Special Event on the
Farm

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18th
Century Wedding
Come celebrate
with the farm family on this joyous occasion! Dance with
the bride and groom, witness an 18th century style ceremony,
and taste the wedding cake.
For the current year's event schedule, please see our calendar
of events. Events may be cancelled due to weather
conditions.
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Information about
Weddings in the 18th Century
Marriage and wedding
traditions in the 18th century were a bit different from the way
they are today. Many of our wedding customs come from the Victorian
age, in the 19th century, and were unknown to our Colonial ancestors.
For instance, white was not yet the standard wedding dress color,
and a poor bride might not have had any special dress made at all,
but simply worn her best clothes.
Courtship
Courtship was initiated by the interested man. If he expressed
interest in a certain woman, he must first convince his own father
that the match would be good and beneficial one. If his father agreed,
his father would then contact the woman's father to propose the
match and convince him that the match would be beneficial. If the
woman's father agreed, the man was then free to court the woman.
However, in poorer families in which little or no wealth or property
was at stake in the match, couples were more free in choosing their
mates. Courting usually took place at public functions such as dances,
church services, and market fairs or by the gentleman calling upon
the lady at home.
A good match was one that would be considered beneficial to both
families. Love matches, while not unheard of, were uncommon. In
the lower classes, a man might look for a woman who showed proficiency
in cooking, sewing and child rearing while a woman would be looking
for a man who was a hard worker and able to provide for a family.
First and foremost, a marriage was a social and public contract.
The average age to be married (in 18th century lower-class Virginia)
was 23 for women, 26 for men. (It was even higher in England; the
marriage age in the Americas decreased the more land there was available--
for instance, on the frontier. The upper classes often married younger
as well.)
Who could marry?
- Any free white over the age of 21 could marry provided they
had obtained the lawful license or published banns.
- It was illegal for anyone under the age of 21 to marry without
consent from a parent or legal guardian.
- It was illegal for servants still serving an indenture or apprentices
to marry without their master or mistresses permission.
- It was illegal for any white to marry an enslaved or free black.
- Virginia did not recognize marriages between slaves.
Marriage License...
A marriage license was a document issued to those intending to
marry. These licenses stated to both the minister and to the public
that both parties were either of legal age to marry or had the consent
of a parent or guardian; that there were no objections to the marriage;
and that both parties were legally able to wed.
Marriage by license was more expensive than marriage by the publication
of banns, but couples did not have to wait the extended period of
time to wed.
... or Publication of Banns?
The publications of banns required that notice of a couple's intention
to marry be published either verbally or in writing for three consecutive
meetings of the church. If the bride and groom resided in separate
parishes, the banns must be published in both parishes. Banns were
to be published under the rubric of the Anglican Book of Common
Prayer. The publication of banns over a period of three consecutive
weeks allowed any member of the community who might object for whatever
reasons to the union to be heard. Upon the successful publication
of banns, a document certifying the eligibility of the two parties
to marry would then be issued.
Marrying by publications of banns was cheaper than by marriage
license, but required the couple to wait longer.
The Wedding Celebration
- The popular months for weddings were late December, January
and early February, but people married at all times of the year
except for the four weeks of Lent leading up to Easter and the
week of Advent before Christmas.
- By the 1770s, many of the rituals that had been traditionally
performed in churches, including marriages, were being performed
in homes. If a marriage was conducted in a church it was always
done before noon. Regardless of where it was performed, the ceremony
had to be done by a minister of the Church of England for it to
be recognized in Virginia.
- Those attending the wedding would dress in the finest clothes
they owned. The bride's dress did not have to be white.
- Wedding day events included games, singing, dancing and a great
deal of food. Some typical dishes served would be beef, venison
and pork. One tradition was to bake a cake with a piece of nutmeg
cooked inside. The person who received the piece with the nutmeg
would be the next to marry.
Sources:
"The Freshest Advises: The Advancement of Matrimonial Felicity."
Colonial Williamsburg, December 1999/ January 2000. V. 21
No.6
Bloch, Ruth H. Gender and Morality in Anglo-American Culture,
1650-1800. Berkeley: University of California Press, c2003.
http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/kt129017bs/
(chapter: Women and the Law of Courtship in Eighteenth Century America,
p. 88)
Isaac, Rhys. Transformation of Virginia 1740-1790. University
of North Carolina Press
Kulikoff, Alan. From British Peasants to Colonial American Farmers.
University of North Carolina Press, 1999.
Lizon, Karen Helene. Colonial American Holidays and Entertainment.
New York: Franklin Watts, 1993.
Middleton, Richard. Colonial America. Massachusetts: Blackwell
Publishers, 1996
Observations on the American Backcountry 1728-1836, p. 88-89
Stone, Lawrence. The Family, Sex & Marriage in England 1500-1800.
New York: Harper & Row, 1977.
Taylor, Dale. The Writer's Guide To Everyday Life in Colonial
America From 1607-1783. Ohio: Writer's Digest Books, 1997.
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