STRATFORD
 

Leisure Time and Games

Children did not have Nintendo, TV, or many books to read, so they often created their own games. They spent so much time in the schoolroom and doing chores that outdoor games were most appealing to them.

One popular outdoor game was rolling the hoop. Taking a big wooden hoop, the children would race each other from one point to another on the lawn. The object of the game was to see who could get to the finishing point fastest. It sounds like an easy game, but the hoop was difficult to roll.

Another fun game was nine pins, which is similar to bowling. Nine pins would be placed three in a row on the lawn and th eobject was to knock down all nine pins with a ball. The slope of the lawn made the game tricky.

Children had sack races and played tag, quoits, marbles, hopscotch, leapfrog, and Blindman?s Buff. They flew kites and went fishing and swimming. Even simple activities like swinging or taking a walk were enjoyed if they had friend to accompany them. If the weather was bad, children often played with simple wooden toys like spinning tops and whirligigs, read, and embroidered samplers.

Suggested Reading

Kalman, Bobbie. Colonial Life. New York: Crabtree Publishing Company, 1992.

Kalman, Bobbie. Early Pleasures and Pastimes. Crabtree Publishing Company, 1992.

McGovern, Ann. If You Lived in Colonial Times. New York: Scholastic, Inc., 1964.

Newell, William Wells. Games and Songs of American Children. New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1963.

Suggested Activities

Have students record their daily leisure time activities for one week in a journal. Compare and contrast their activities with those of colonial children.

Have each student make a whirligig.

As a class, have an eighteenth century games recess. Include hopscotch, leapfrog, Blindman?s Buff, marbles, quoits (ring toss), and bowling.




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Robert E. Lee Memorial Association, Inc.
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