In colonial America, a blacksmith was someone who froged iron into kettles, hinges, weather vanes, nails, axes, hoes, and many other products. The difference between a blacksmith and a silversmith, is that for one, a blacksmith uses iron, and a silversmith uses silver. Also, a blacksmith heats the metal before he shapes it, while a silversmith uses a variety of hammers to pound the room-temperature silver into tools.
Yes, a surveyor is a colonial job[=
Yes. It requires a great deal of skill and upper body strength.
Back then you could not just go down to the store and buy what ever you needed when something broke. You had to fix it and that's one reason why they had a blacksmith. The blacksmiths job was to basically make or fix anything out of iron, but that's not all the blacksmith did. Since the blacksmith worked with metal he made and put horse shoes on horses. Since the blacksmith was working with the horse to put the shoes on they got to know some of the diseases that some horses have. so because of that the were also used as a vet.
The Secretary of Energy develop, regulate, and produce energy and get rid of nuclear waste. :)
The duties of a chandler were making candles. They were peasants.. by yo yo $#@!
how did colonial blacksmith "James Anderson get his job?"
Colonial Blacksmiths are known to be the most important job in history & if you had a toothache (if your dad was a colonial blacksmith) he would get his tongs and pull out the tooth that is hurting.
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they made iron tools and utensils. everything was made of metal. a blacksmith was a very hard and tiring job and usally done by men.
He never was a blacksmith
No it can be either a woman or a man. In colonial times many thought that it was a mans job and women stayed inside their house cooking cleaning and sewing.
just switch your job to blacksmith, it's that easy
Yes.
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Yes, a surveyor is a colonial job[=
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