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There is something inexpressibly sad in the thought of the children who crossed the ocean with the
There is something inexpressibly sad in the thought of the children who crossed the ocean with the
There is something inexpressibly sad in the thought of the children who crossed the ocean with the
There is something inexpressibly sad in the thought of the children who crossed the ocean with the
There is something inexpressibly sad in the thought of the children who crossed the ocean with the
There is something inexpressibly sad in the thought of the children who crossed the ocean with the
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Alice Morse Earle:
It is heartrending to read the entries in many an old family Bible - the records of suffering, distAlice Morse Earle:
In the seventeenth century, the science of medicine had not wholly cut asunder from astrology and nAlice Morse Earle:
The seventeenth-century baby slept, as his nineteenth-century descendant does, in a cradle. NothingAlice Morse Earle:
When the first settlers landed on American shores, the difficulties in finding or making shelter muAlice Morse Earle:
By the year 1670, wooden chimneys and log houses of the Plymouth and Bay colonies were replaced byAlice Morse Earle:
Few of the early houses in New England were painted, or colored, as it was called, either without oAlice Morse Earle:
The first and most natural way of lighting the houses of the American colonists, both in the NorthAlice Morse Earle:
The study of tavern history often brings to light much evidence of sad domestic changes. Many a cheAlice Morse Earle:
The landlord of colonial days may not have been the greatest man in town, but he was certainly theAlice Morse Earle:
Every sea-captain who sailed to the West Indies was expected to bring home a turtle on the return v