Stone cutters, Brick makers, Carpenters, Blacksmiths, Drovers, Farmers,
most of the women worked in the house ..... doing all of the things women should do...... like clean, educate the kids, and cook.
Delaware was a middle colony and had rich soil so they had "cash" crops. They grew corn, wheat, beef, pork. They had large farms and had manufacturing jobs in glass, textiles and paper. Shipyards provided jobs and ships. In 1770 they could produce 400 ships a year.
to provide jobs for people to improve public lands - apex
ranch hands were the most frequent jobs back in the early 1900s
there is farming and chores
Most people in France in the 1600s worked as farmers. Some people worked as fishmongers, tailors, blacksmiths, shoemakers, and inn keepers.
Well, honey, in the 1600s in Rhode Island, folks were busy with jobs like farming, fishing, shipbuilding, trading, and some were even dabbling in piracy. It was a real mixed bag of occupations back then, but one thing's for sure, they were working hard to make a living in those colonial days.
to work in the Field
Fur Trappers, Lumer shipping, and Slave trading were popular jobs back in the 1600-1700s. - Baylee S.
farming and lumbering
Fur Trappers, Lumer shipping, and Slave trading were popular jobs back in the 1600-1700s. - Baylee S.
No, There is not.
McDonalds, Kay Jewelers, and Strickland Propane were all common jobs.
awsome
The most popular jobs were milliners, (people who grind wheat into flour at a mill), fisherman, trading, agriculture, ( very little farming, except wheat grew a lot in Delaware). Delaware was located in the middle colonies and they were known as "Bread Baskets" because of their abundant recourse of wheat.
they were ok but not ggoo