![]() ![]() Car inspectors and repairers, plus additional detail.Quartz mill men, plus additional detail.Painters and decorators, plus additional detail.Laundry employees, plus additional detail.Granite and stone cutters, plus additional detail.Firemen, stationary, plus additional detail.Engineers, stationary, plus additional detail.Electric railway and light employees, plus additional detail.Bakers and confectioners, plus additional detail.Occupations include carpenter, carpenter's helper, hod carrier, mason, mason's helper, painter, bricklayer, bricklayer's helper, steam and gas fitter, plumber, tinsmith, machine hand, teamster, roofer, plasterer, watchmen, foreman, apprentice and engineer. Reports monthly wages paid to individual, unnamed male and female employees in a variety of jobs at selected establishments in the states of MD, MA, NJ, NY, PA and RI. Building trade wage microdata (not averaged),1890-1891. ![]() Wages for all the typical building trades are represented (carpenter, stone mason, bricklayer, electrical inspectors) as well as other jobs working for city governments. Wages for city employees, by occupation and city - 1890s.and Europe, 1890-1903Ĭompares wages for blacksmiths, boiler makers, bricklayers, carpenters, compositors, hod carriers, iron molders, general laborers, machinists, house painters, plumbers, stone cutters, and stone masons in U.S., Great Britain, Germany, France and Belgium. Building trades - Wages and hours in the U.S.Source: History of Wages in the United States from Colonial times to 1928. Scroll forward in the source to see additional occupations. Lists wages for bricklayers, carpenters, electricians, stationary engineers, stationary firemen, hod carriers, building laborers, marble cutters, stone masons, painters, plasterers, plumbers, stone cutters, granite cutters and tile layers. Building trade wages by year and state, 1840-1900. ![]()
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