Hello my Omschooligans! Guess what? Someone has a special birthday coming up and that is the United States of America! She's turning 250 years old! This birthday or anniversary is called by a huge semiquincentennial. Teacher Omi is excited to share with you, free printable 4th of July coloring pages to celebrate America 250 as folks are calling the celebration. I'll share a bunch of recipes, games, crafts and activities to throw an America 250 birthday party with style!
4th of July printables
- America 250 NC has many free printable American history lesson plans and 4th of July coloring pages for teachers to use in homeschool or classroom activities.
- Scholastic Teachables offers some free America 250 lesson plans to download and print. Scholastic Books has always been a leader in educational books for kids. Many of my favorite kids books bore the Scholastic logo.
- eParenting has provided free printable US history word searches to use for 4th of July lesson plans. I used to love word search games. As a Omschool mom, I'd print off word searches for the kids to complete for reading and spelling activities or as car games.
- Notgrass History has compiled a huge unit of America 250 lesson plans. There are general American history activities, coloring pages, crafts, games and puzzles. There's also a huge database of free printable Laura Ingalls. Print flashcards, memory games, word searches and even American history recipes!
Life in 1776: Recipes, craft projects and living history activities
We all need somebody to lean on...
And those people would be some members of local tribes that took pity on the few settlers who had survived that first ocean voyage in 1607. How did they help? It would be easier to describe how they didn't help. I'll explore that more in another post but for now, here are a few survival skills the native people of the Powhatan Confederacy and Wampanoag Nation taught colonists.
๐ฝ Eat like a local
When the English colonists arrived in North America, they brought European grains like wheat, rye, and barley. However, these crops completely failed to grow in the thin, rocky New England soil and the humid Virginia climate. They would have starved but for native neighbors who taught them to "eat local. They learned to grow, cook and eat dished made from a crop they had never seen before: maize, which they simply called "Indian corn."
The coexist garden method
European farming involved clearing massive fields, plowing the soil into long rows, and planting a single crop. Native Americans taught them a much more efficient, sustainable companion-planting system called the Three Sisters:
Corn was planted in small mounds, acting as a natural trellis for beans to climb.
The beans pumped nitrogen into the dirt, naturally fertilizing the soil.
Squash (or pumpkins) was planted at the base, its massive prickle-trimmed leaves acting as a living mulch that kept the soil damp and blocked weeds from growing.
Fertilizing with Fish
In places like Plymouth, the soil was incredibly nutrient-poor. Squanto (Tisquantum) famously taught the Pilgrims to catch river herring or shad and bury one or two small fish heads directly into each corn mound. As the fish decayed, they provided a massive burst of nitrogen that allowed the corn to thrive in sandy soil.
Bulla, Clyde Robert. Illustrated by Peter Burchard. Squanto, Friend of the Pilgrims. New York: Scholastic, 1954.
Work smarter not harder
Clearing dense American forests by chopping down every tree took months of grueling work. Native peoples showed the colonists how to girdle a tree—cutting a deep ring through the bark all the way around the trunk. This killed the leaves, letting sunlight pour down to the forest floor so corn could be planted immediately between the standing, dead trees.
๐️ Why it Was Called "Corn"
In 17th-century English, the word "corn" didn't mean the yellow vegetable with kernels we eat today. "Corn" was simply the generic English word for any region's primary grain (in England, wheat was called corn; in Scotland, oats were called corn). Because this new grain belonged to the Native people, the settlers called it "Indian Corn" to tell it apart. Over time, Americans dropped the first word entirely, which is why we just call it "corn" today!
๐ฅฃ Traditional Indian Corn Mush
The simple, versatile staple of early American kitchens, adapted from Native American traditions.
Prep Time: 5 Minutes
Cook Time: 25 Minutes
Yield: 4 Servings
Ingredients:
- 1 cup coarse yellow cornmeal (hand-ground or stone-ground is best!)
