Posted on April 27, 2010.
[the type of mute question] Did the women have jobs during the Track of Oregon? Do [but I need knowledge]?Je'm doing a history type for my history class [I was forced, not my choice] of how we ought claim to be pioneers traveling on the Track of Oregon.
Then, I want one of the women in my history to be nurse...
BUT! The it was during this time when the women had not jobs but have remained at the house and cooked and stuffs?
Because then to do the men are nurses and the doctors and the things?
The type of must help now...
well in the game.. they didnt does does not import what lol
Yes. I know because of the old spectacle of TV, " Dr. Woman" of Medicine of Quinn. She was doctor and itself il's to the TV, then it must be true! ! !
yes
On the track that some women worked as the servants domesticate, the professors, and of time in turned time to prostitution.
I mets't thinks that the women became heavily implied in to care for to the War Civil. Even then, the it was a male a field and a dominated men criticized women that wanted to be implied in a matters as bloody as medicine instead of remainder to the house and to take care of the family.
werent of women giving right alot until likes the 1900
But someone were nurses but in the track of Oregon I think that they were only women to the home and they stuff should take care of the childlike ones and cooks. didnt of men believes that the women were able to do the something else.
Funny Cuz now we r overcoming them. ESPERER THAT THE ASSISTANCE
House WORK is a work in lui's jokes automatically the thing that it does diffrent of no other work is that your is not paid by someone a d'autre.. unless you consider your spouse someone the one.
also on the wemon of track of Oregon where resposnsible for almost all that didn't flies away hunting and laber manual. they assured themselves that every a things had at the merchandise and yes someone did the medicine of pratice but most of the men preferred men to do this thing type. the woman if u thinks about him really didn't has it then, themselves they had alot of childlike then later one on to clothe the it was as liberates the work
The women were not in to care for then except someone big hospitals. There they were especially religious.
The women on the Track of Oregon could be midwifes and could have the good knowledge of folk medicine. Most of them were married or the sisters or the girls of guy traveling the track. No only women without report traveling alone.
Typical chores on the track included the kitchen, washing dishes, doing the laundry soap, form beds, and keep the childlike ones represented and healthy.
The day would begin around 4AM when women would assemble themselves a quick breakfast and the men would tend the stock. The beds would must are taken and camp hit. Immediately that the it was rather light to see, the carts would begin the move. Everyone that could do the walk. And they would keep the walk until around 10 or 11 am.
The train would stop itself for the nooning (almost 10AM to 2pm). The stock would be allowed grazing, the young children would eat, then would do a small sum. The women would repair the big meal of the day, to do the dishes the breakfast and do the bread of laundry soap or mixes to cook. Themselves they had the time, ils'd sum, also.
To 2 in the evening, the camp again would be hit and everyone would walk and would keep on the walk until almost dark or until a good source of water was found. To this point, the beds would be displayed, everyone would eat again and would go to bed.
Qui's the day in a walnut shell. The trains could travel anywhere of 15 to 40 miles by the day.
Someone mentioned Dr. Quinn. ... The true doctor she was based on was the War posts civil, but not by a lot of. The apogee of Track of Oregon was 1848 to 1867. Keep present to the spirit that Dr. Quinn was the exception, not the rule.
A lot of women took out towards the west to become professors. There could have been some women on the track of Oregon that had the intention to become professors when they obtained there. For not to care for was a respectable work for the women until the 1850, but the women would have cared for certainly the patient, although it would not have been considered as a work, but a just party of their duties women.
But most of the women would have gone to live as the agriculteur's women, that is the same constant work. It seems that it took money to travel out towards the west, therefore most of the women that took out there were bourgeois women that were not used to the hardships. Most of the women took in Amazon, that more was considered seemly, but was a lot harder one than to take to califourchon on. They were counted to touch in with the men when it was an urgency matter, doing the things as to push of the carts of the mud, driving teams of beef, launching of the stretched, and checking even rifles as temporary urgencies. They were counted to remove from wood and water, do the camp fires, display the night and display in the morning, and do the milking themselves they had cows. The women of Manyh were pregnant, but they always hitched loaded carts and did facing vomitings in the morning during the turn jostling. They crossed the rivers of raging on rafst and helped leads their children on the mountain sides. A woman of pioneer related to help a birth during a storm when the pregnant woman was placed on two chairs in the pierced cart " with the nurses painfully advances around" help his delivery.
The carts stopped only to the grave of the night and to roll begun again to the dawn, and the women learned to do their chores domesticate on the movement. Someone could roll a piecrust on the seat of cart while to drive a beef team. But there weren't a lot of chances to do the laundry soap, and the families went for a month or longer between the own clothing. Some women found it strong to obtain that is used to the kitchen on a fire open. But the most adapted one. James Clayman wrote that it had looked at a woman cooking next to a cart on a rainy night in 1844: &Quot; after having having full of his dough she looked at and cared for the fire and held an umbrella on the fire and his skillett with the biggest self-control for almost 2 hours and the bread cooks enough to give us a very abundant soup. "
As the track showed itself hard and the weaker animals, a lot of families have low-fat their loads and were ridded of all otherwise that THE possesions more CRUCIAL. To relieve the animals, the people have gone out of the carts and walked. Inevitably, the women injure on to carry the smallest children. Juliette Eglantier walked 100 miles by the sand and the boulders when his train of cart was lost in the Valley of Death. She carried a child on his back and another in its arms, while sh eled the third by a hand. The Young ones of Samuel of Mrs, that had delivered just, climbed the cliffs of the Sierra Nevada with hr the newborn baby in its arms.
Mettre't never does not import that allows is not punished for says that the women in these d ays didn't has jobs - they had the work more important in the world - the work on duty to go life. The source (the sources) : 'America's Women - 400 Years of Dolls, the Plodding, the Companions and the heroins' by Gail Collins