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Here is one I've been wondering about for some time. What is the difference between a "barman" and a "potman"? I know they both work in a bar but other than that I have no idea.
I admit that I don't know what a saggy bottom knocker is, and I won't Google it, but I think Coral has the other question right. A barman served the drinks and a potman collected, and maybe washed, the glasses and did other general jobs in the pub.
Thanks for the answer Coral, that makes sense. I have a few more for you guys if you're willing. I've always wanted to ask this very question so I'm glad someone else started this thread.
What is a "crest chaser", a "compositor", a "wood turner", and a "shape maker"? My guess on the latter is that it is either a person who makes the "last" for boots or shoes, or some kind of mold for something.
And lastly, what is the difference between a "hawker" and a "traveler"? Are they both basically selling various things? Would a "traveler" be equivalent to a traveling salesman?
A compositor was a member of the printing trade and was the one who actually set the hand type into a form. As with all in the printing trade back then, they were among the most literate in society.
A wood-turner is just that, one who operated a wood-turning lathe, creating all sorts of fancy, intricate cylindrical wooden objects with a variety of gouges, skews and and other cutting tools.
Not sure about a "shape maker" unless that was the same as a "pattern maker" in American industries. Again, a highly skilled occupation as pattern makers would create the model for which the products of all the other workers would have to conform.
Unless a "crest chaser" pursued proprietary toothpaste products i have no idea. However, I do believe that in the UK now "traveller" is a PC term for a Rom or Gypsie.
Don.
"To expose [the Senator] is rather like performing acts of charity among the deserving poor; it needs to be done and it makes one feel good, but it does nothing to end the problem."
In the days of the mass pottery industry, a sagger (or saggar) was the shelf in the base of a kiln, like an upturned bowl, which held the pots to be fired. The saggar was an extremely difficult piece of kit to make, but its base or bottom didn't need much skill, and the sagger-maker employed a labourer to mould the bottoms by literally knocking clay into a mould. There you go!
Not as skilled as a wringer-out for a one-armed window-cleaner, though...
Graham
We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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