Hello. I have been doing some newspaper reading from 1798 to 1819 in Saratoga Co., particularly Ballston Spa. In preparing a "business directory" for those shops mentioned in the ads and articles, I do not get the idea that "shoemakers" made anything but shoes for humans. There were two "blacksmiths" in Ballston, whose businesses began to be advertised in 1809: Elias CROES and Norman WEBSTER. There was a Patent Shearing Machine salesman named James Wiltse (1809), but no mention of a horse-shoe maker. My untutored impression of the blacksmith is that horse-shoe making would have been a staple of his trade, only the occasional wheel or carriage needing repair. The reference to the decline of the local (human) shoe maker in the 1860s may have been a local phenomenon, as the mail-order catalogue purveying of items would not have taken off for some decades later, R.W. Sears not having started his company until 1886. As for the vet/farrier, no one advertised as either in those years. Perhaps I'm researching in too early a period for the veterinarian, but "farrier" is a very old term. Check your source you mention at the beginning of your query. --- Harold Miller <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > I am researching the history of blacksmithing in the > Town of Berne, a rural > town in western Albany County. I have been told that > in the 19th-Century > blacksmithing was seldom combined with farrier work > (horse shoeing). Farmers > who came into town to buy supplies or bring wheat to > the mill, would stay at > a hotel overnight, board their wagons and horses, > and have them shod at a > Farrier located next to the hotel. Another thing is > that farriers were often > the local veterinarian. > > > The 1865 State Census for Berne lists: > > 15 Blacksmiths > 9 Shoe Makers / Shoemakers > 4 Wagon Makers > 3 Harness Makers > 7 Hotel Keepers > > There are no Farriers listed on the census and no > Cobblers. The census and > maps confirm that in the hamlets that had hotels, > there was generally > blacksmith shops and Shoe Makers located very > nearby. The question is: Are > the Shoe Makers more likely to have been Farriers or > Cobblers? *** > I'm inclined to think that the Shoe Makers in Berne > in 1865 were Farriers, > but before I go with that, I would appreciate the > input from someone more > knowledgeable. > > Thanks! > > Harold Miller > Berne Historical Project www.bernehistory.org > "Berne Heritage Days 2003 to be held July 18, 19, > and 20." ===== "... Until we all attain to the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to a mature man, to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ." Ephesians 4:13 __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? The New Yahoo! Search - Faster. Easier. Bingo. http://search.yahoo.com