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A piggin?! What's that? In the colonial era, some buckets were made with one stave left extra long; this stave would be carved into a handle so the bucket could be used as an oversized scoop. ... It was useful on the farm for scattering grain for the chickens, slopping the hogs, used as a one-handed milk bucket,
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www.beaverbuckets.com/Catalog_Piggin.htm
www.beaverbuckets.com/Catalog_Piggin.htm
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Piggin $9; Compare & Save on Miscellaneous Piggin from $9 ... Thesaurus.com Free Toolbar; Look Up Piggin Instantly. Faster Page Loads With Fewer Ads. ... Search another word or see piggin on Dictionary...
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thesaurus.reference.com/browse/piggin
thesaurus.reference.com/browse/piggin
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A piggin is a small wooden pail or tub with a long stave for a handle. It was often used as a dipper. Piggins were brought to colonial America by settlers from the British Isles. As descendants of these early pioneers moved westward, so moved the tools of everyday life, such as a piggin.
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www.springdalear.gov/shiloh/collections/piggin.htm
www.springdalear.gov/shiloh/collections/piggin.htm
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Diggin' In and Piggin' Out: The Truth About Food and Men; by Roger L. Welsch; Description:; Roger Welsch says, "Men are meant to cook. Food and men go hand in hand. The secret is, however they may feel about cooking, men like to eat.";
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www.foodreference.com/html/diggin-in.html
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Stuart Piggin, “The History of Revival in Australia,” in Re-Visioning Australian Colonial. Christianity, ed. Hutchinson and Campion, 187. ...
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doi.wiley.com/10.1111/j.1467-9809.2008.00717.x
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In Great Grandma's day a piggin was found in every home -- 1 or 2 quart dry measure with a handle used to measure shellfish, grains, flour or sugar and to collect table scraps for the pigs! These are today's fine wood replicas for fruit, rolls, nuts, or simply to be used for outstanding displays of early Americana.
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www.virginiabornandbred.com/prodinfo.asp?number=X5351C
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An analysis of placenames which contain the word Piggin ... The book Colonial Revival Maine by Kevin D Murphy states at page 149 that it must have lost its "piggin" appearance in the 1712-1732 period when it was extended. The house was later much modified.
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www.piggin.org/locations.htm
www.piggin.org/locations.htm
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# referred to in Colonial Families of the United States of America, Volume 2, page 714: one Joseph Trumann settled in New London in 1666 and purchased some pits for tanning from Alexander PIGGIN in 1667. An additional reference to this is in the Hamilton HURD History of New London County, Connecticut.
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www.piggin.org/miscell71.htm
www.piggin.org/miscell71.htm
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with more particular discourses of migration, colonial- ism, and notions of center and periphery. ... Piggin supports his thesis with a brief examination of ...
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www.jstor.org/stable/2650925
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