This lesson will be introduced and taught in February along with a study of Abraham Lincoln. The students will have some insight into what a little girl’s life was like at that time in history. Abraham Lincoln became president in 1861, one year after Ella wrote these pages in her diary. Students will understand after reading the diary excerpts from Ellen Louisa Arms (1859-1860) and through discussion, that the routine of a child’s life in the middle 1800s was very different and also, in some ways, similar to a student’s daily routine today. Students today attend school and study arithmetic (mathematics), grammar(language), and reading just like Ella did. Ella ate the same kind of Thanksgiving Day dinner that children eat today. Ella went to church and spent some of her free time reading just as many students do today. However, Ella also spent her free time involved in different activities from today’s students, such as shelling nuts, sewing, picking berries in the woods, ironing, and writing letters. In the classroom, students will try some of the activities mentioned in the diary and will compare them to what we have or do today that has replaced these activities. Students will learn to crack walnuts and to prepare and drink tea. Students will understand that making a quilt takes planning as they create a hexagon design on a square which will be used to make a classroom quilt to resemble the Mosaic or Honeycomb Quilt of Kate Melvina Newton.
A Child’s Daily Routine – Then and Now
Details
Author |
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Topic/Subject Area | Home Life, Household Items, Furniture; Gender, Gender Roles, Women; Family, Children, Marriage, Courtship; Education, Literacy |
Historical Era | Civil War and Reconstruction, 1861–1877, National Expansion and Reform, 1816–1860 |
Grade Level | Elementary (K–5) |
Creation Date | 2010 |
Last Revision Date | 2024 |