“Look’d Like Milk”: Breastmilk Substitutes in New England’s Borderlands

By Carla Cevasco Captured by the Abenaki in 1724, the English colonist Elizabeth Hanson fretted as “my daily Travel and hard Living made my Milk dry almost quite up.” As Hanson recorded in her captivity narrative, God’s Mercy Surmounting Man’s Cruelty (1728), she watched her baby become “very poor a...

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Main Author: carlacevasco
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:French
Published: The Recipes Project 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://recipes.hypotheses.org/5448
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:10670/1.m0432p 2023-05-15T12:58:50+02:00 “Look’d Like Milk”: Breastmilk Substitutes in New England’s Borderlands carlacevasco 2015-04-02 http://recipes.hypotheses.org/5448 fr fre The Recipes Project 10670/1.m0432p http://recipes.hypotheses.org/5448 other The Recipes Project hisphilso hist Blog post https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6947/ 2015 fttriple 2023-01-22T16:52:41Z By Carla Cevasco Captured by the Abenaki in 1724, the English colonist Elizabeth Hanson fretted as “my daily Travel and hard Living made my Milk dry almost quite up.” As Hanson recorded in her captivity narrative, God’s Mercy Surmounting Man’s Cruelty (1728), she watched her baby become “very poor and weak,” so thin that she could “perceive all its Joynts from one End of the Babe’s Back to the other.” Among English women taken captive by Native Americans in colonial New England, food shortag. Other/Unknown Material abenaki Unknown
institution Open Polar
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op_collection_id fttriple
language French
topic hisphilso
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spellingShingle hisphilso
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carlacevasco
“Look’d Like Milk”: Breastmilk Substitutes in New England’s Borderlands
topic_facet hisphilso
hist
description By Carla Cevasco Captured by the Abenaki in 1724, the English colonist Elizabeth Hanson fretted as “my daily Travel and hard Living made my Milk dry almost quite up.” As Hanson recorded in her captivity narrative, God’s Mercy Surmounting Man’s Cruelty (1728), she watched her baby become “very poor and weak,” so thin that she could “perceive all its Joynts from one End of the Babe’s Back to the other.” Among English women taken captive by Native Americans in colonial New England, food shortag.
format Other/Unknown Material
author carlacevasco
author_facet carlacevasco
author_sort carlacevasco
title “Look’d Like Milk”: Breastmilk Substitutes in New England’s Borderlands
title_short “Look’d Like Milk”: Breastmilk Substitutes in New England’s Borderlands
title_full “Look’d Like Milk”: Breastmilk Substitutes in New England’s Borderlands
title_fullStr “Look’d Like Milk”: Breastmilk Substitutes in New England’s Borderlands
title_full_unstemmed “Look’d Like Milk”: Breastmilk Substitutes in New England’s Borderlands
title_sort “look’d like milk”: breastmilk substitutes in new england’s borderlands
publisher The Recipes Project
publishDate 2015
url http://recipes.hypotheses.org/5448
genre abenaki
genre_facet abenaki
op_source The Recipes Project
op_relation 10670/1.m0432p
http://recipes.hypotheses.org/5448
op_rights other
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