The Mary Wooster Chapter of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) will present a special program, “Pudd’nheads: Childhood in Colonial America” on Sunday, April 29 at the Danbury Museum, 43 Main Street in Danbury. The program will begin at 2pm.
The program, conducted by Velya Jancz-Urban, author, teacher and creator of “The Not-So-Good Life of the Colonial Goodwife” and her daughter Ehris Urban, will examine the unique aspects of childhood between the late sixteenth and late eighteenth centuries and explore themes including birthing and childrearing practices, parenting, children's health and education, naming, gender, play, and rites of passage. The program will offer compelling information on colonial children - as well as Native American and slave children who are too often left out of conventional coverage.
Seats are $10 per person and can be purchased by sending a check, made payable to Mary Wooster Chapter, to the Danbury Museum, Att: Mary Wooster Chapter, 43 Main Street, Danbury, CT 06810. Seating may be purchased the day of the event based on availability. For more information email lynna.marywooster.dar@gmail.com.
Refreshments and a silent auction will follow the program. All proceeds from the event will be utilized by the Chapter to support its community service projects benefitting deployed soldiers, veterans, educational opportunities, and women’s issues.
For those interested in researching possible American Revolution ancestors in their family trees, contact the Chapter at marywoosterdar@gmail.com . Further information about the National Society can be found at DAR.org.
###