The Chronicles of America Series, Volume 91919 |
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Page 3
... area , toward the foot- hills of the mountains , lay the back country , which after 1730 received immigrants in large numbers . J Except for settlements and outlying clearings , the colonial area THE LAND AND THE PEOPLE 3.
... area , toward the foot- hills of the mountains , lay the back country , which after 1730 received immigrants in large numbers . J Except for settlements and outlying clearings , the colonial area THE LAND AND THE PEOPLE 3.
Page 4
... World to which they still instinctively turned . If the land furnished homes and subsistence from agriculture , the sea , while also furnishing food , afforded opportunities for commerce and travel 4 COLONIAL FOLKWAYS.
... World to which they still instinctively turned . If the land furnished homes and subsistence from agriculture , the sea , while also furnishing food , afforded opportunities for commerce and travel 4 COLONIAL FOLKWAYS.
Page 5
... land and its staples often shaped the destiny of individual colonies , the most important single factor in bringing wealth and opportunity to the colonies as a whole was the sea . Those who jour- neyed upon the Atlantic thought as ...
... land and its staples often shaped the destiny of individual colonies , the most important single factor in bringing wealth and opportunity to the colonies as a whole was the sea . Those who jour- neyed upon the Atlantic thought as ...
Page 7
... land admirably adapted to a system of intensive farming and husbandry . The variety of its staples was matched by the diversity of the occupations of its people . Fishing , agricul- ture , household manufactures , and trade kept the New ...
... land admirably adapted to a system of intensive farming and husbandry . The variety of its staples was matched by the diversity of the occupations of its people . Fishing , agricul- ture , household manufactures , and trade kept the New ...
Page 8
... land and opportunity offered , and in self - governing towns and cities , of which Boston , with about twenty thousand in- habitants , was by far the largest.1 The people of New England were mainly of Eng- lish stock , with but a small ...
... land and opportunity offered , and in self - governing towns and cities , of which Boston , with about twenty thousand in- habitants , was by far the largest.1 The people of New England were mainly of Eng- lish stock , with but a small ...
Expressions et termes fréquents
acres adorned advertised America Anglican Annapolis apprentice back country Beverley Birket Boston breeches brick building built Cape Fear captain chaises Charleston chiefly church cloth coast colonial colonists color Connecticut diary drink Dutch early Edenton eighteenth century England English Essex Institute fall line farmers farms ferry French frequently Georgia Germans Governor horses houses Huguenots imported indentured servants Indian indigo Jersey John Jonathan Boucher journey King's Chapel labor land large numbers less libraries lived London manors Maryland Mass Massachusetts master meetinghouse merchants negroes Newport North occasionally Pennsylvania period Philadelphia plantations planters Portsmouth Quakers Quincy race Rhode Island rivers road Salem Savannah schools Scotch-Irish sermons settlements settlers ship silk slaves social sold sometimes South Carolina Southern stone Thomas Thomas Bulfinch tion towns trade traveler usually Virginia voyage West Indies William Byrd Williamsburg Wilmington women wood wore wrote York