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Getting in the Wood

Getting in the Wood. Lesson 40 “The Midnight Cry”. Two hundred years ago in America, most people kept warm with a fire. Katie & Ian. If your home had several rooms, often there was a fireplace in each main room. Alijoyy. Steve Elgersma.

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Getting in the Wood

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  1. Getting in the Wood Lesson 40 “The Midnight Cry”

  2. Two hundred years ago in America, most people kept warm with a fire.

  3. Katie & Ian

  4. If your home had several rooms, often there was a fireplace in each main room.

  5. Alijoyy

  6. Steve Elgersma

  7. In America at this time, people also cooked over a wood-burning fire.

  8. Donna62

  9. Kheel Center,Cornell University

  10. NeenahHistory

  11. And many areas of the world still use wood stoves.

  12. Arturo Sotillo Costa Rica

  13. Chris de Rham Nepal

  14. International Rivers

  15. When canopy beds were used, it was mainly to help one stay warmer during the night.

  16. Richard White

  17. donielle

  18. Thomas Ault

  19. imperialroom.jpg

  20. By 1914 things were changing. Radiator heat was beginning to be used among the wealthy, and electricity became available within some cities.

  21. David Numan

  22. cliff reppart

  23. Text Ian Turk Everybody loved radiator heat!

  24. But something still had to heat the water in the radiators. Sometimes it was coal.

  25. Aaron Muderick

  26. But at the Pittock Mansion in Portland, Oregon, it was wood!

  27. Michael Henley Pittock Mansion, Portland, Oregon, finished in 1914

  28. The basement of the mansion

  29. To stay warm in the winter and to be able to cook food, you had to plan ahead.

  30. Francis Eatherington

  31. John O’Neill

  32. Virginia Guard Public Affairs

  33. Marek Tomaszewski

  34. The Forest History Society

  35. Iain Turner

  36. Tony Hisgett

  37. nyweb2001

  38. The U.S. National Archives

  39. Peretz Partensky

  40. Eva Funderburgh

  41. evelyn

  42. WHardcastle

  43. Andrew Pescod

  44. Cliff Muller

  45. In 1843 and 1844, many people were preparing for the second coming of Jesus--they devoted time and energy to their own personal preparation and to telling others about it. They believed they understood Daniel 8:14 correctly and, therefore, had no reason to harvest their potato crops or do other things normally done at that time of the year. They were greatly disappointed, and most people stopped believing in the soon return of Jesus.

  46. Joshua Himes, for example, walked away from the Advent believers and became an Episcopal minister. William Miller could not understand that the sanctuary to be cleansed was actually the heavenly sanctuary. But a few people remained loyal to a soon-appearing Saviour, and from them grew the Seventh-day Adventist Church.

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