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This was a standard reader in New England in the 18th and 19th centuries.
It was apparently used in both public and Sunday (religious) schools.
At that time children of all ages studied in the same classroom, so it has portions oriented towards younger and older students.

Besides instruction in the alphabet, the New England Primer also served to indoctrinate young minds in the stern and somewhat morbid Protestantism of that time and place.
Depending on your viewpoint, it is either yet another example of how religion has been excised from the public schools in the United States, or a quaint sample of what our forefathers considered acceptable as 'moral education'.

The New England Primer also has examples of religious intolerance, specifically anti-Catholic and anti-Semitic statements, which reflect then-contemporary attitudes.

This particular book went through a number of editions.
This version was scanned from an copy in the possession of my family which was published in 1843.
An earlier version, dated 1777, is also available here.

--j.b.
Hare.

Title Page

Frontispiece

Alphabet

The Creed

The Lord's Prayer

The Ten Commandments

Alphabet Poem

An Alphabet of Lessons for Children

Morning Prayer for a Child

Evening Prayer for a Child

Agur's Prayer

Duty Of Children To Their Parents

Uncertainty of Life

On Life and Death

The Infant's Grace Before and After Meat

The Sum of the Ten Commandments

Our Savior's Golden Rule

Choice Sentences

The Dutiful Child's Promise

Instructive Questions and Answers

Dr. Watts's Cradle Hymn

Offices of Humanity

The Burning of Mr. John Rogers

Verses for Little Children

The Shorter Catechism

A Dialogue Between Christ, A Youth and the Devil

Lessons for Children
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