FastSaying
The first and most natural way of lighting the houses of the American colonists, both in the North and South, was by the pine-knots of the fat pitch-pine, which, of course, were found everywhere in the greatest plenty in the forests.
Alice Morse Earle
American
Both
Colonists
Course
Everywhere
Fat
First
Forests
Found
Greatest
Houses
Lighting
Most
Natural
Natural Way
North
Plenty
South
Way
Were
Which
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It is easy to gain a definite notion of the furnishing of colonial houses from a contemporary and reliable source - the inventories of the estates of the colonists.
— Alice Morse Earle
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— Alice Morse Earle
Around
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By the year 1670, wooden chimneys and log houses of the Plymouth and Bay colonies were replaced by more sightly houses of two stories, which were frequently built with the second story jutting out a foot or two over the first, and sometimes with the attic story still further extending over the second story.
— Alice Morse Earle
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We should have scant notion of the gardens of these New England colonists in the seventeenth century were it not for a cheerful traveller named John Josselyn, a man of everyday tastes and much inquisitiveness, and the pleasing literary style which comes from directness, and an absence of self-consciousness.
— Alice Morse Earle
Absence
Century
Cheerful
Few of the early houses in New England were painted, or colored, as it was called, either without or within. Painters do not appear in any of the early lists of workmen.
— Alice Morse Earle
Any
Appear
Colored