A Step Back in Time
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Mike Sciacca
Andy Clark sat cross-legged on the floor, among a sea of fellow
classmates, with a bemused look on his face as his gaze honed in on the
spinning wheel set before him.
The 10-year-old was anxiously waiting to see if he’d get the chance to
take the contraption for a spin.
Andy was one of 97 fifth-grade students at Smith Elementary School to
don period costumes and get down to the basics of everyday life as it
once was at a recent Colonial Day celebration on campus.
While it was a day for learning about a key period of time in our
country’s history, the event also involved fun and games. Ask Cubby
Carlson, an 11-year-old who won several pieces of candy for his expertise
at playing games from the mid-18th century.
“We learned about what life was like in Colonial days and we had some
fun doing it,” he said.
Cubby also excelled in learning classroom lessons. In studying the
colonies, which were divided up into the areas of New England, Middle and
South for the purpose of the project, he found out that Florida was under
the rule of Spain. He also noted that young girls generally went to
school during that era for just one year, learning the basics of how to
read and write, and that some boys were as young as 11 when they went to
college.
Students were celebrating Colonial Day as part of their social studies
requirement. The project, which lasted for more than four weeks, not only
involved the students but was a success due to the volunteer work of
their parents.
Hands-on projects included the practice of calligraphy, the use of a
quill pen, which they made out of goose features, the making of a horn
book -- a sturdy, paddle-like first reader that featured burnt parchment
with calligraphy writing -- the making of their own New England primer
and the students made their own silhouettes.
Other projects taught them to learn how to make quilt pillows, play
period games such as the turkey shoot -- a Nerf football was used to hit
the turkey -- and stilts. They also shook baby food jars filled with
heavy cream to produced butter, made corn muffins and applesauce.
They were told to display proper Colonial behavior when they observed
how to use a spinning wheel. The exhibition taught these students that
young Colonial children regularly worked the spinning wheel to make
clothing. They also learned of the different fibers that are used to make
clothing.
These lessons left their mark on Andy.
“Colonial life was pretty tough for everybody,” he observed. “They had
to do almost everything on their own, like building their own houses. The
children also had to bring firewood to school. We also learned what their
cures were for sicknesses -- that was pretty nasty -- like putting a
chicken on your foot or eating cobwebs to cure a cold. It sure was a
different time than how we live today.”
* MIKE SCIACCA is the education and sports reporter. He can be reached
at (714) 965-7171 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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