- 4 cups water (or 3 cups water and 1 cup milk for a richer porridge)
- 1 teaspoon salt
- For Serving: Pure maple syrup, honey, or a splash of fresh milk
Instructions:
- Bring to a Boil: In a heavy-bottomed saucepan, bring 3 cups of the water and the salt to a brisk boil.
- The Slurry Secret: In a small bowl, whisk the remaining 1 cup of cold water into the cornmeal until smooth. (This traditional trick prevents lumps from forming when it hits the hot pot!)
- Thicken: Slowly pour the cold cornmeal mixture into the boiling water, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon.
- Simmer: Reduce the heat to low. Cook for 20 to 25 minutes, stirring frequently to keep it from sticking to the bottom, until the mush is thick and bubbles lazily.
The Pioneer Method: Eat it hot out of the pot with maple syrup for breakfast. To save leftovers, colonial cooks would pour the extra mush into a loaf pan, let it cool into a solid block, slice it thick, and fry it in butter until crispy on the outside the next morning!
๐ฅฃ Traditional Indian Corn Mush
The simple, versatile staple of early American kitchens, adapted from Native American traditions.
Ingredients:
- 1 cup coarse yellow cornmeal (hand-ground or stone-ground is best!)
- 4 cups water (or 3 cups water and 1 cup milk for a richer porridge)
- 1 teaspoon salt
- For Serving: Pure maple syrup, honey, or a splash of fresh milk
Instructions:
- Bring to a Boil: In a heavy-bottomed saucepan, bring 3 cups of the water and the salt to a brisk boil.
- The Slurry Secret: In a small bowl, whisk the remaining 1 cup of cold water into the cornmeal until smooth. (This traditional trick prevents lumps from forming when it hits the hot pot!)
- Thicken: Slowly pour the cold cornmeal mixture into the boiling water, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon.
- Simmer: Reduce the heat to low. Cook for 20 to 25 minutes, stirring frequently to keep it from sticking to the bottom, until the mush is thick and bubbles lazily.
The Pioneer Method: Eat it hot out of the pot with maple syrup for breakfast. To save leftovers, colonial cooks would pour the extra mush into a loaf pan, let it cool into a solid block, slice it thick, and fry it in butter until crispy on the outside the next morning!
The Daily Grind
๐งบ Kid-Craft: Build a Pioneer Sieve
Construct a simple, historical-style sifter to separate your hand-ground cornmeal.
Supplies Needed:
- 1 sturdy disposable paper plate or clean margarine tub or recycled cardboard works too
- A small piece of burlap, cheesecloth, or plastic mesh (like a clean mesh bag from onions or oranges) You can use a piece of plastic screen too.
- Tape or a strong rubber band
- Safety scissors
Activity Steps:
- Cut the Frame: Have an adult help cut out the center circle of the paper plate or the bottom of the plastic tub, leaving just a sturdy outer rim to act as your hoop. Or cut a ring of cardboard.
- Attach the Mesh: Cut your piece of burlap, cheesecloth, or onion-bag mesh so it is slightly larger than the opening you just cut.
- Secure the Screen: Stretch the mesh tightly across the bottom of the rim. Secure it firmly in place by wrapping tape around the edges or snapping a thick rubber band around the rim. Trim away any loose overhanging mesh.
- Test Your Sifter: Pour your hand-ground corn into your homemade sieve over a bowl and shake it back and forth to watch it separate!
Historical Note: Colonial sift-makers traditionally wove the mesh screens out of split wood reed, horsehair, or fine iron wire. A household would have multiple sieves with different sized holes—coarse ones for separating grains, and incredibly fine ones for shifting baking flour.
๐ง Living History: Grind Your Own Colonial Cornmeal
A hands-on, kid-friendly experiment to feel the true effort behind a Revolutionary War meal.
Supplies Needed:
- ¼ cup unpopped popcorn kernels (cheap and perfectly dried for grinding!)
