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Samuel Snow, Tanner and Cordwainer

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 July 2012

Josepha M. Perry
Affiliation:
Harvard University.

Extract

The village shoemaker has become merely a tradition. His little shop, if it remains standing, has been put to other uses, and his cobbler's bench, or a reasonable facsimile thereof, has found its way into present-day living-rooms in the guise of a coffee table or smoking stand. Of the product of his skill, little remains because, unlike the cabinet maker and metal worker, he worked in goods that served their purpose and were gone, but he was as true a craftsman as they, and perhaps a more important figure in the life of a town. From, him young and old obtained their footwear, and to him they brought it back to be mended. Farm horses and saddle horses wore the harnesses he made; ploughs and carriages alike depended on the strength and stitching of his traces. And, in return, he got from his fellow townsmen sometimes cash but more frequently the necessities of his family's existence. In his ledger, debits and credits reflected the whole business of give-and-take in the life of the community.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 1945

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References

1 The United Shoe Machinery Company has at its Boston offices a large collection of shoes from many times and places, including groups of various styles from various periods in the United States. The premium on floor space during the war has removed the greater part of them from public view at present.