Fifty-five fascinating
and informative articles on early tools and trades, selected from
several thousand published in the journal of the Early American Industries
Association over the past 60 years.
Some written by
experts, others the first hand accounts of early craftsmen, pioneers,
and travelers, they cover a wide variety of subjects including:
Lumber
rafting down the Delaware in 1896
America's largest tool store -- Hammacher Schlemmer in 1900
How tinsmiths used their tools
The bygone cobbler and clogmaker
Cutting, hewing and squaring a beam
Blacksmiths' hammer signals
Traditional soapmaking on the frontier
Making horsehair sieves
The many uses of horn
Education of apprentices in New England
Household irons, spinning wheels and the hay burner
Nail making in early Virginia
Making
barrels by hand
Harvesting ice-from nature to the consumer
Old time fences, gathering sawdust, and the charcoal burner
Building a New England home in 1831
Another tool classification: early burglar tools
The wooden leg of Gouverneur Morris...and many more.