Palines Consoles Cévennes Consoles Vercors Consoles Chartreuse Console Ecrins Console Vanoise Auvents 1 pente Auvents 2 pentes Bandeaux usinés Palines Garde corps en kit Palines : 21 x 145 Longueurs : 890 ou 1175 mm Quantités : 5.40 palines au ml avec un espace de 40 mm Essences : Sapin du Nord ou Mélèze Palines
Wedding Coloring pages and activities are a fun way to celebrate the coming of your wedding day. Print them for parties, showers and all wedding occasions. Kids love to color wedding pictures too, so print them for the kids around you. We have a nice...
Mariuxi Luna creció entre letras. Toda su vida ha estado rodeada por ellas. Las ha visto de todos los tamaños y colores. Algunas son luminosas, otras no. Es lo que tiene crecer en una familia que se dedica al negocio de los letreros en Guayaquíl (Ecuador). Un día escarbando entre los restos de carac
A fabulous collection of 1920's Canadian Coca-Cola, Chiclets and Ivory Soap print advertising items for your enjoyment. with more to come. Courtesy of EC reader Margaret L. Thanks for sharing! Click on the photos. You may also enjoy an Eaton's Christmas 1920/1921 http://everythingcroton.blogspot.com/2015/08/an-eatons-christmas-1920-21.html
“En este lugar de casitas de piedra para refugio del frío hay una cascada muy famosa de atracción turística, sin embargo yo me quedo un rato por estas callecitas de cuento… ¡En la primera casita hay un aroma a chocolate! FOROGLIO-Ticino-Suiza🇨🇭”
I have said it before, and I’ll say it again. The things authors—particularly historical fiction authors—must research for accuracy in their stories is a mixed bag and always proves interesting. I can’t tell you how many times I find myself questioning what a particular item might have cost in the Old West. I thought you might find it interesting to see the costs of various things in the latter half of the 1800s. Grocery Items I don’t know about the rest of you, but I can walk into our local grocery store and pick up “a few” items—and drop over $100 without batting an eye. Prices on everything seem to skyrocket. What about 150 years ago? Old General Store, St. Augustine, Florida, where canned goods and other items line the walls behind the counter. Here’s just a sampling of common grocery items from a sampling of years. (These prices are pulled from various sources. Costs could have been drastically different in different areas of the country): Years Article 1860 1864 1872 1878 1882 Barrel of Flour 5.25 8.00 -- 4.00 -- Pound of Corn Meal .02 -- .01 .02 .04 Barrel of Salt Pork 16.12 19.75 -- 9.25 -- Quart of Beans .08 -- .09 .08 .13 Gallon of Molasses .33 .50 -- .25 -- Pound of Rice .035 .085 -- .06 -- Pound of Starch .11 -- .12 .10 .09 Pound of Sugar .06 .13 -- .075 -- Pound of Roasted Coffee .23 -- .42 .26 .29 Pound of Oolong Tea .54 -- .69 .60 .58 Pound of Lard .10 .12 -- .07 -- I find it notable that during the years of the Civil War (1861-1865) and in the 5-7 years afterward, prices on many typical grocery items were higher than before the war, and they dropped down again a decade or more afterward. Clothing We are so spoiled today. We are used to walking into any store—from Walmart to Nordstrom, and anything in between—to purchase ready-made clothing in vast arrays of styles, colors, and price ranges. It hasn’t always been so. In the late half of the 1800s, people still made their clothing, something that is far more of a rarity today than it once was. The "dry goods" display in the Old General Store, St. Augustine, FL A yard of brown shirting material would’ve run .08-.09 cents between 1860-1882. A yard of ticking would have cost .17-.18 cents. A yard of satinet (a polished cotton fabric with a similar look to satin) would have cost .54-.59 cents in that 22 year span. And if you didn’t have the sewing skills to cut out a pattern and stitch it together, then you’d pay a tailor or seamstress for their services. Livestock, Saddles, and Other Gear So much of the Old West culture revolved around ranches, livestock, and horses. So what did these animals and the equipment needed to use them run? A calf might run $2.50/head. A yearling would go for $12.50. A 2-year-old steer would go for $22.50. A bull would run $90. A yoke of 2 oxen, good for pulling wagons and the like, would run roughly $150. An average workhorse to be used around the farm or ranch would also go for $150. A fine saddle horse would cost more—about $200. Harnesses for the oxen or workhorse would go for $50 or so. A saddle, depending on the type, would cost between $30-$60. If you were looking at a wagon, expect to pay $70 or more. Guns and Other Weapons Historic ad for Colt Peacemaker In the 1800s, if you expected to eat, you typically had to have a gun. Life wasn’t like it is today, with a grocery store on every corner where you can pick up neatly-packaged, pre-cut meat, ready to throw on the grill or into the oven. No…in that day, you hunted for your food. And while perhaps not as prevalent as western TV programs, movies, and novels would have you believe, gunplay with pistols was also an element of western life. So what did those tools of the time cost? A used single-shot, muzzle-loading rifle would cost $8. The fancy seven-shot Sharps Repeating Rifle cost $50. A breach-loading shotgun would go for $60. And the gun that won the west—the Colt .45 “Peacemaker” ran $17 if ordered by mail-order. If you preferred the upgraded pearl-handled set, which came with holsters, those Peacemakers were $100. And cartridges for the guns cost $.50/box. Salaries of that Day Of course, none of these prices means a whole lot until you compare it with what typical folks made back then. So what did people earn in common western jobs? During the California Gold Rush, carpenters were making $16/day in San Francisco (1849). By the 1860s, this had dropped to $4/day. Wild Bill Hickok earned $150 a month as the marshal of Abilene, KS. Other Kansas lawmen earned $100, and deputies often made $60-75/month. Typical ranch hands earned $30/month, plus room and board. If you were a top ranch hand, you might earn $40. A ranch foreman could command $50/month. And the trail boss of a cattle drive sometimes made as much as $100. The average school teacher would earn $30/month. Pony Express Riders, for the very short time of that service, earned $25 a week for their efforts and the dangers they faced. Pony Express ad, showing the pay of $25/week. A private or corporal in the Army (in 1865) could expect $13/month. A sergeant’s page jumped to $17. A 1stor 2ndlieutenant made roughly $105, with captains earning $115. If one was fortunate enough to make it all the way to the rank of General in 1865, they could’ve expected almost $760 in pay. Oh, and just to keep it real—a soiled dove could expect $1 to $2 per roll in the sheets. I hope you enjoyed this little look into what things cost in bygone days. If you did, I’d love to hear your thoughts. Just please be patient with my response time. My hubby and I are in a training class all week, so I won’t be able to respond until evening, if then.
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