- 1 heavy-duty zip-top freezer bag
- Tools of choice: A rolling pin, a wooden meat mallet, or a smooth garden stone
- 1 fine mesh kitchen sifter & a small bowl
Activity Steps:
- The "Cracker" Phase: Place the popcorn kernels inside the freezer bag and seal it tightly. On a sturdy floor, let children gently smash the kernels with a rolling pin or mallet to crack the bright yellow hulls open.
- The Pioneer Grind: Lean heavily on the rolling pin, rocking it back and forth over the broken pieces with your body weight, or try pressing and crushing them using a smooth stone. Watch how the kernels break down into a gritty meal.
- Sifting the flour: Pour the crushed corn into a kitchen sifter held over a bowl. Shake it gently. The fine, powdery corn flour will fall into the bowl, while the tough, unground yellow hulls stay behind in the sieve.
Historical Discussion: Ask the kids to look at how much energy it took just to yield a single tablespoon of flour. It gives them an instant connection to why colonial families wasted nothing—and why a warm Johnny cake at the end of a hard day was a true reward! Keep reading to learn how to make Johnny cake, the staple of the patriot army.
Lenski, Lois. Indian Captive: The Story of Mary Jemison. New York: J.B. Lippincott, 1941. Newbery Honor Book
๐ฝ Revolutionary War Johnny Cakes
Historical Note: Authentic 18th-century Johnny cakes were often just cornmeal, hot water, and salt, fried on a greased griddle (or even a literal hoe over an open fire). They were also called hoecakes or Journey cakes because they didn't have yeast and stayed fresh longer that bread. This recipe adds a tiny bit of butter and maple syrup, which would have been available as rare luxuries or regional treats during the war.
Prep time: 5 minutes
Cook time: 15 minutes
Yield: About 6–8 small cakes
Ingredients
1 cup yellow or white cornmeal (stone-ground is best if you want that authentic, rustic texture)
½ teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon butter (melted), bacon grease, or lard
1 cup boiling water
1 tablespoon maple syrup or molasses (optional, for a hint of historic sweetness)
More butter or bacon grease for the frying pan
Step-by-Step Instructions
Scald the Cornmeal: In a medium bowl, mix together the cornmeal and salt. Pour the boiling water directly over the cornmeal. Stir it well.
Let it Plump: Add the melted butter (or bacon grease) and the maple syrup/molasses. Stir until a thick, wet dough forms. Let it sit for about 3 to 5 minutes so the cornmeal absorbs the water and softens. (If it looks too dry to hold together, add a splash more hot water; if it's like soup, stir in a spoonful more cornmeal).
Heat the Skillet: Melt a generous tablespoon of butter or bacon grease in a heavy skillet (cast iron is perfect for this) over medium heat.
Form the Cakes: Drop the batter into the hot skillet by the spoonful. Use the back of your spoon to gently flatten them into patties about ¼-inch to ½-inch thick.
Fry to a Golden Crisp: Fry for about 4 to 5 minutes on the first side until the edges look golden brown and crispy. Flip carefully and fry for another 4 minutes on the other side.
How to Serve Them 1776-Style
To eat these like a colonial American or a Continental soldier, serve them hot off the griddle. They are wonderful:
Drizzled with a little extra maple syrup or honey.
Spread with a layer of fresh butter.
Served alongside salt pork, bacon, or a hearty venison/beef stew.
The Story of Corn by Sherrin Watkins – Written by a Cherokee-Shawnee author, this beautiful book focuses on a 12-year-old boy in the mid-1700s just before the Revolutionary War, using the seasonal stages of planting, harvesting, and grinding corn as a framework for daily life.
And now for something really different...
๐ Non-Alcoholic Colonial Cranberry Apple Cider Syllabub
A Bog Berry NOd: America's First Fruit
How Native American wisdom introduced European settlers to a resilient native treasure.
