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    First Generation Women

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    #1 Women in America today are drastically different then the colonial women of yesterday. Today I can not imagine the life they lived. From preparing and processing food from scratch to sewing and mending clothes by hand. Imagine maintaining a household without the local Walmart handy to buy cleaning supplies‚ gives me a headache just thinking about it! Not to mention they had little value in the eyes of their husbands and community. After reading First GenerationsWomen in Colonial America‚ by

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    Mothers: Women in the Struggle for America’s Independence‚ Carol Berkins illustrates to her readers that women‚ during the American Revolution‚ played an imperative role‚ in all respects‚ during the war. Throughout the American Revolution‚ women were boycotting goods from Britain‚ taking over all aspects of the family business‚ took care of their families and put food on the table‚ and raised funds‚ all while the men in their family were being killed in war. Carol Berkins portrays women as participants

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    Essay on Carol Berkin’s Revolutionary Mothers Women in the Struggle for America’s Independence Jill Martinez HIST 516: American Revolution and Federalist Era November 7‚ 2014 Adams State University Carol Berkin clearly states her thesis in the introduction of Revolutionary Mothers. “Despite the absence of radical changes in gender ideology and gender roles for most women‚ the Revolution did lend legitimacy to new ideas about women’s capacities and their proper roles”. (Berkin 2005)

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    Women in Colonial America

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    Throughout most of history women generally have had fewer legal rights and career opportunities than men. Wifehood and motherhood were regarded as women’s most significant professions. Since early times women have been uniquely viewed as a creative source of human life. Historically‚ however‚ they have been considered not only intellectually inferior to men but also a major source of temptation and evil. Colonial women faced the harsh realities of childbirth‚ housework‚ and serving their husbands

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    Women In Colonial America

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    In modern Americawomen are sometimes looked upon negatively or with little value. Stereotypes haunt women and can even discourage them from achieving their dreams. Dating back to colonial Americawomen were assigned the role of a caretaker for men and their homes‚ giving a norm for women to meet. At the time‚ women were associated with peace‚ cleaning‚ and obedience. This is especially noteworthy as women weren’t born to fit one specific role‚ men merely told what to do throughout history. By

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    Women in Colonial America

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    February 2015 Women in Colonial America During colonial times‚ the lives of women were very different compared to the lives of men. Regardless of economic status‚ the role of all women was to assist the men. English law also made women dependent on men. There were many rights and privileges that women and girls did not have. For example‚ colonial America defined men to be “independent citizens”‚ which allowed them to own land‚ slaves‚ and household goods. However‚ on the other hand‚ women were expected

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    Colonial Women

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    November 3‚ 2013 Word Count: Colonial Women Women in America today are drastically different than the colonial women of yesterday. I as a women of today‚ cannot imagine the type of life that they lived. From preparing and processing food from scratch to sewing and mending clothes by hand. Try to imagine maintaining a household without the local market close by to purchase cleaning supplies‚ food and so forth; for me this just gives me a headache thinking about it! Not to mention they had

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    American women did all of the traditional and manual labor‚ according to European standards. They worked in and around the house‚ reared the children‚ prepared the food and created pottery. They also worked in the fields tilling the land and farming. What the early explorers noted was the men were leisurely enjoying their lives hunting deer and animals‚ fishing and building homes for their families. Doing things that the noble class of Europe did in their leisure. The image of native women in Europe

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    In the book “A Brilliant Solution: Inventing the American Constitution” by Carol Berkin she explains the constitution from start to finish from how it all began‚ to the debates inside the convention and finally the end product. Berkin takes the reader and puts him directly in the middle of the convention of 1786; throughout the book you can feel the excitement‚ the frustration‚ the tensions between delegates and the overall commitment to making a new government work for all. The time for a new

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    Colonial America

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    holds." Crèvecoeur presumed that America was a melting pot‚ that the environment created a homogeneous American culture‚ with similar values‚ beliefs‚ and social practices. Such cultural uniformity is inherently plausible. After all‚ most white colonial Americans worked the soil‚ enjoying the fruits of their labor‚ and practiced similar Protestant faiths. Moreover‚ they believed in private ownership of the means of production by individual cultivators. Generations of scholars‚ following the lead of

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