The Colonial Period: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[File:george-h-boughton-pilgrims-going-to-church.jpg|frame|"...most dismal wretches, who said their prayers before daylight, and then wrought in the forest or the cornfield till evening made it prayer time again."]]
{{quote box|"...most dismal wretches, who said their prayers before daylight, and then wrought in the forest or the cornfield till evening made it prayer time again."}}
The period in America from around 1607-1763 where just about [[Blatant Lies|everyone was a Puritan Pilgrim]] and had to attend church services that were approximately 11 days long. [[Deliberately Monochrome|Everyone wore black all the time]]; the men all carried [[BFG|blunderbusses]] and wore [[Nice Hat|tall hats with big buckles around them]]<ref>[[Hat Shop|capotains]]</ref>, while the women all wore bonnets and square linen collars with optional [[The Scarlet Letter|large red A's]] <ref> This option was generally discouraged -- but then, everything, and everyone, was generally discouraged</ref>.
The period in America from around 1607-1763 where just about [[Blatant Lies|everyone was a Puritan Pilgrim]] and had to attend church services that were approximately 11 days long. [[Deliberately Monochrome|Everyone wore black all the time]]; the men all carried [[BFG|blunderbusses]] and wore [[Nice Hat|tall hats with big buckles around them]]<ref>[[Hat Shop|capotains]]</ref>, while the women all wore bonnets and square linen collars with optional [[The Scarlet Letter|large red A's]] <ref> This option was generally discouraged -- but then, everything, and everyone, was generally discouraged</ref>.



Revision as of 19:51, 27 November 2013

"...most dismal wretches, who said their prayers before daylight, and then wrought in the forest or the cornfield till evening made it prayer time again."

The period in America from around 1607-1763 where just about everyone was a Puritan Pilgrim and had to attend church services that were approximately 11 days long. Everyone wore black all the time; the men all carried blunderbusses and wore tall hats with big buckles around them[1], while the women all wore bonnets and square linen collars with optional large red A's [2].

The women were all called "Goody Somethingorother" and were frequently burned at the stake as witches. Occupations among the men, besides the aforementioned prayer and witch-burning, included persecuting Quakers, oppressing Native Americans, being scalped, and hunting turkeys for the first Thanksgiving Day dinner.

Examples


Anime and Manga

Literature

  • The Leatherstocking Tales, including The Last of the Mohicans
  • Many of Nathaniel Hawthorne's works, including The Scarlet Letter and "Young Goodman Brown."
  • Mason & Dixon
  • The backstories of many of HP Lovecraft's works.
  • The short story "Ezekiel" by Desmond Warzel takes place in Roanoke in 1587 (the first English settlement in North America, and thus the very earliest part of this period).
  • The Dear America series has A Journey to the New World (1607), Standing in the Light (1763), and Look to the Hills (1763).

Newspaper Comics

Theatre

  • The Crucible
    • Which was historically accurate enough to know that witches were hanged not burned in this period.
      • Almost everything else was wrong, though; the people who wrote Burn the Witch got it right.
      • As this troper recalls, it wasn't meant as an accurate portrayal of the Salem Witch Trials and instead used the witch trials as a metaphor for the hysteria surrounding the Mc Carthy hearings

Video Games

Western Animation

  1. capotains
  2. This option was generally discouraged -- but then, everything, and everyone, was generally discouraged