Prep time: 15 minutes (plus 2+ hours to chill)
Yield: 4 to 6 small serving glasses
Ingredients
1 cup heavy whipping cream (cold)
½ cup high-quality cranberry orange apple cider (sparkling apple cider works beautifully too!) Make your own cranberry orange apple cider using either the quick or the longer recipe below.
3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
Zest of 1 lemon (finely grated)
¼ cup sugar (reduced slightly from the original recipe since apple cider is naturally sweeter than white wine)
½ teaspoon vanilla extract or a pinch of ground nutmeg (for that warm, tavern-style flavor)
Step-by-Step Instructions
Dissolve the Sugar: In a medium bowl, combine the apple cider, lemon juice, lemon zest, sugar, and vanilla (or nutmeg). Stir until the sugar is completely dissolved. Let it sit for 5 minutes to infuse the lemon oils.
Add the Cream: Slowly pour the cold heavy whipping cream into the cider mixture, stirring gently.
Whip to Pillows: Whip the mixture using a hand mixer or whisk on medium-high speed. The acid from the cider and lemon will react with the cream, causing it to whip up into a thick, luxurious, cloud-like texture with soft peaks.
Chill and Separate: Spoon the mixture into small glasses. For the authentic colonial experience, let them sit in the refrigerator for 2 to 4 hours. The tart, sweet apple-lemon syrup will settle into a clear layer at the bottom, leaving a thick, luscious whipped cream on top.
๐ Stovetop Cranberry Orange Apple Cider๐ Quick Colonial Cranberry Orange Apple Cider
A crisp, no-cook tavern blend perfect for drinking or using in a traditional Syllabub.
Prep Time: 2 Minutes Yield: ~1.5 CupsIngredients:
- 1 cup pure, unfiltered apple cider
- ½ cup 100% pure cranberry juice (unsweetened)
- Fresh squeeze of orange juice (about half an orange)
Instructions:
- In a measuring cup or small pitcher, combine the unfiltered apple cider and the unsweetened cranberry juice.
- Squeeze the juice of half a fresh orange directly into the mixture. Stir briskly to combine.
- Note for Syllabub: Ensure the mixture is completely chilled before whipping it with your cream to get the perfect historic layer separation!
Prep time: 10 minutes
Cook time: 30–40 minutes
Yield: About 4 cups of concentrated cider
Ingredients
4 cups pure, unfiltered apple cider (or pure apple juice with no added sugar)
2 cups fresh or frozen whole cranberries
1 large orange (sliced into rounds, skin left on)
1 cinnamon stick
2 whole cloves
Step-by-Step Instructions
Combine: In a medium saucepan, combine the apple cider, whole cranberries, orange slices, cinnamon stick, and cloves.
Simmer and Pop: Bring the mixture to a boil over medium-high heat, then immediately reduce the heat to low. Cover the pan and let it simmer gently for about 20 to 30 minutes. You will hear the cranberries begin to burst and pop open—this is exactly what you want, as it releases their tart juice and natural pectin.
Mash: Take a potato masher or a large wooden spoon and gently smash the cranberries and orange slices against the side of the pot to squeeze out all the remaining juices. Let it simmer uncovered for another 5 to 10 minutes to deepen the flavor.
Strain to Bright Clarity: Turn off the heat. Pour the cider through a fine-mesh strainer into a glass jar or bowl, pressing down on the fruit solids to catch every drop of liquid. Discard the leftover pulp and spices.
๐ก For the Syllabub Separation Trick:
Let this homemade cider cool completely in the fridge before using it to make your syllabub.
Because you left the orange skins on while simmering, the cider will be infused with natural orange oils, meaning you can completely skip the lemon zest in the syllabub recipe! When the dessert separates in the fridge, the bottom layer will be a gorgeous, crystal-clear, ruby-red syrup that tastes like a crisp autumn harvest.
