morning an afternoon <br />8.placed a heavy emphasis on the ability to read an understand the bible<br />9.great effort expanded to educate the community<br />10.pass laws intended to prevent access in the areas of clothing an food consumption <br />11.public displays of affection prohibited<br />12.no celebrations of Christmas, other holidays or church weddings were not allowed since not in bible<br />13.noone shall be a free man or give a vote unless he be converted<br />14.no one shall turn Quaker or else be banished <br />15.no women shall kiss her kid on the sabbath<br />16.exhibited a range of interest an beliefs <br />17.puritans-multi face group like everyone else <br />18. puritans not first settlers on north American land<br />19.slavery was permitted<br />20.puritans reguarded unconfined democracy as an aberrationNicolas and Danielnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post-30028646284684357852010-09-13T09:47:03.641-04:002010-09-13T09:47:03.641-04:00End of Puritanism
1.Strict and conservative led t...End of Puritanism<br /><br />1.Strict and conservative led to conflictions.<br />2.People wanted to believe their own beliefs.<br />3.People wanted to see the world.<br />4.Everything outside the laws was a sin.<br />5.If you disagreed with the religion you got kicked out.<br />6.People wanted to believe in their own god.<br />7.Historians are not completely sure if puritanism actually ended.<br />8.Very strict sexual views.<br />9.They disapproved of Christmas celebrations.<br />10.You could not celebrate anything on Saturday nights.<br />11.You could not gamble on moral grounds.<br />12.You could only drink in moderation.<br />13.You could not toast to anything, it wasted God's gift of beer and wine.<br />14.Only married couples could engage in sexual intercourse.<br />15.Women were disciplined if they did not preform their sexual marital duties.<br />16.Punished if you were drunk in public.<br />17.Only boys could go to school.<br />18.Girls could not work.<br />19.Marriage were arranged by parents according to social classes.<br />20.Women could not speak in church.<br /><br /><br />www.hyperhistory.net<br /><br />mb-soft.com/believe.com<br /><br />puritanboard.comLauren and Abbynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post-43153305790508090112010-09-13T09:37:02.131-04:002010-09-13T09:37:02.131-04:00Puritan Family Life
1 Family life was joyless rep...Puritan Family Life<br /><br />1 Family life was joyless repressive & brutal.<br />2 Parents punished their children mercilessly.<br />3 The male was the head of the house.<br />4 The Puritan people emphasized the spirital leadership of the male head of the family.<br />5 The Puritans viewed family government and family worship.<br />6 Puritan parents would try to find good matches for their children.<br />7 Puritans families were extremely strong.<br />8 The children were not expected to make the most important decisions of their lives.<br />9 The oldest son was expected to follow the fathers calling.<br />10 At 14 a boy might be an apprentice to a crafts man or merchant to learn their skill<br />11 Once a parent made a decision, it can't be changed.<br />12 The children had no say in what they did.<br />13 Puritans took their religion and family very seriously. <br />1 Puritans had a complex relationship with their family.<br />15 In-laws were considered just as important as blood relatives.<br />16 The parents were often afraid they would spoil their children.<br />17 Boys needed to learn the skill trade.<br />18 One of the distinctive marks of the Puritan family was a commitment to daily family worship.<br />19 Fathers were required to lead their family in the knowledge and discipline of the Lord.<br />20 Puritan fathers ended each day with the singing of the Psalms and reading of the scriptures &prayers. <br /><br />www.graceonlinelibrary.org<br />www.upne.com<br />http://highlands-reformed.comMaggie Arynnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9088273984661570768.post-32673534494331597992010-09-13T09:35:06.776-04:002010-09-13T09:35:06.776-04:00www.law.umkc.edu
www.smithsonianmag.com
www.salemw...www.law.umkc.edu<br />www.smithsonianmag.com<br />www.salemwitchtrials.com<br /><br />1) The Salem Witch Trials started in 1692.<br />2) Some of he accused witches in Salem were Tituba, Sarah Good, Rebecca Nurse, Mary Easty, and Bridget Bishop.<br />3) The trials occurred in colonial Massachusetts.<br />4) More then 200 people were accused of using witchcraft. <br />5) In 1692, Reverend Parris' daughters thought they were possessed. <br />6) Tituba said, "The Devil came to me and bid me to serve him."<br />7) A special Court of Oyer and Terminer was established. <br />8) The first case brought to the special court was Bridget Bishop. She was known for her gossipy habits and promiscuity. <br />9)Bridget was the first person o be hung on June 10th for her crimes.<br />10) The minister, Cotton Mather, made a testimony about dreams and visions. <br />11) The court ignored the testimony and 5 people were sentenced and hanged. <br />12) March 1st 1692- Tituba confesses to witchcraft.<br />13) Witchcraft is defined as devil's magic.<br />14) it ended in May 1693.<br />15) 1702- court declared the trials were unlawful.<br />16) Judge Samuel Sewall, confessed error and guilt for helping.<br />17) 1711- A bill was passed restoring the rights and good names of those accused. <br />18)William, SAmuel, John,Walt Still, and Thomas were members of a supieror court of Judicature that is created to try the remaining persons accussed of witchcraft.<br />19) 19 people were hung on Gallows hill.<br />20) 1957 more than 250 years later Mass. formally apologized for the events of 1692.Jackie c, Jenna wnoreply@blogger.com