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Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve & Fort Caroline National Memorial
Corn Husk Dolls

General Plantation Activity

Objectives
Students will learn how to make a corn husk doll, and then compare the toys they have with toys that children of the 19th century played with (and often made) as a daily life comparison.

Age
3rd-5th grade

Enhances
VA.A.1.2.1, VA.A.1.2.2, VA.A.1.2.4, VA.C.1.2.1

Time and Place
Classroom pre- or post-visit activity, 30 minutes (plus prep time)

Worksheet
Making Corn Husk Dolls pdf (110k)
This file must be viewed using Adobe Acrobat Reader.
To download this program (free of charge), click here.

Ideas for this project taken from:
Lauri Carlson, EcoArt! (Charlotte, Vermont: Williamson Publishing, 1993).
and http://www.teachersfirst.com/summer/cornhusk.htm

Background
Begin with a class discussion. Have your students imagine what life at Kingsley Plantation, over 150 years ago, would have been like. Would there have been grocery stores or department stores to shop at? Where would someone acquire children's toys? The planter's family might have been able to purchase toys such as lead soldiers, marbles, metal jacks, or dolls with porcelain heads and hands, at a general store (if there was one in the area), but the slaves had no way to earn money to pay for such luxuries. Most toys back then were homemade by the child or someone they knew using leftover materials, for example cloth from making a dress, or materials found in their environment such as wood. Have students brainstorm ways they could use materials found in the environment for making toys. What sorts of games do you think children living in the 19th century played? [some examples: hopscotch, tic tac toe, yoyos, dominoes, jackstraws (known as pickup sticks today), tops, singing games] How do they differ from toys and games kids play today?

This activity will show students how to make a toy from corn husks, a common item that today we often throw away. Corn was grown at Kingsley Plantation, and while it was used for food, other parts of the plant were useful too. Children back then would have had as much fun using their imaginations to make their toys as they did when playing with them!

Procedure
Corn husks can be purchased at local craft stores, though it would be less expensive to contact your local grocery store's produce department and ask them to hold the husks during the appropriate season. Once you take the husks home, lay them out to dry in the sun. Once dried they will keep indefinitely. Remember to soak the corn husks for at least 20 minutes before craft use. Each student will need 6 corn husk strips, scissors, and string. Print out the activity sheet above for step-by-step instructions.

16th century French flag  

Did You Know?
The flag that flies over Fort Caroline is a sixteenth century French flag with “fleur de lis” heraldic symbols in gold on a blue background. The "fleur de lis" is an unoffical symbol of France.
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Last Updated: September 12, 2008 at 00:32 EST