37 odd jobs that no longer exist
You won't find any of these gigs on today's resumes

Milkman
Milkman
Every morning in the 1950s, like clockwork, the milkman would deliver bottles and jugs filled to the brim with milk. If you were lucky, sometimes he would even deliver other kitchen essentials like eggs and butter. With the rise of home refrigeration the milk stayed, but the profession expired. Maybe if they delivered cookies too, milkmen would've had a better chance?
PHOTO: Getty

Elevator Operator
Elevator Operator
Elevators didn't always move with the simple push of a button. Back in the day, elevator operators were in charge of controlling everything from the doors and direction to the speed and capacity of the elevator car — a lot of layers, or should we say levels, to the position. In the 50s, automatic elevators became more common and individuals had to push their own button.
PHOTO: Getty

Hacker
Hacker
Not computer hackers, but tree hackers. Hackers were known as woodcutters and were axed, yet again, due to technological advancements.
PHOTO: Getty

Linotype Operator
Linotype Operator
Life without a backspace?! Hard to imagine, but former linotype operators definitely can. These highly skilled workers used the linotype, a hot metal typesetting system, to produce the daily newspaper in the late 1880s. was created in the early 1960s and rapidly replaced all operator positions.
PHOTO: Getty

Gandy Dancer
Gandy Dancer
A Gandy Dancer actually has nothing to do with real dancing. The title is slang for a railroad worker who maintained the tracks years before the work was done by machines.
PHOTO: Getty

Computer
Computer
If you've seen "," then you know what a computer is — and no, it's not the technology that you're on right now. Dating back to the early 17th century, computers, usually women, would calculate figures and crunch numbers all day long by hand. Yup, that's right, no calculators allowed.
PHOTO: Getty

Billy Boy
Billy Boy
Pinky's up! In the 50s and 60s, Billy boys were young apprentices in training that would make tea for the other men at work. Seems strikingly similar to an intern grabbing a load of Starbucks, right? Some things never change.
PHOTO: Herald Sun Image Library/Argus

Bowling Alley Pinsette
Bowling Alley Pinsette
If you loved to play games and needed some extra change, a pinsetter position at a bowling alley was right up your alley. The workers usually manually organized the pins for every game. The job was sent to the gutter once the mechanical pinsetter was .
PHOTO: Getty

Switchboard Operator
Switchboard Operator
Switchboard operators connected long-distance calls and directed communication before digital exchange switched up the game. By the early 80s the position became obsolete.
PHOTO: Getty

Typist
Typists
Typists are still in-demand today, just without the typewriter. In the 1940s, typists were popular positions within the publishing, administrative and clerical industries. The role today has simply been upgraded with computers.
PHOTO: Getty

Catchpole
Catchpole
Deriving from the old english word "cace-" and the medieval Latin word "pullus" (a chick), the job title catchpole, aka a debt collector, was born. There are still debt and tax collectors today, but none that go by this bizarre British title.
PHOTO: Getty

Clockwinder
Clockwinder
A clockwinder did exactly what the name insinuates — wind clocks. It was only a matter of time before electric clockwinders, which required less maintenance and fewer repairs, were produced during the Industrial Revolution.

Icemen
Icemen
In the early 1800s, ice cutting was the common task of hand-sawing individual ice blocks from lakes and rivers to help store cold food throughout the winter. Then refrigerators were invented and the heavy-lifting job chilled out.
PHOTO: Columbia Valley Pioneer

Eggler
Eggler
We're not going to lie, there's nothing too "eggsquisite" about this job. The egg carton was invented in 1911, and Egglers began to sell bulk batches of eggs and sometimes switched it up with other poultry. At the end of the day, they couldn't wing it with just eggs and poultry and added other food to the mix. Today, you can find these folks at farmers' markets.
PHOTO: Getty

Fuller
Fuller
A fuller is a job that every parent can relate to — washing clothes. In the medieval era, fullers cleaned cloth to rid the textiles of oil and dirt. Afterward, the material was bound together to create clothing and other items.
PHOTO: Getty

Hobbler
Hobbler
We assume a hobbler got its nickname in the mid-1800s from hobbling around and balancing on boat decks, but the real job was to tow river and canal boats. Similar deckhand positions still exist today, but they don't go by hobblers.
PHOTO: Getty

Hush Shopkeeper
Hush Shopkeeper
Sneaky hush shopkeepers got their name from keeping their liquor sales on the hush-hush during prohibition. Now, you can find a cocktail after a stressful day of work just about anywhere. Cheers!
PHOTO: Getty