๐ก Kid-Friendly History Lesson Tip:
Back in the 1700s, before modern refrigerators and stabilizers, people used the natural acid in fruit juices to "clot" or curdle cream just enough to make it thick and stable without needing gelatin!
The 18th-Century Science Magic Trick
If you want to serve it exactly like Martha Washington or a colonial tavern keeper would, let it sit in the fridge for at least 2 to 4 hours (or overnight). As it sits, a beautiful scientific separation happens: the clear, sweet liquid will settle into a beautiful layer at the bottom of the glass, while a thick, airy, velvety cream layer floats perfectly on top. Guests would traditionally drink the liquid through the cream, or use a long spoon to get a bit of both in every bite. Here's the chemistry behind it.
1. The Acid "Clots" the Cream
When you mix the citrus juice and apple cider with the heavy cream, the natural acids immediately go to work on the cream's proteins (casein). Instead of completely curdling into chunks like spoiled milk, the acid gently relaxes the proteins, allowing them to trap air and fat molecules. This is what gives the syllabub its thick, stable, cloud-like texture when you whip it.
2. Gravity and Density Take Over
Once you pour the whipped mixture into a glass and let it sit quietly in the fridge, gravity goes to work:
The Cream Layer: The whipped fat and trapped air bubbles are incredibly light and buoyant, so they want to float.
The Liquid Layer: The sugar, apple cider, and lemon juice form a heavier, denser syrup. Because it is much heavier than the airy cream, it slowly drains down through the foam and pools perfectly at the bottom.
After a few hours, you are left with a sharp, beautiful line between a crystal-clear, sweet-tart liquid at the bottom and a rich, velvety mousse on top!
๐ชต Traditional Native American Pemmican
The ultimate historic survival superfood, packed with energy for the trail.
Prep Time: 15 Minutes
Chill Time: 30 Minutes
Yield: 8-10 Travel Cakes
Ingredients:
- 1 cup high-quality beef jerky (plain, original flavor—avoid teriyaki or sweet flavors)
- ½ cup dried cranberries (unsweetened or lightly sweetened)
- ¼ cup tallow, lard, or unflavored coconut oil (melted)
- 1 tablespoon raw honey (optional, for a traditional touch of sweetness)
Instructions:
- Pound the Meat: Place the beef jerky into a heavy-duty zip-top bag. Let children use a wooden rolling pin or mallet to smash and pound the jerky until it breaks down into a coarse, shredded powder.
- Add the Berries: Add the dried cranberries to the bag and lightly smash them as well so they break into smaller bits, blending with the meat. Pour the dry mixture into a medium bowl.
- Bind Together: Pour the melted tallow (or coconut oil) and honey over the meat and berry mixture. Stir thoroughly with a wooden spoon until the dry ingredients are entirely coated and look like wet sand.
- Press and Set: Line a small dish or loaf pan with parchment paper. Pour the mixture in and press it down firmly with the back of a spoon until it is flat and tightly packed. Place it in the refrigerator for 30 minutes to harden.
- Cut into Cakes: Once solid, lift the parchment paper out and slice the pemmican into small squares or bars. Wrap them in wax paper for an authentic pioneer trail snack!
The Power of Pectin: Historically, pemmican made with completely dried ingredients and rendered fat could stay fresh at room temperature for years without spoiling. The natural acids in the cranberries acted as an extra preservative, keeping fur traders and Native scouts fueled through the brutal winters.
Literature connections: ๐
๐ชต Traditional Native American Pemmican
The ultimate historic survival superfood, packed with energy for the trail.
Ingredients:
- 1 cup high-quality beef jerky (plain, original flavor—avoid teriyaki or sweet flavors)
- ½ cup dried cranberries (unsweetened or lightly sweetened)
- ¼ cup tallow, lard, or unflavored coconut oil (melted)
- 1 tablespoon raw honey (optional, for a traditional touch of sweetness)
Instructions:
- Pound the Meat: Place the beef jerky into a heavy-duty zip-top bag. Let children use a wooden rolling pin or mallet to smash and pound the jerky until it breaks down into a coarse, shredded powder.
