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FREE ESSAY ON "THE GODLY FAMILY OF COLONIAL MASSACHUSETTS"

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Massachusetts Bay Colony
An examination of the colony's 17th Centuty establishment, focusing on the dominance of Puritan beliefs, maintenance of daily life and work and the control of dissent. -- 2,700 words;

Colonial Essex County, Massachusetts
Examines architectural development, land use and town planning, focusing on Fuller family houses in Middleton. -- 2,250 words;

Colonial America
This paper discusses key issues of the economy of colonial America. -- 4,275 words; APA

“Race and Family in the Colonial South”
This paper discusses “Race and Family in the Colonial South”, a volume of papers from a 1986 University of Mississippi conference on colonial American. -- 835 words; MLA

Virginia and Maryland in Colonial Times
Examines Gloria L. Main's "Tobacco Colony: Life in Early Maryland, 1650-1720" and Edmund S. Morgan's "American Slavery American Freedom: The Ordeal of Colonial Virginia". -- 2,957 words; MLA

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"THE GODLY FAMILY OF COLONIAL MASSACHUSETTS"

"The Godly Family of Colonial Massachusetts"
Puritans didn't really think of their family as a private household, but as an essential
part of society. Many communities tied families to each other by birth or marriage. The
communities of the seventeenth-century, being small, had many marriages and remarriages
that created a kinship, which was a difficult to understand. In-laws and distant cousins
were known as brothers, sister, aunts, uncles, mothers, fathers, and cousins. This
relationship was very important in the social, economic life of the community, because it
helped to develop trading networks and investments. Partnerships within families were
important, because some members had their own ships. Merchant and artisan families kept
their craft skills within the family, by teaching their sons and/or nephews the trade.
For economical purposes, it was very important that everything was within family. 
The father was the authority figure in the family. He represented his family and
supported the family. His wife, servants, and children were to submit to his authority
(if the children cursed or hit their father, they were penalized with death). Where the
sons would live when they got married was up to their father (usually around the parental
homestead). The Puritan doctrine states that the wife is not equal to her husband. She
was not allowed to vote, had to submit to her husband's commands, and had to show him an
attitude of reverence (fear him out of love). The Puritans did provide the wife with some
safeguards in the doctrine; such as being able to divorce her husband if he's impotent,
cruel, has abandoned and failed to provide for the family. Though the father seems to be
the dominant one, his wife does have the power to leave him is she chooses to (with a
good reason). 

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