Yep – you read that right! A Harnessmaker! Wanted to list the occupations of folks in my family history file so I spent a little time yesterday evening going through the list. I haven’t input some occupations yet so this is really an incomplete listing. Most of the occupations I’ve found either through censuses or obituaries or my own personal knowledge. Most of the women in the censuses were usually “house keepers” or “house wives” or “homemakers” and that would be a ton of them. I didn’t count those. So here are some interesting facts:
The Top Occupations included: Farmer (38), Minister (11), and Teacher (8). The ministers included 1 Nun, 1 elder in a church, and ministers who were evangelical, circuit riders, Officers in the Salvation Army, “First Church” (don’t know if that was Baptist or what), and Methodist. The teachers included a principal and a college president. Other occupations included:
Accountant/Auditor
Attorney 3
Business owner (store, distillery-2, printing, grocer -2, company, billiard parlor, metal fab, )
Military 3
(Indentured-1) servant – 3
Shoemaker 5
Railroad 2
Miner 7
Harness maker/miller-3/
Stone mason
Fireman
Painter 3
Baseball player
Stock buyer
Carpenter -5/farmer
Clerk (store) (office girl)
Teamster-2/blacksmith
Postal worker (post mistress, postmaster)
Doctor
Butcher
Farm hand 3
Steel worker
Seamstress 3
Engineer 3
Salesman (wholesale groceries -2, candy company, herff jones-2, clothing company, paint)
Teaming
Furnaceman (pottery)
Nurse 2
Ran a boarding house
Inventor
Machinist (press operator) 4
Laborer 5
Barber 2
Auto mechanic
Telephone operator 2
Delivery man
Logger 2
Stenographer
Hostess restaurant
Optician
Textile mill worker -2
Institutional cook
Civil service -2
Real estate broker/sales
Truck driver
Automotive
Plumber
Author
Medical receptionist
Patrolman
Singer
Photographer
Graphic artist
Dentist
Justice of the Peace
Casket maker
Office girl
Bank employee
Investment companies
Some people had two or three different occupations in their lifetime. I’m not talking about doing the same type work at several different locatons. My grandfather was a coal miner, a machine press operator for a novelty company, and a house painter. My other grandfather started off as a “chauffeur” – not a limo driver – before going into the military for most of his life. He also was a volunteer Fire Chief and employed with the Civil Service after his retirement from the military. I think that researching the occupations is interesting. Go find out what “chauffeur” was back in 1920 or what a Teamster was (not the same kind that Jimmy Hoffa was!). Some are pretty self-explanatory. What did you come up with?
(Image courtesy Pixelbay – Creative Commons)
[…] 27, 2008 by wendylittrell As referenced in the post “A Butcher, A Baker, a . . . Harness Maker?” my family consists of several ministers. My great-uncle, Rollo Werts Amore, was commissioned in […]
I have lots of different occupations in my tree as well – my great-great-grandfather, Thomas Taylor, was a machine rule operator and later a vellum binder, at least according to a) the census and b) his daughter (my great-grandmother), who declared the second occupation on her marriage certificate (he was dead by then)…I have lots of ag labs, weavers, metal workers, etc…
It’s very interesting to discover what our ancestors’ occupations were! Thanks for commenting!