sunrise to sunset
A colonial innkeeper is a person that basically owns a hotel. The host/innkeeper will let people come into their inn. The host will serve these people, make their beds, and feed them. A colonial innkeeper would need a license to run an inn. Sometimes a magistrate(a judicial officer) stopped by to make sure that the innkeeper was following the rules. Laws required inns to have large, easy-to-spot signs. A sign had to be easy to understand, even for the travelers who could not read.The law told the innkeeper how much he could charge for beds, food, and drink. For example, one law said that innkeepers could charge no more than sixpence for a meal.
An innkeeper at that time had to run several operations under the same roof so to speak.RestaurantBarHotelHostel or bunk roomStableAnd think what that means:Finding and controlling staffCookingFinding, purchasing food, suppliesMaintaining buildingsBar tendingAnd about a million other things.
The daily life in the colonial Boston was to work in the fields and build roads. The slaves were subjected to manual labor for long hours everyday.
Innkeeper
They work in the church. They usually tend to be quite wealthy.
fu
A colonial innkeeper is like a tavern keeper. A tavern is like a bar. You have to have a lot of skills and house hold items. That's what a colonial innkeeper is.
They serve thier people
pineapple
A colonial innkeeper is a person that basically owns a hotel. The host/innkeeper will let people come into their inn. The host will serve these people, make their beds, and feed them. A colonial innkeeper would need a license to run an inn. Sometimes a magistrate(a judicial officer) stopped by to make sure that the innkeeper was following the rules. Laws required inns to have large, easy-to-spot signs. A sign had to be easy to understand, even for the travelers who could not read.The law told the innkeeper how much he could charge for beds, food, and drink. For example, one law said that innkeepers could charge no more than sixpence for a meal.
A colonial innkeeper is a person that basically owns a hotel. The host/innkeeper will let people come into their inn. The host will serve these people, make their beds, and feed them. A colonial innkeeper would need a license to run an inn. Sometimes a magistrate(a judicial officer) stopped by to make sure that the innkeeper was following the rules. Laws required inns to have large, easy-to-spot signs. A sign had to be easy to understand, even for the travelers who could not read.The law told the innkeeper how much he could charge for beds, food, and drink. For example, one law said that innkeepers could charge no more than sixpence for a meal.
A colonial innkeeper is a person that basically owns a hotel. The host/innkeeper will let people come into their inn. The host will serve these people, make their beds, and feed them. A colonial innkeeper would need a license to run an inn. Sometimes a magistrate(a judicial officer) stopped by to make sure that the innkeeper was following the rules. Laws required inns to have large, easy-to-spot signs. A sign had to be easy to understand, even for the travelers who could not read.The law told the innkeeper how much he could charge for beds, food, and drink. For example, one law said that innkeepers could charge no more than sixpence for a meal.
Well, honey, that colonial innkeeper did what any innkeeper would do back in the day - served up some warm ale, cooked some questionable meat, and probably overcharged for a lumpy bed. But hey, business is business, right?
They did not necessarily "use" anything...
most of the day and they didnt see there children
An innkeeper at that time had to run several operations under the same roof so to speak.RestaurantBarHotelHostel or bunk roomStableAnd think what that means:Finding and controlling staffCookingFinding, purchasing food, suppliesMaintaining buildingsBar tendingAnd about a million other things.
Innkeeper is a compound word.