Synopsis
The Mother's Practical Guide In The Early Training Of Her Children. 3Rd Amer. Ed — by Mrs. J. Bakewell. The book is a 19th-century manual for mothers that frames child-rearing as a comprehensive program of physical, intellectual, and moral education. It presents a long, multi-edition treatise organized around prenatal care, infant management, and later domestic training, with extended sections on grandmothers and stepparents. Bakewell argues that early education extends beyond schooling to the mother’s daily example, habits, and religious instruction, and she emphasizes the mother’s dignity, responsibility, and role in shaping character. The work blends practical guidance on feeding, hygiene, sleep, dress, and exercise with guidance on intellectual development (reading, writing, arithmetic, geography) and moral formation (obedience, truthfulness, self-denial, benevolence). Religious training pervades the guidance, including instruction, prayer, Sabbath observance, and ministerial respect. The text also addresses family dynamics and social roles, offering admonitions on discipline, punishment, and rewards, and it considers the duties of grandmothers and stepmothers within a Christian domestic ideal. Overall, it functions as a combined manual and moral theology of motherhood intended to sustain domestic virtue across generations.
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