FInding a place to live wasn't that hard for dragacorns. when they are not in war, the parents sleep in one teepee and the kids sleep in another. Only 4 people can fit in each, but in that time, that was a luxury bed. Other lowerclass people just have a hard floor and the cold outside. In war, everyone is their own perosn. Individually, everyone has to find food and shelter, but if you are younger, you would have to stay with a parent. To most parents, back then, having kids were a big deal. Whenever another dragacorn came into the world, it meant the more people there would be to fight in war. Eveyone in the dragacorn clan brought something special to the group. Everyone had a different type of weapon that they found throughout missions
Many people lived in small, run-down apartments in cities called tenements. Like the cities, these tenements were also overcrowded, with some homes showing “six children on a single fire escape” (Document 6). With long work hours, many families were unable to come home and see their children; they were essentially separated. Some even described themselves as “a stranger am I to my child; and he one to me” (Document 2) due to the family separation. Another horrid living condition within the cities was pollution. With coal being the main source of power, especially in factories, it could create pollution (Document 3). The pollution could eventually cause breathing problems for the people within the cities, making the living conditions even worse. Even the “fast travel of railroad” (Document 5) could contribute to pollution, since it also ran on coal. Like the machines in the factories, it could create pollution as well since the coal could release potential toxins into the air, worsening living conditions even
E-The reason they were forced was because they society was way different from ours.Also each family was assigned to children a boy and a girl.Also
When hunter and gatherers would keep moving it was actually a good advantage to do that. The reason why it was good to do that is well after you use all the resources and then you move away and come back your resources are all still there. Know when the agriculture people stayed in one place they had to keep growing resources because if you use all of them than you run out of supplies. So hunter and gatherers were smart to not stay in one place. Since all of the agriculture people were settling in one place they needed help so they needed kids.
During these times, minimizing was the key for most families. Often this meant that items such as “shoes, socks and underwear were accessories” if any at all (Gentry 138). Due to this lack in appropriate clothing, many times “the family was held back from ‘social doin’s’ because of their unkempt appearance” (Corder and Miller 42). Along with the emotional embarrassment of their personal appearance, sharecroppers and their families suffered physical consequences. Often a lack of inadequate clothing left them more susceptible to illness, and in their circumstances, that was a risk they could not afford to take.
Children who are selected by their owners live and work in the house as attendants and other small jobs. Although they were under the watchful eye of other slaves, the child would still look up to their owners and fear their wrath. Some children would not see their parents after they start working in the house. The long hours adults worked meant that many did not see their parents even if they
Women also played a role in army camps. Most women and children became camp followers out of economic necessity. Women who were unable to make ends meet at home alone went with their family male family member into army camps. Some women, however, followed soldiers because they could not bear the separation while other women were refugees
Virginia is in the coastal lowlands and wooded mountains. The colony of Virginia was the first permanently settled English colony in North America.The colony’s name was named after Queen Elizabeth I. Sir Walter Raleigh discovered the colony and claimed it for England in 1607.
As a consequence of the industrialisation in Britain, the mobilisation of masses started. Working class families migrated from other cities seeking for job opportunities and a better life. However, industrialised cities became affected by this and soon became overcrowded. Working class families used to dwell in tenements in rather poor sanitary conditions due to the lack of hygiene and artificial feeding in children. Children and their parents struggled to cope with freezing temperatures during the winter since they could not afford to pay
When the children turned twelve they started a harsher training, teaching them the hardships they would have to suffer in a time of war. They trained nude, slept on beds of rushes, given a minimal amount of food and expected to fend for themselves. There were also contests to see who could take the most severe flogging. For the most part of these years the boys were arranged into groups, and were sent off into the countryside with nothing, and were expected to survive on wits and cunning. It was assumed that they would steal their food, yet anyone caught stealing was severely punished.
Living with the perpetual possibility of being separated from family was stressful and overwhelming. Slaves were sold to other plantation owners for various reasons. It could be to clear debt or because the former owners died or moved away. Slave owners did not care about separating families no matter how much the mother would beg and plead for her children or children crying because their mother is sold. This made it challenging for families to be stable because they could be separated at any moment. Although it was difficult for slaves to cope with the separation, some lived in nuclear families where the father would belong to one plantation and his family would belong to another, but the father would only have the chance to see his family on Wednesday nights and
Peasants lived in small cottages or huts with their families, and they laid claim to small strips of land and also a share of the meadow. (ok just add some more info)
The lowborn workers toiled away for hours in physically exhausting jobs only to afford apartments that were sterile and cold. “There were some nine cots in the place . . . he was sick of the bareness and privation connected with his venture” (Dreiser, 304). The pay affected the men and woman’s own mode of life. They were forced to share living spaces with other families and more often than naught, had to bunk with complete strangers. The very comforts associated with a home, such as wood and furniture, were often too large of an expense. Even with Governmental/ Charity handouts the citizens had no money in which they could afford better living conditions. The rooms they were given to stay in were cold and sterile, and they were not guaranteed a place to stay every night.
USA became key to its expansion and growth. The Rock and Roll hall of repute and Museum’s
They were put up very rapidly, and so they were very badly built. They soon became damp, and walls started to crumble, and furniture became ruined, and people ill. In extreme cases, the walls had completely disintegrated. Families were also split up, or fragmented as a result of the relocations.
During the eight-hundred mile trek many children and spouses were separated from their families. About one-third of the original Cherokee they collected died in the holding camps and between the trek from the Southeast section of the Union to Indian Territory. "In the words of a British officer, They are like the Devil's pig, they will neither lead nor drive'" (Woodward Preface).They would have to learn a new way of life and adjust. They lost their Negro slaves, and their possessions (Bruchac 35).