- Add the Berries: Add the dried cranberries to the bag and lightly smash them as well so they break into smaller bits, blending with the meat. Pour the dry mixture into a medium bowl.
- Bind Together: Pour the melted tallow (or coconut oil) and honey over the meat and berry mixture. Stir thoroughly with a wooden spoon until the dry ingredients are entirely coated and look like wet sand.
- Press and Set: Line a small dish or loaf pan with parchment paper. Pour the mixture in and press it down firmly with the back of a spoon until it is flat and tightly packed. Place it in the refrigerator for 30 minutes to harden.
- Cut into Cakes: Once solid, lift the parchment paper out and slice the pemmican into small squares or bars. Wrap them in wax paper for an authentic pioneer trail snack!
The Power of Pectin: Historically, pemmican made with completely dried ingredients and rendered fat could stay fresh at room temperature for years without spoiling. The natural acids in the cranberries acted as an extra preservative, keeping fur traders and Native scouts fueled through the brutal winters.
You know that no Omschool unit is complete without a bibliography of books. Here's a list of books written in or set around 1776. I've included some picture books and novels, plus non-fiction on life in colonial America.
๐
[Anonymous]. (Attributed to Oliver Goldsmith).
The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes; Otherwise Called Mrs. Margery Two-Shoes.
London: Printed for J. Newbery, 1765.
Historical Context
Published a decade before the American Revolution, this landmark text is widely considered the world's first true "children’s novel." John Newbery published it to entertain and gently instruct young minds, a departure from the stern religious tracts common to the era.
Thematic Connection
The story follows Margery Meanwell, an orphan who becomes a beloved schoolteacher. Of note to this unit is Margery's use of a miniature toy grinding mill in her classroom. In the 1760s, the mill served as an educational metaphor showing children that while nature provides raw grain, human industry, patience, and collaboration are required to transform it into life-giving bread.
[Anonymous]. (Attributed to Oliver Goldsmith). The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes; Otherwise Called Mrs. Margery Two-Shoes. London: Printed for J. Newbery, 1765.
Colonial America Literature Selection
Award-winning historical fiction and picture books for living history units.
Forbes, Esther. Johnny Tremain. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1943. Newbery Medal Winner
Set in Boston just before the Revolutionary War, this classic novel follows a proud young silversmith's apprentice who injures his hand, finding a new purpose as a messenger for the Sons of Liberty alongside historical figures like Paul Revere and Samuel Adams.
Speare, Elizabeth George. The Witch of Blackbird Pond. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1958. Newbery Medal Winner
A brilliant look at early colonial culture, this novel centers on Kit Tyler, a spirited girl from the tropical island of Barbados who moves to a strict Puritan settlement in Connecticut in 1687, struggling to fit into their rigid way of life.
Hall, Donald. Illustrated by Barbara Cooney. Ox-Cart Man. New York: Viking Press, 1979. Caldecott Medal Winner
Featuring gorgeous, scratchboard illustrations that mimic early American folk art, this picture book chronicles the quiet, rhythmic cycle of a New England farm family processing their goods—wool, candles, linen—and taking them to market by ox-cart.
Yates, Elizabeth. Amos Fortune, Free Man. New York: Dutton, 1950. Newbery Medal Winner
The deeply moving biographical novel of an African prince who was enslaved in Massachusetts, learned the trade of tanning, purchased his own freedom, and became a respected, philanthropic citizen in New Hampshire during the late 1700s.
Edmonds, Walter D. Illustrated by Paul Lantz. The Matchlock Gun. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1941. Newbery Medal Winner
Set in the Hudson Valley during the French and Indian War, this short, suspenseful novella follows young Edward van Alstyne as he must protect his homestead with an antique, heavy Spanish gun while his father is away fighting.