Women and children were a vital part of the community and family, but they had no community rights or ability to vote.
The Puritans wanted to reform the Anglican church the Pilgrims wanted to make their own churches. Hope I helped yah ;)
Tobacco planting became very popular and made them very rich Women, children, and slaves helped with everything such as farming and they had a representive government
Pilgrim children wear clothing that are probably made by hand from animal skins, or from Indian trade. The pilgrims wore old woven clothing
The women in the 1950s were viewed by society as a wife that stayed home, cleaned the house, washed the children, and cooked for the family. They were taught to be everything the man in the house wanted her to be. The women in the 1950s were taught "how to be a good wife" from a home economics textbook in the 1950s. Women were not supposed to hold jobs. They were also meant to hold a spot on their children's PTA board.
children are born good
I need an answer please.
the view of the pilgrims is giving God thanks
The sailors treated the pilgrims rudely, impolitely, and improperly - even the women and children. They cursed a lot, and they were very troublesome.
puritan's were pilgrims
There are two women pilgrims in Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales": the Wife of Bath and the Prioress.
that the pilgrims can get smurfed
The Crusaders, who could be children OR women, could be Crusaders... or whoever wanted to serve their religion. in the middle ages pilgrims or explorers were the Crusaders of the Holy Land
The Pilgrim children were home schooled.
The Puritans wanted to reform the Anglican church the Pilgrims wanted to make their own churches. Hope I helped yah ;)
The Puritans wanted to reform the Anglican church the Pilgrims wanted to make their own churches. Hope I helped yah ;)
The Puritans wanted to reform the Anglican church the Pilgrims wanted to make their own churches. Hope I helped yah ;)
According to a letter, hand-written by a Pilgrim named Edward Wintston, all of the Pilgrims who were present at the first Thanksgiving were survivors of the voyage on the Mayflower. Those present at the first Thanksgiving feast were 22 men, 13 children, 14 teenagers, and four married women. A total of 53 pilgrims were there. There were also some 90 Indians in attendance. Also derived from the letter is that the Indians killed 5 deer for the feast and brought them to share with the Pilgrims.