Colonial Games
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Transcript Colonial Games
THIS IS MY
PROJECT ON
COLONIAL
GAMES!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Summary
Back then, children didn’t have Nintendo games, the
Television, or books to read.
They had to make their own games.
Some were made from chores, and others were made
from tools.
Some games, like 9-pins, just needed a few materials,
like pins and a ball.
GAMES IN GENERAL
Children usually played the games that their parents
played.
Children and adults both played dice, dominoes, and
cards.
Board games
Older children played chess, while smaller children
played checks, a form of checkers.
Tops
Children played tops for
fun indoors. They played
with, obviously,
tops(shown right).
The goal of the game was
to hit another’s top and
knock it over or make it
stop without harming
your own(shown on the
next slide).
Morris
Morris was a game like tic-tac-toe. The idea was to get
three in a row on the board.
The people playing would put pieces in one at a time.
Then he/she would move his/her pieces and try to get
three in a row.
When a player gets 3 in a row, he takes on of his
opponent’s pieces. The game is over when 2 pieces are
left.
Morris example
Archery
Archery helped boys train their skill for hunting. They
would have a wooden post.
Boys will then get a bow and a quiver full of arrows.
They would then shoot at the post.
Bilbo-Catcher
Bilbo catcher is a game where kids had a cup and a
ball, and they tried to make the ball land in the cup in
one flick.
Bilbo-catcher was the word for bilboquet. Bille means
ball and boquet means the point of the spear.
Nine-Pins
Nine-pins is a game very similar to bowling, except
there are only 9 pins, not ten.
It was only changed to bowling when the English
conquered New Amsterdam and Delaware
You have a wooden ball and you roll it to try and knock
down all nine pins.
Little Toys
Little girls back then made dolls out of scraps of fabric,
corn husks and rags. Sometimes they even used a
small dried up apple as a head for the doll.
Little boys pretended sticks were horses and rode on
them.
Contests
Children made contest out of their chores.
Their chores consisted of:
Carrying wood
Retrieving berries
Straightening wool(also called carding wool)
They would see who can carry the most wood, retrieve
the most berries or card the most wool.
Riddles
Children also told riddles to pass time more quickly.
Some riddles were:
1) What can be seen falling down, but never crying?
2) What kind of room is not in a house?
3) What has three feet, but cannot walk?
Riddle Answers
1)Rain
2)A mushroom
3)A yardstick
Bibliography
http://www.stratfordhall.org/learn/teacher/games.ph
p
http://www.ssdsbergen.org/Colonial/games.htmhttp:/
/www.pencaderheritage.org/main/teachtool/games.p
df
Welcome to Felicity's World 1774 Growing up in
Colonial America by Catherine Gourley. ©Copyright
1999. Pages 8-9