Because of the kind of work they did, requiring considerable space, most lived in a separate building. The Coopers shops in various restored villages that I have visited did not have living quarters in the building (work space downstairs and storage upstairs was common.)
Of course, in any given situation, a person might work out of their home quarters, living over the shop.
2007-10-21 10:35:51
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answer #1
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answered by Mike1942f 7
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"Colonial America" redirects here. For other uses, see Colonial America (disambiguation).
The term colonial history of the United States refers to the history of the territory that would become the United States from the start of European settlement to the time of independence from Europe, and especially to the history of the thirteen colonies of Britain which declared themselves independent in 1776.[1] Starting in the late 16th century, the British, the French, the Spanish, and the Dutch began to colonize eastern North America. The first English attempts—notably the Lost Colony of Roanoke—ended in failure, but successful colonies were soon established. The colonists who came to the New World were not alike, they came from a variety of different social and religious groups who settled in different locations on the seaboard. The Dutch of New Netherland, the Swedes and Finns of New Sweden, the Quakers of Pennsylvania, the Puritans of New England, the English settlers of Jamestown, and the "worthy poor" of Georgia, and others—each group came to the new continent for different reasons and created colonies with distinct social, religious, political and economic structures.
Historians typically recognize four distinct regions in the lands that later became the Eastern United States. Listed from north to south, they are: New England, the Middle Colonies, the Chesapeake Bay Colonies (Upper South) and the Lower South. Some historians add a fifth region, the frontier, as frontier regions from New England to Georgia resembled each other in certain respects. Other colonial regions of today's United States include New France (Louisiana), New Spain (including California, Florida and New Mexico) and Russian Alaska.
2007-10-21 10:47:08
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answer #2
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answered by steven 1
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I think the answer is there to find in your book, which is what your teacher wants. I suspect it is the kind of business where they could live in back.
You know what a cooper is, right? Be sure you don't fake it but know what a cooper makes.
2007-10-21 10:44:37
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answer #3
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answered by CarlisleGirl 6
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to this point as i understand important different promoting replaced into no longer criminal in colonial u . s . a .. It wasn't criminal in England the two, in spite of the undeniable shown fact that it replaced into practiced as a manner of buying one in each and every of those casual 'divorce' at a time on a similar time as criminal divorce replaced into very almost impossible to receive. It replaced into usually the female who had to be 'bought' to a distinctive guy. usually the sale have been prearranged between the female, her husband, and the guy to whom she replaced into to be 'bought'. In 'For greater suitable suitable, For Worse, British Marriage 1600 to the renowned-day" John R. Gillis writes: 'via the 1790s the practice had replace into so properly-common that it replaced into the precedence of editorial fact. "As circumstances of the sale of greater useful halves have of previous due usually occured between the shrink instructions of persons who evaluate such sales lawful, we anticipate of it actual to tell that, via determination of the courtss of regulation in a former reign, they have been declared unlawful and void, and considered an insignificant pretence to sanction the crime of adultery."
2016-10-04 07:36:23
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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