Knockerupper
Knockerupper
Before the first mechanical alarm clock was invented in 1847, people hired knockeruppers to help shoot peas at their windows or tap the glass with long poles so they didn't oversleep for work or during an afternoon snooze. Then the alarm was born, which we all now have a love-hate relationship with.
PHOTO: Getty

Lamplighter
Lamplighter
A lamplighter in the late 1800s and early 1900s was precisely that — someone who is employed to light street lamps. Only a small number still exist today as the majority of street lighting is now electric.
PHOTO: Getty

Lector
Lector
We all can relate to needing a little distraction at work. Well, lectors were the source of entertainment back in the 20s. They read news and literature out loud to employees, almost like an adult bedtime story without the bedtime. Although some pastors and educators are called lectors today, this type of lector was dismissed for most-likely being too distracting at work.
PHOTO: Wikimedia

Leech Collector
Leech collector
In the 19th century, medicinal leeches were thought of as medical miracles that would suck toxic blood and disease from the body. The profession was stopped as even more disease began to spread, sucking the life out of the entire leech-collector operation.
PHOTO: Getty

Log Drivers
Log Drivers
Up until the 1970s, log drivers helped move huge tree trunks from the forest to sawmills for construction purposes. The job didn't make the cut as modern transportation progressed.
PHOTO: Getty

Lungs
Lungs
Ironically, "lungs" were people employed to fan the fire in alchemist shops, primarily between the 14th and 16th centuries. Due to all the toxic materials in the labs, the worker's actual lungs became blackened, and the job was put to rest.
PHOTO: Getty

Mudlarks
Mudlarks
Typically an occupation dominated by those in extreme poverty, mudlarks scavenged through river mud in search of valuable items that were resold to the public. In 1904 this job was and was frowned upon.
PHOTO: Getty

Necessary Women
Necessary Women
Necessary women were, well, definitely necessary before the colonial period. These women were known to empty chamber pots filled with waste throughout the day. It wasn't until the end of the colonial period that indoor bathrooms became commonplace, and the job was flushed down the toilet.
PHOTO: Getty

Phrenologist
Phrenologists
Phrenologists were considered ahead of the game because they were masters in ," or in other words, reading intelligence based on the shape of your head. This practice fizzled and eventually became disbanded in 1967.
PHOTO: Getty

Powdermonkey
Powdermonkey
During the Age of Sail, young men on warships who stuffed gunpowder in cannons were dubbed powdermonkeys. "Monkey" could've stemmed from monkeying around, but we're not certain. As artillery innovation spurred, the powdermonkey position went kaboom!
PHOTO: Getty

Quarryman
Quarryman
We take things like heavy-duty construction equipment for granite these days. In the late 19th century, Quarrymen rocked construction sites, mining stone that was used for other purposes.
PHOTO: Getty

Ratteners
Rattners
According to , in the Victorian Era, ratteners would capture and sell rats to pubs where they were eaten by dogs and played with for entertainment. Rats, can't believe we missed that "premium" entertainment.
PHOTO: Getty

Resurrectionist
Resurrectionist
In the 18th and 19th centuries, med students needed bodies to practice on and resurrectionists came to the rescue — they would literally dig up dead corpses and sell them to medical schools for extra money. We're not positive what ever happened to the occupation, but we're pretty sure the job was banned due to ethics.
PHOTO: Getty

Signalman
Signalman
A signalman helped manage multiple switches and levers by hand to ensure all trains were moving in the right direction. Once railways were computerized in the late 60s, signalmen got the caboose.
PHOTO: Getty

Town Crier
Town Crier
A town crier was in charge of screaming important news from street corners — a tradition dating back all the way to the 18th century. Their booming voices paraded down the streets with bold presence … and then radio, TV and Twitter happened.
PHOTO: Getty

Badger
Badger
You would think farmers would sell their own produce during the Market Revolution, but nope. Badgers were the middlemen who would buy produce from farmers and then up-sell it to customers at the farmers' market. thinks the phrase, "To badger someone" came from a badger's persistent sales tactics. Middlemen exist today, but the term "badgers" does not.
PHOTO: Getty

Film Boxer
Film Boxer
A film boxer worked at video entertainment companies in the 90s to collect and package film canisters to be stored or shipped. As technology progressed, both film and the position became obsolete.
PHOTO: Getty

