Prices for cigars by the dozen, and tobacco and snuff by the pound or (sometimes) ounce. Tobacco prices date to 1760s. Price of paper from a Virginia paper mill, 1809. This advertisement in the October 13, 1809 issue of The Enquirer of Richmond, Va. lists prices (in dollars per single ream) for various types of paper.
Jun 14, 2012 · He arrived in United States in about 1903 and he could get jobs at will that paid a $1.50 a day which he indicates was a substantial pay increase from Holland where he immigrated from. He also indicates that a 1.50 a day was considered a lousy wage once you got used to the richer life style America provided. Jim Ulvogsays:
Feb 01, 1995 · Those with few skills were paid as little as $1 a day and had to struggle to pay the $20 to $25 monthly rent common at the time. But the variety of jobs in the county made it possible for workers...
Charles Darwin, Esquire, theorized in the mid-1800s that tribes of lawyers existed as early as 2.5 million years ago. However, in his travels, he found little evidence to support this theory. Legal anthropology suffered a setback at the turn of the century in the famous Piltdown Lawyer scandal. In order to prove the existence of the missing ...
Average wages per year $1,780.00. Cost of a gallon of gas 10 cents. Average cost for house rent $26.00 per month.Dec 2, 2021
The Average Annual Wages of Employees in Industry, Trade, and Transportation*1. Nominal average annual wages3. Real average annual wages18756515781880545524188558158918906506367 more rows
It took $600 per year to make ends meet and most industrial workers made approximately $500. Women and children therefore had to go to work.
Laborers made about 10 cents an hour ($6 a week, or $300 per year) Privates in the Union army earned $11 a week, or $572 per year. Firemen earned 15 cents an hour ($9.00 a week, or $468 per year) Carpenters earned 14 cents an hour ($8.40 a week, or $436 per year)Oct 12, 2016
How much did cowboys get paid in the 1800s? Cowboys were mostly young men who needed cash. The average cowboy in the West made about $25 to $40 a month. In addition to herding cattle, they also helped care for horses, repaired fences and buildings, worked cattle drives and in some cases helped establish frontier towns.Dec 15, 2021
Salaries varied quite a bit. A deputy U.S. marshal might make around $50 a month during the 1880s. I contacted historian Larry Ball on U.S. Marshals and he responds: “Regarding the salary of marshals, each marshal received a base annual salary of $200 through much of the nineteenth century.Feb 6, 2019
Laborers' Average Hourly Rate of Wages, Weighted for United States (A08139USA052NNBR) Download1891:0.13791890:0.13701889:0.13831888:0.13821887:0.13301 more row•Aug 17, 2012
Early 1800's Shoes: Shoes, both mens and womens, were sent to the mountains in small quantities starting at least by 1809. Surviving records show that the St. Louis Missouri Fur Company sent 44 pair of womens shoes at $2.50 each and six pair of mens shoes at $2.00 in 1809.
If you worked in manufacturing (as many did during this period of mechanization), you could have expected to make approximately $1.34 a day in 1880, which adds up to $345 annually for an average 257 days of work in a given year.Aug 23, 2019
A $10,000 house in 1890 would be worth almost the same in real dollars in 2010 but more than $350,000 in nominal dollars in 2010.Mar 23, 2011
How much was an acre of land in 1860? The latest census showed that the United States had 31 million people, 77 of whom were killed that year in the country's first factory disaster. Land was selling for $3 to $5 an acre, and a laborer's wage without board was 90 cents a day.Jan 3, 2022
Minimum Wage in the United States Minimum wage was set at 25 cents an hour, which works out to about $4 per hour in today's money.
30-page booklet reviews overall wage trends from 1800-1899. Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Staff Paper #2.
Source: the Sixteenth annual report of the Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor, for 1885.
Lists prices of wheat, bread, wine, beef, pork, butter and rice. Source: Bulletin of the U.S. Bureau of Labor, Vol. 20 #87, pp. 599-607.
Good discussion. Update 1-31-15: Found another interesting resource: History of Wages in the United States from Colonial Times to 1928. Written in 1929, updated in 1934, and republished in 1966. It has been preserved by the Google Booksproject.
1893 he shoveled coal for $30/month, working horrendous hours, seven days a week, I believe.
The chart shows a carpenter in 1890 at a little over 32 cents per hour and $19.32 per week. Laborers are shown at just over 15 cents per hour and $9.06 per week, so laborers are shown to make more than 3 times the wage of a soldier.
