Synopses & Reviews
How would life be different if you lived in the 18OOs? No T-shirts or jeans -- you'd wear bonnets and petticoats or button-up trousers with suspenders. No cars or buses -- you'd walk to your one-room schoolhouse, or ride in a horsedrawn buggy. No TV or video games -- instead, you'd spend your evenings playing checkers or doing needlework by candlelight.
A group of kids stepped back into the 1800s by going to Kings Landing Historical Settlement. For one week, they occupied a nineteenth-century village, living in a time before electricity, before cars -- even before indoor plumbing! The girls milked cows, churned butter, and spun wool. The boys drove teams of oxen, harvested corn, and fanned the forge at the blacksmith's shop. By journeying back through time, the kids learned valuable lessons about the past -- and their own lives in the present.
Susan E. Goodman and Michael J. Doolittle bring history alive in the fourth book of their Ultimate Field Trip series. Through vivid text and photographs, they record an exciting modern adventure in nineteenth-century America.
Synopsis
In the newest addition to the acclaimed series, students go on a field trip to a recreated 19th-century village. For one week they experience firsthand what life was like before television, blue jeans, and indoor plumbing. By the end of the trip, the children have gained valuable lessons about the past and an appreciation for the present. Color photos.
About the Author
To research her various books and magazine articles, Susan E. Goodman has worn an astronaut's jumpsuit, shared a bathroom with a tarantula, and hiked out of her way to avoid a herd of bison. While doing this book, she wished she could wear nineteenth-century clothing just like the kids. But she didn't think she could take notes fast enough using a quill pen and an inkwell. Ms. Goodman lives with her family in Boston, Massachusetts.