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by running inn's where the miners could stay and eat and other stuff like that almost like todays inn's.
In mining communities, women often made money through various means. Some worked as domestic servants or cooks for the miners, while others ran boarding houses or opened small businesses such as laundries or grocery stores. Some women also found employment in the mining industry itself, working as clerks, nurses, or seamstresses.
They sold supplies that were needed by the miners. Supplies like food, shelter, buckets, and other mning tools
Mining towns were different than Mormon towns mostly because mining towns were focused on getting rich and mining, and Mormon towns were focused on religion rather than money. Mining towns were more 'rough and tumble' or 'wild west' than Mormon towns, which were more peaceful and civilized and had a lot more women and children. However, in the west, some Mormon towns were also mining towns. Nevertheless, most Mormon towns were farming, ranching, or industrial communities.
look for gold
mining*
Most hardworking women generally made good money by cooking meals, washing clothes, and operating boardhouses.
Women dalits
Don't make more productions of Mining Miners stop your employment for being miners Buisness women and men don't being a technicial for mining
This would be nuns in a nunnery.
One way that women contributed to New England communities was by preparing food for their families. Another way the women contributed to New England communities was by using churns to turn cream into butter, drying and preserving fruits, pickled cabbages, and other vegetables from the garden.
They generally used cotton rags, also called "clouts", which had to be washed. Women in some rural communities (including Native Americans) used moss.