Gong Farmer
Gong Farmer
This job sure did stink. A gong farmer was someone who dug out and removed human waste from privies and cesspits between the 15th and 17th centuries. As modern sewage systems became more widespread, gong farmers disappeared.
PHOTO: Getty

Haberdasher
Haberdasher
Back in the day, mothers would stop by a haberdasher to pick up sewing tools such as buttons, ribbons and zips. was one of the first . The odd title got its name from , aka notions. Selling these little accessories only last so long and the position was wiped out when larger arts and crafts stores were launched.
PHOTO: Wikimedia

Redsmith
Redsmith
By the 1700s, American redsmiths were caught redhanded with loads of copper artifacts because that was their job. The term redsmith comes from the shiny bronze color of copper and there are still a handful present today. However, the job title "metalsmith" has become more commonplace.
PHOTO: Getty
Milkman
Milkman
Every morning in the 1950s, like clockwork, the milkman would deliver bottles and jugs filled to the brim with milk. If you were lucky, sometimes he would even deliver other kitchen essentials like eggs and butter. With the rise of home refrigeration the milk stayed, but the profession expired. Maybe if they delivered cookies too, milkmen would've had a better chance?
PHOTO: Getty
Elevator Operator
Elevator Operator
Elevators didn't always move with the simple push of a button. Back in the day, elevator operators were in charge of controlling everything from the doors and direction to the speed and capacity of the elevator car — a lot of layers, or should we say levels, to the position. In the 50s, automatic elevators became more common and individuals had to push their own button.
PHOTO: Getty
Hacker
Hacker
Not computer hackers, but tree hackers. Hackers were known as woodcutters and were axed, yet again, due to technological advancements.
PHOTO: Getty
Linotype Operator
Linotype Operator
Life without a backspace?! Hard to imagine, but former linotype operators definitely can. These highly skilled workers used the linotype, a hot metal typesetting system, to produce the daily newspaper in the late 1880s. was created in the early 1960s and rapidly replaced all operator positions.
PHOTO: Getty
Gandy Dancer
Gandy Dancer
A Gandy Dancer actually has nothing to do with real dancing. The title is slang for a railroad worker who maintained the tracks years before the work was done by machines.
PHOTO: Getty
Computer
Computer
If you've seen "," then you know what a computer is — and no, it's not the technology that you're on right now. Dating back to the early 17th century, computers, usually women, would calculate figures and crunch numbers all day long by hand. Yup, that's right, no calculators allowed.
PHOTO: Getty
Billy Boy
Billy Boy
Pinky's up! In the 50s and 60s, Billy boys were young apprentices in training that would make tea for the other men at work. Seems strikingly similar to an intern grabbing a load of Starbucks, right? Some things never change.
PHOTO: Herald Sun Image Library/Argus
Bowling Alley Pinsette
Bowling Alley Pinsette
If you loved to play games and needed some extra change, a pinsetter position at a bowling alley was right up your alley. The workers usually manually organized the pins for every game. The job was sent to the gutter once the mechanical pinsetter was .
PHOTO: Getty
Switchboard Operator
Switchboard Operator
Switchboard operators connected long-distance calls and directed communication before digital exchange switched up the game. By the early 80s the position became obsolete.
PHOTO: Getty
Typist
Typists
Typists are still in-demand today, just without the typewriter. In the 1940s, typists were popular positions within the publishing, administrative and clerical industries. The role today has simply been upgraded with computers.
PHOTO: Getty
Catchpole
Catchpole
Deriving from the old english word "cace-" and the medieval Latin word "pullus" (a chick), the job title catchpole, aka a debt collector, was born. There are still debt and tax collectors today, but none that go by this bizarre British title.
PHOTO: Getty
Clockwinder
Clockwinder
A clockwinder did exactly what the name insinuates — wind clocks. It was only a matter of time before electric clockwinders, which required less maintenance and fewer repairs, were produced during the Industrial Revolution.
Icemen
Icemen
In the early 1800s, ice cutting was the common task of hand-sawing individual ice blocks from lakes and rivers to help store cold food throughout the winter. Then refrigerators were invented and the heavy-lifting job chilled out.
PHOTO: Columbia Valley Pioneer
Eggler
Eggler
We're not going to lie, there's nothing too "eggsquisite" about this job. The egg carton was invented in 1911, and Egglers began to sell bulk batches of eggs and sometimes switched it up with other poultry. At the end of the day, they couldn't wing it with just eggs and poultry and added other food to the mix. Today, you can find these folks at farmers' markets.
