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In the Classroom > Course Overview > Unit Overview
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Lesson 6: A Visit to Deerfield: Learning About the Layout of This Colonial Village

Lesson Central Question:

In This Lesson:

How did this colonial town develop?

Lesson Length
Key Ideas
I.L.O.s
Preparation
Materials
Activity 1
Assessment
Lesson Length

1 class period (85 minutes)

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Key Content Ideas Taught in this Lesson and Teacher Background

This lesson will describe the actual layout and design of the Deerfield village as shown on the 1686 map. It will go on to describe the manifestations of Puritan influences as the town developed. Insight into the town meeting records indicates issues that were important in the developing community of settlers.

Teacher Background Essay: Settlement and Occupation of Deerfield

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Intended Learning Outcomes

Understandings
Students will understand:

  • that it is valuable to study the lives, actions, ideas, political experiences, and judgments of people in the past.
  • that both primary source materials and interpretive materials of all types are rich sources of historical evidence.
  • that in Massachusetts there was no division of church and state as we understand it, and this condition influenced every aspect of daily life.
  • the physical boundaries of Deerfield in the context of the geologic formations and land use and settlement.

Skills
Students will be able to:

  • use a variety of primary source materials, to analyze these sources, and to make logical inferences and supported conclusions.
  • make reference to previously presented material.
  • utilize technology to research information and present
    projects.

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In Preparation for Teaching

Read the Teacher Background Essay: Settlement and Occupation of Deerfield, MA

Further Background reading:

McGowan, Susan and Miller, Amelia. Family and Landscape: Deerfield Homelots from
1671.
Deerfield, Massachusetts: Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association, 1996.

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Materials

Primary and Secondary Sources:

1. Original Lot Survey of Deerfield, c. 1686

2. From Memorial Hall Website, The Turns of the Centuries Exhibit: "Newcomers 1680-1720" > "Beliefs" and "Working" sections.

3. Puritan Village patterns from "Historical Atlas of Massachusetts"

4. Deerfield Town Book for the following dates:

April 4, 1692
October 30, 1694
September 15, 1697
March 7, 1698 & November 11, 1698

5. "The Journal of Madame Knight" This can be found in the Anthology Journeys in a New World. Andrews, William et al., Madison WI: UP Wisconsin, 1996. Pp. 87-116.

6. "Crime and Fate of Sarah Smith" from The History of Deerfield by George Sheldon. Volume 1, pages 263, 264.

7. "Warnings to the Unclean" a sermon by Reverend John Williams, delivered 1698. See pages 9-10, 21-22, and 55-59.

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Activities Materials in Context

Activity 1

1. Invite the class to use the Original Lot Survey of 1686 map, noting how the land in Deerfield was divided by surveyor, Joshua Fisher. Compare that map with that in an historical atlas. What factors determine the design of a town? How were the lands divided among the earliest Deerfield English settlers?

2. Ask students to go to the Memorial Hall website to view the "Turns of the Centuries" Exhibit: "Newcomers 1680-1720" to gain a sense of the Puritan influences that came to bear on the development of the town.

3. Invite students to read the Town Book accounts to learn about the decisions made by the town as the community is established. As the students read, they should be preparing to discuss how early Deerfield was designed and functioned.

Assignment: Complete the readings of Madame Knight or Sara Smith, two very different stories of colonial women during the early period of settlement in New England.

In your journal write about those aspects of the Madame Knight or Sara Smith story that are unique to the colonial setting. Then tell about those aspects of the story that could find a counterpart in today's world by describing a similar (fictitious) situation as it could occur in today's environment.

 

 

 

Original Lot Survey of Deerfield, c. 1686

Puritan Village patterns from "Historical Atlas of Massachusetts"

Deerfield Town Book:
April 4, 1692
October 30, 1694
September 15, 1697
March 7, 1698 & November 11, 1698

 

"Crime and Fate of Sarah Smith" from The History of Deerfield by George Sheldon. Volume 1, pages 263, 264.

"Warnings to the Unclean" a sermon by Reverend John Williams, delivered 1698.

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Assessment

The journal article describing a contemporary event such as Madame Knight's tour or Sara Smith's dilemma will be used as an assessment.

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