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Domestic Life in Virginia in the Seventeenth Century

Chapter 37: Transcriber's note
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About This Book

The booklet examines domestic life in seventeenth-century Virginia, arguing that establishment of households was essential to colonial stability and economic enterprise. It surveys motives for colonization including hopes for wealth, opening trade routes, population pressures, and the search for raw materials and markets. Descriptions of dwellings and plantations emphasize architecture, mills, orchards, gardens and vineyards, and household industries that produced cloth, leather, dairy and cider. Attention is given to the roles of women, servants, and artisanal labor in sustaining homes, and to how household production linked private life to broader colonial commerce.


Transcriber's note

The following changes have been made to the text:

Page 27: "racoon" changed to "raccoon".

Page 41: "no title whatsover" changed to "no title whatsoever".

Page 45: "Nothwithstanding the limitations" changed to "Notwithstanding the limitations".

Page 50: "usually a barrell" changed to "usually a barrel".

Page 52 (in this version of the text): In caption "archeological" changed to "archaeological".

Page 73: "made from molassas" changed to "made from molasses".

Page 75: "poultice, soothed inflamation" changed to "poultice, soothed inflammation".

Page 81: "Bolthorpe" changed to "Bolthrope".