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When young siblings Tracy and Greg, working on a Thanksgiving table setting, find themselves transported back in time to Plimouth Plantation, circa 1627, they naturally ask the pilgrims a few questions, such as why the settlement is called a plantation ("it's where we have planted ourselves") and why there are no forks for eating dinner (they're told that fingers are adequate to the task). Shot on location,
Plimoth Plantation is one of three volumes in the
Colonial Life for Children series (the others are
Jamestown and
St. Augustine) which immerse young viewers in the dress, daily habits and general social and political milieu of colonial life. Kids will learn that ovens were "common"--i.e., not plentiful, but "shared" by the community--and watch as bread is prepared for baking, listen to Governor Bradford explain the Mayflower Compact and describe the punishment of a pair of roughnecks who broke its rules, and discover that an earthen floor is not exactly conducive to pest-free living (lice were common). Prior to the Plimoth visit, the kids briefly tour a Native American settlement and see that not all Indians lived in teepees. While I had some trouble with the framing device (I'm not a big fan of setups that blithely break the laws of physics with no explanation whatsoever), the meat and potatoes, so to speak, of this introduction to colonial life offer solid educational nourishment. Recommended.
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