American Girls

Felicity Learns a Lesson by Valerie Tripp, 1991.
This is the second book in the Felicity, An American Girl series.
So far, Felicity has mainly been taught at home, learning to read and write and take care of basic household tasks, like cooking and sewing, from her mother. However, Felicity’s parents have decided that it’s time for her to begin furthering her education. Felicity fantasizes about studying Greek, Latin, and geography, like boys do in college, but girls of her time do not receive that kind of education. Some girls take on apprenticeships, learning professions such as seamstress, which Felicity thinks might be exciting, but her father is a wealthy merchant, which means that Felicity will be educated as a gentlewoman, not as a girl preparing herself for a trade. A gentlewoman’s education involves lessons in penmanship, fine stitchery, dancing, manners, and hostess skills. Felicity doesn’t find that prospect as exciting.
Felicity starts taking lessons from Miss Manderly, a respected gentlewoman, in manners and the practical arts that girls from well-off families of her era were expected to know. Two other girls, a pair of sisters who have recently arrived from England, are also taking lessons from Miss Manderly, and at first, Felicity worries that they will know more than she does. However, they are also young and have lessons of their own to learn. The younger of the sisters, Elizabeth, becomes Felicity’s best friend. However, Annabelle, the older girl, is disapproving. She misses her old life in England and doesn’t think that anything in the colonies is good.
Then, Felicity’s father declares that because of the tax on tea, he will no longer carry it in his shop. It leaves Felicity feeling conflicted about Miss Manderly’s lessons, which include the proper way to serve tea. She has started enjoying the lessons and doesn’t want to lose Elizabeth’s friendship, but she wants to support her father, too. Then, Annabelle criticizes Felicity for what her father said at one of the lessons, prompting Felicity to storm out angrily. She is doubly angry and hurt that Elizabeth didn’t try to defend her, making her doubt Elizabeth’s friendship.
At first, Felicity thinks that there is no way she can return to the lessons, but her mother convinces her that if there’s something that she really cares about (the lessons, Elizabeth’s friendship, supporting her father, etc.) she will find a way to work through the conflict rather than give up on it. She also points out that some people aren’t as brave as others and find it more difficult to speak their minds and that Felicity should give Elizabeth another chance at friendship. In the end, Felicity works out a compromise for her lessons using what Miss Manderly has already taught her, and Elizabeth finally finds the courage to tell Annabelle how she really feels about her behavior and the way she treats both herself and Felicity.
Each of the girls in the American Girls stories has her own personality, including strengths and weaknesses. Felicity is a spirited girl, but at first, she has a tendency to be too impatient and impulsive. Part of what she learns is the need take responsibility for her choices and to think things through before she acts. Elizabeth, who is shy and easily intimidated by her older sister, learns that nothing will improve until she makes her true feelings known and that she has as much right as anyone else to be treated with respect. Annabelle is a rather self-centered individual and is genuinely surprised when Elizabeth finally stands up to her. In some ways, Annabelle is unfortunate because she does not find a friend at Miss Manderly’s like her sister does, but readers will recognize that Annabelle’s lack of friends is partly her own fault because she is deliberately antagonistic and does not try to earn Felicity’s friendship.
In the back of the book, there is a section that explains more about how children were educated in the American colonies around the time of the Revolutionary War. Other good books on this topic are Going to School in 1776 and Colonial Crafts.
This book is currently available online through Internet Archive.
Alissa, Princess of Arcadia by Jillian Ross, 1997.
It turns out that Balin is a wizard. He’s lived in the tower for centuries and hardly ever leaves, so most people have forgotten that he’s there. He offers Alissa lessons in magic and the kind of quests that she’s been craving. He once taught Alissa’s father similar lessons, although he thinks that King Edmund has also forgotten that he exists. Alissa eager accepts the offer of magic lessons.
When Alissa first begins her lessons with Balin, she thinks that studying magic is turning out to be as boring as her other lessons. Balin makes her do little chores, like dusting things in his tower, and he has her read books and memorize words. Alissa is impatient to get on with the exciting magic, but Balin impresses on her that she needs to start out slowly and to recognize that magic is not the solution to all things.
Going to School in 1776 by John J. Loeper, 1973.
These explanations are told in story form, rather than simply explaining listing the ways children could live, learn, and go to school, trying to help readers see their lives through the eyes of the children themselves. The children’s lives are affected by the war around them. As the book says, many town schools in New England were closed during the war, so the students would attend “dame schools” instead. A dame school was a series of lessons taught in private homes by older women in the community. In other places, such as cities like Philadelphia, official schools were still open. Discipline was often strict, and school hours could be much longer than those in modern schools. Sometimes, children would argue with each other over their parents’ positions on the war.
There were different standards for what girls and boys were expected to learn because their learning was guided by what they were each expected to do with their adult lives. A typical school might teach boys subjects like, “writing, arithmetick [sic], accounting, navigation, algebra, and Latine.” Generally, “reading, writing, arithmetic, and religion” were common elementary school subjects. Latin lessons and other advanced subjects were typically for boys who planned to become lawyers or clergymen. Girls were likely to receive little formal education beyond reading and writing, and black people were less likely to receive even that.