PHOTO: Getty
Fuller
Fuller
A fuller is a job that every parent can relate to — washing clothes. In the medieval era, fullers cleaned cloth to rid the textiles of oil and dirt. Afterward, the material was bound together to create clothing and other items.
PHOTO: Getty
Hobbler
Hobbler
We assume a hobbler got its nickname in the mid-1800s from hobbling around and balancing on boat decks, but the real job was to tow river and canal boats. Similar deckhand positions still exist today, but they don't go by hobblers.
PHOTO: Getty
Hush Shopkeeper
Hush Shopkeeper
Sneaky hush shopkeepers got their name from keeping their liquor sales on the hush-hush during prohibition. Now, you can find a cocktail after a stressful day of work just about anywhere. Cheers!
PHOTO: Getty
Knockerupper
Knockerupper
Before the first mechanical alarm clock was invented in 1847, people hired knockeruppers to help shoot peas at their windows or tap the glass with long poles so they didn't oversleep for work or during an afternoon snooze. Then the alarm was born, which we all now have a love-hate relationship with.
PHOTO: Getty
Lamplighter
Lamplighter
A lamplighter in the late 1800s and early 1900s was precisely that — someone who is employed to light street lamps. Only a small number still exist today as the majority of street lighting is now electric.
PHOTO: Getty
Lector
Lector
We all can relate to needing a little distraction at work. Well, lectors were the source of entertainment back in the 20s. They read news and literature out loud to employees, almost like an adult bedtime story without the bedtime. Although some pastors and educators are called lectors today, this type of lector was dismissed for most-likely being too distracting at work.
PHOTO: Wikimedia
Leech Collector
Leech collector
In the 19th century, medicinal leeches were thought of as medical miracles that would suck toxic blood and disease from the body. The profession was stopped as even more disease began to spread, sucking the life out of the entire leech-collector operation.
PHOTO: Getty
Log Drivers
Log Drivers
Up until the 1970s, log drivers helped move huge tree trunks from the forest to sawmills for construction purposes. The job didn't make the cut as modern transportation progressed.
PHOTO: Getty
Lungs
Lungs
Ironically, "lungs" were people employed to fan the fire in alchemist shops, primarily between the 14th and 16th centuries. Due to all the toxic materials in the labs, the worker's actual lungs became blackened, and the job was put to rest.
PHOTO: Getty
Mudlarks
Mudlarks
Typically an occupation dominated by those in extreme poverty, mudlarks scavenged through river mud in search of valuable items that were resold to the public. In 1904 this job was and was frowned upon.
PHOTO: Getty
Necessary Women
Necessary Women
Necessary women were, well, definitely necessary before the colonial period. These women were known to empty chamber pots filled with waste throughout the day. It wasn't until the end of the colonial period that indoor bathrooms became commonplace, and the job was flushed down the toilet.
PHOTO: Getty
Phrenologist
Phrenologists
Phrenologists were considered ahead of the game because they were masters in ," or in other words, reading intelligence based on the shape of your head. This practice fizzled and eventually became disbanded in 1967.
PHOTO: Getty
Powdermonkey
Powdermonkey
During the Age of Sail, young men on warships who stuffed gunpowder in cannons were dubbed powdermonkeys. "Monkey" could've stemmed from monkeying around, but we're not certain. As artillery innovation spurred, the powdermonkey position went kaboom!
PHOTO: Getty
Quarryman
Quarryman
We take things like heavy-duty construction equipment for granite these days. In the late 19th century, Quarrymen rocked construction sites, mining stone that was used for other purposes.
PHOTO: Getty
Ratteners
Rattners
According to , in the Victorian Era, ratteners would capture and sell rats to pubs where they were eaten by dogs and played with for entertainment. Rats, can't believe we missed that "premium" entertainment.
PHOTO: Getty
Resurrectionist
Resurrectionist
In the 18th and 19th centuries, med students needed bodies to practice on and resurrectionists came to the rescue — they would literally dig up dead corpses and sell them to medical schools for extra money. We're not positive what ever happened to the occupation, but we're pretty sure the job was banned due to ethics.
PHOTO: Getty
Signalman
Signalman
A signalman helped manage multiple switches and levers by hand to ensure all trains were moving in the right direction. Once railways were computerized in the late 60s, signalmen got the caboose.
PHOTO: Getty
Town Crier
Town Crier
