North American People

An Apache cradleboard (from the Peabody Museum)
Most kids in North America lived with their mothers and
fathers and brothers and sisters, generally in one room of a pueblo,
or one tipi or hogan or wickiup.
Because a lot of kids died of sicknesses, you usually had a lot of brothers
and sisters, to make sure that some would grow up. Iroquois
and Chinook kids lived in longhouses
with their grandparents (if they were still alive), and with their aunts
and uncles and cousins. As in medieval
Europe, most people kept their babies swaddled, and carried them around
using a wooden cradleboard, at least until they were old enough to crawl.
There weren't any schools in early North America. Older
kids followed their mothers or fathers around, so that girls learned to
do what their mothers did and boys learned to do what their fathers did.
Mostly girls gathered wild plants and planted corn
and hoed beans and harvested the crops, and made clothes.
Boys learned to hunt and fish
and make weapons. And boys learned to fight so they would fight wars when
they grew up, while girls learned how to take care of babies and cook.
When a girl got to be a teenager, she usually got married.
When people got married, they gave each other gifts of food instead of gold rings.
A bride gave her husband corn or corn
bread, and he gave her venison (deer
meat) or some other kind of meat. If she lived in a small house like a tipi
or a hogan, the young married people
would set up their own house. If she lived in a longhouse,
she didn't move out of her mother's house, - she stayed home, and her husband
moved in with her family. Sometimes a man had more than one wife, but usually
women only had one husband.
If married people got divorced later, the dad would move back to his mother's house or his sister's house, and the children would stay with their mother in her house.
If married people got divorced later, the dad would move back to his mother's house or his sister's house, and the children would stay with their mother in her house.
Women in North America had more power and freedom than women in Europe or Asia at the
same time. Women owned their own houses and their own stuff. They could get divorced whenever they wanted to, and they could
keep their kids with them if they did get divorced.
You might think that because everyone in North America
was a Native American there would be no racism at this time. It's true that
Native Americans didn't treat people differently based on the color of their
skin. But they often did treat people from other cultures badly. Navajo
people thought they were better than Ute people, and Ute
people thought they were better than Navajo people. Pueblo
people didn't get along with Navajo people, and the Iroquois
were always fighting with the Algonquins.
All of these people used to capture people from their enemies and force
them to work for them as slaves.
Because people didn't always get enough food,
and they didn't have much medical knowledge,
most people in North America at this time died of old age in their forties
or fifties (just like in Europe,
Africa, or Asia
at this time). So most kids never knew their grandparents, and by the time
they grew up they often had lost one or both of their parents too. Teenagers
often had to take care of themselves.

