The Panorama Of Professions And Trades (1837)
Oct 10th, 2009 by Doug Berch
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Musician and Appalachian Mountain Dulcimer Maker
Oct 10th, 2009 by Doug Berch
You are currently browsing comments. If you would like to return to the full story, you can read the full entry here: “The Panorama Of Professions And Trades (1837)”.
Hi Doug,
I hate to hear about the surgery. I hope you have a speedy recovery…and stay off of that unicycle!
Randy
Hi Randy,
Thanks for the kind words. Surgery was a breeze as far as such things go. Looking forward to getting back into the shop in a few days. And I’ll stay off the unicycle!
Glad you’re healed up enough to work in the shop again (by the time I’ve looked at the book linked above).
Pretty fascinating to review topics I know something about. On page 44, where it talks about spinning (“This operation is, in most cases, performed by females . . .”), it describes spinning on a great wheel (which it says is used for wool–not always true) and a flyer wheel (described as used for flax–also not always true). Yes, the wheels are often *called* “wool” and “flax” wheels, but. . . . It also describes the early-industrial jennies, frames, and mules. Anyway, parts of the original hand technology may have already been fading from common knowledge by the time this book was written, in *1837*–or, in attempting to cover such a broad territory of trades, the author understandably did not research each in depth.
Anyway, intriguing to look up a familiar topic and see how he presents it!
And to think about which skills we still, in the twenty-first century, would do well to maintain.