good article from countryside
In the Sept/Oct 2012 issue, a reader wanted to know how people did things in the 1800s. Heres my reply.
I am a bit of a history nut. I have spent many years engaged in accurate historical re-enactment. (Think Ren Faire but with no turkey legs.) So your question about how people lived in the 1800s prompted me to write.
Firstare you talking early 1800s before the advent of canning, telegraph, railroads, and sewing machines? Or are you talking late 1800s? If the latterjust talk to any member of an Amish community about how they live. If you are talking about early 1800sthats a completely different matter. I would recommend visiting historic Williamsburg, Virginia.
There are numerous diaries that have been left behind by the folks who traveled West and the hardships they endured; as well as diaries of those who stayed behind in the civilized world of chamber pots and chimney fires. Reading these diaries gives a very good insight into how people lived.
Are you interested in the day-to-day life of agrarian people as opposed to those that live in the city? If soI recommend becoming a homesteader without electricity, power tools or indoor plumbing. Also take away modern medicine (become an herbalist) and learn to recognize gangrene. Go to the grocery store for only flour, coffee and sugar. Grow your own linen (hemp is preferable to flax for durability and comfort), and wool. Learn to spin, weave and knit and use only your own feet (or those of a horse) for transportation. Dig your own well, do your own blacksmithing and starve in the winter when youve had a bad crop year.
If you truly want to live in the 1800s, be expected to have 18-20 children, all born at home, and have half of them die before the age of five because of dysentery, typhoid, scarlet fever or measles.
Good i site. So many of us romanticize those times. For me, I want the best of both worlds. I like my movies and my gas oven! I also use herbs for medicine and have an out house. When we have crop failure I am very for my local farmers market and grocery store!
Be RADICAL Grow Food
29 Jan ’13
A lot of the old ways were rough. Just like the old timers back in those days we're trying to use what resources we have at hand. Those folks made something out of nothing and like them, we may have to go that route. This country is a mess and the more knowledge we have the better we can plan ahead. We call it survival, the old timers just called it everyday life.
I enjoy a lot of the modern gizmos but I can live without them if I have too. I have a 2TB external hard drive full of old movies, this laptop and a solar rig to power it. Maybe one day my grandson and his family will come in from a hard day on the farm and gather round the ol lappy and watch The Maltese Falcon just like the old timers sat around and watched the radio in the evenings.
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