However, the federal minimum wage for non-agricultural workers in 1970 was $1.45, which works out to about $240/month at 40 hours/week, or almost twice the minimum soldier salary. Of course the draftees had additional benefits, free food, occasional 24 hour work days, and funeral benefits.
Charles Darwin, Esquire, theorized in the mid-1800s that tribes of lawyers existed as early as 2.5 million years ago. However, in his travels, he found little evidence to support this theory. Legal anthropology suffered a setback at the turn of the century in the famous Piltdown Lawyer scandal.
Norman lawyers discovered a loophole in Welsh law that allowed William the Conqueror to foreclose an old French loan and take most of England, Scotland, and Wales. William rewarded the lawyers for their work, and soon lawyers were again accepted in society.
The attempted sale of the Sphinx resulted in the Pharaoh issuing a country-wide purge of all lawyers. Many were slaughtered, and the rest wandered in the desert for years looking for a place to practice. Greece and Rome saw the revival of the lawyer in society.
Previously, lawyers had relied on oral bills for collection of payment, which made collection difficult and meant that if a client died before payment (with life expectancy between 25 and 30 and the death penalty for all cases, most clients died shortly after their case was resolved), the bill would remain uncollected.
In many sites dating from 250,000 to 1,000,000 years ago, legal tools have been uncovered. Unfortunately, the tools are often in fragments, making it difficult to gain much knowledge. The first complete site discovered has been dated to 150,000 years ago.
The first hard scientific proof of the existence of lawyers was discovered by Dr. Margaret Leakey at the Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania. Her find consisted of several legal fragments, but no full case was found intact at the site.
Despite the mathematical soundness of double billing, some lawyers went to extremes. Julius Caesar, a Roman lawyer and politician, was murdered by several clients for his record hours billed in late February and early March of 44 B.C. (His murder was the subject of a play by lawyer William Shakespeare.
November 10, 1803. Image courtesy of Library of Congress John Randolph served as chairman of the Ways and Means Committee from 1801 to 1807. On this date, President Thomas Jefferson approved and signed an act to pay France $11 million dollars for the Louisiana Purchase.
The House discussed and approved the payment with a 90 to 25 vote on October 25, 1803. During the deliberations, some Members questioned the constitutionality of increasing the size of the nation and Congress’s role in that process. President Jefferson conducted most of the negotiating with Napoleonic France without congressional input.
The Louisiana Purchase added 828,000 square miles to the United States, stretching northwest from New Orleans to present-day Montana. Daniel Clark of the Orleans Territory became the first delegate from the acquired land in the 9th Congress (1805–1807).
The average wage earner only made $16.00 a week. Some trades only made two, three, four, or six dollars a week. The men driving the horse drawn streetcars in New York in the 1880's made $1.75 a day working 14 to 16 hr. a day.
Though coffee has been known to mankind since the Middle Ages, it was a luxury in frontier America. Sometimes the pioneer mother made hot, coffee like drinks of dried wheat, barley, or certain roots roasted and ground. In the South, sweet potatoes were sliced thin, browned in the oven, broken into bits and ground in a coffee mill.
In 1874 the highest paid player in major league baseball was Ross Barnes, who earned the princely sum of $2000 . Today, the minimum salary for a MLB player is more than 200 times that level, and this season Alex Rodriguez earned ...
Not to feel sorry for Ross Barnes though. In 1874 he was earning 2.3 times what the average American earned. And he earned it over just a few months working time, whereas the average American worked 60 hours a week for the entire year to bring in his $864.
The financial ledgers of the New York Yankees (Hall of Fame Library) and Philadelphia Phillies (Hagley Library) have provided researchers with salary data as well as information on every aspect of the finances of these two professional baseball teams for a limited time period.
In 2009 and 2010, when Rodriguez was earning the highest salary in MLB history ($33 million each year) he was earning barely 38% more than the second highest paid player (Manny Ramirez in 2009 and fellow Yankee C.C. Sabathia in 2010).
Today, the minimum salary for a MLB player is more than 200 times that level, and this season Alex Rodriguez earned more than $56,000 per plate appearance. If he saw 28 pitches during each trip to the plate, he would have earned as much per pitch as Barnes earned in an entire season.
He was the highest paid player in the game for 13 consecutive years, beginning with his $52,000 salary in 1922 and ending with $35,000 in 1934. Of course in between his salary ballooned to $70,000 and then $80,000.
The MLBPA salary figures are available from a wide variety of sources on the internet. Salary data since 1985 are certainly not scarce. It is salary data before this date that are hard to come by. Over the years numerous sources have reported player salaries, but in small quantities, and with little reliability.