They had to work out to get strong.
He was a silversmith's apprentice.
Not today. As long as you have knowledge of the craft, you are a silversmith. A high school or college jewelry class should give you all the knowledge you need. The rest is up to your own creativity.
Paul Revere was a shoe maker,silversmith,soldier,painter,master engraver,apprentice,and a craftsman
Johnny Tremain becomes an apprentice to a silversmith, Mr. Lapham, in the book "Johnny Tremain." He learns the trade and works as a talented silversmith before joining the colonial forces during the American Revolution.
Paul Revere probably didn't have a huge education. Most of the colonial people didn't go past 5 or 6th grade. Since he was a silversmith my guess is he was an apprentice to a silversmith for several years. That is how most people learned their "education".
Johnny Tremaine is a story about a boy that is an apprentice silversmith during the time just before the American Revolution. Johnny is burned and can no longer be a silversmith. He shows a silver cup to the Lyte family that was given to him by his mother. He is accused of theft. He later works as a spy and messenger for the Patriots.
The main character in "Johnny Tremain" is Johnny Tremain, a young apprentice silversmith who becomes involved in the American Revolutionary War. Other key characters include Rab Silsbee, a fellow apprentice and friend of Johnny, Mr. Lapham, Johnny's master silversmith, and Cilla Lapham, Mr. Lapham's granddaughter who becomes a significant person in Johnny's life.
An apprentice could learn: . to be a printer . to be a blacksmith . to be a silversmith . to be a soap maker . to be a doctor . to be a butcher . to be a carpenter . to be a cook there are others but those are the ones i know hope this helps somehow:)
The silversmith is often asked to make silver bullets.He used to be a silversmith before he retired.A silversmith is a respectable profession which requires a lot of skill and patience.
the first silversmith was james geddy jr
Sterling Silversmith was created in 1975.
A person who learns a trade for a skilled member of that trade is often called an "apprentice." In the old days, before college and vocational schools, young men (and a few young women) would apprentice themselves to a skilled tradesman to learn to be a blacksmith, a silversmith, a glassblower, a carpenter, or other occupations. Today, there are still professions which require a combination of school and apprenticeship.