A town crier was in charge of screaming important news from street corners — a tradition dating back all the way to the 18th century. Their booming voices paraded down the streets with bold presence … and then radio, TV and Twitter happened.
PHOTO: Getty
Badger
Badger
You would think farmers would sell their own produce during the Market Revolution, but nope. Badgers were the middlemen who would buy produce from farmers and then up-sell it to customers at the farmers' market. thinks the phrase, "To badger someone" came from a badger's persistent sales tactics. Middlemen exist today, but the term "badgers" does not.
PHOTO: Getty
Film Boxer
Film Boxer
A film boxer worked at video entertainment companies in the 90s to collect and package film canisters to be stored or shipped. As technology progressed, both film and the position became obsolete.
PHOTO: Getty
Gong Farmer
Gong Farmer
This job sure did stink. A gong farmer was someone who dug out and removed human waste from privies and cesspits between the 15th and 17th centuries. As modern sewage systems became more widespread, gong farmers disappeared.
PHOTO: Getty
Haberdasher
Haberdasher
Back in the day, mothers would stop by a haberdasher to pick up sewing tools such as buttons, ribbons and zips. was one of the first . The odd title got its name from , aka notions. Selling these little accessories only last so long and the position was wiped out when larger arts and crafts stores were launched.
PHOTO: Wikimedia
Redsmith
Redsmith
By the 1700s, American redsmiths were caught redhanded with loads of copper artifacts because that was their job. The term redsmith comes from the shiny bronze color of copper and there are still a handful present today. However, the job title "metalsmith" has become more commonplace.
PHOTO: Getty
Milkman
Milkman
Every morning in the 1950s, like clockwork, the milkman would deliver bottles and jugs filled to the brim with milk. If you were lucky, sometimes he would even deliver other kitchen essentials like eggs and butter. With the rise of home refrigeration the milk stayed, but the profession expired. Maybe if they delivered cookies too, milkmen would've had a better chance?
PHOTO: Getty
Elevator Operator
Elevator Operator
Elevators didn't always move with the simple push of a button. Back in the day, elevator operators were in charge of controlling everything from the doors and direction to the speed and capacity of the elevator car — a lot of layers, or should we say levels, to the position. In the 50s, automatic elevators became more common and individuals had to push their own button.
PHOTO: Getty
Hacker
Hacker
Not computer hackers, but tree hackers. Hackers were known as woodcutters and were axed, yet again, due to technological advancements.
PHOTO: Getty
Linotype Operator
Linotype Operator
Life without a backspace?! Hard to imagine, but former linotype operators definitely can. These highly skilled workers used the linotype, a hot metal typesetting system, to produce the daily newspaper in the late 1880s. was created in the early 1960s and rapidly replaced all operator positions.
PHOTO: Getty
Gandy Dancer
Gandy Dancer
A Gandy Dancer actually has nothing to do with real dancing. The title is slang for a railroad worker who maintained the tracks years before the work was done by machines.
PHOTO: Getty
Computer
Computer
If you've seen "," then you know what a computer is — and no, it's not the technology that you're on right now. Dating back to the early 17th century, computers, usually women, would calculate figures and crunch numbers all day long by hand. Yup, that's right, no calculators allowed.
PHOTO: Getty
Billy Boy
Billy Boy
Pinky's up! In the 50s and 60s, Billy boys were young apprentices in training that would make tea for the other men at work. Seems strikingly similar to an intern grabbing a load of Starbucks, right? Some things never change.
PHOTO: Herald Sun Image Library/Argus
Bowling Alley Pinsette
Bowling Alley Pinsette
If you loved to play games and needed some extra change, a pinsetter position at a bowling alley was right up your alley. The workers usually manually organized the pins for every game. The job was sent to the gutter once the mechanical pinsetter was .
PHOTO: Getty
Switchboard Operator
Switchboard Operator
Switchboard operators connected long-distance calls and directed communication before digital exchange switched up the game. By the early 80s the position became obsolete.
PHOTO: Getty
Typist
Typists
Typists are still in-demand today, just without the typewriter. In the 1940s, typists were popular positions within the publishing, administrative and clerical industries. The role today has simply been upgraded with computers.
PHOTO: Getty
Catchpole
Catchpole
Deriving from the old english word "cace-" and the medieval Latin word "pullus" (a chick), the job title catchpole, aka a debt collector, was born. There are still debt and tax collectors today, but none that go by this bizarre British title.
PHOTO: Getty
Clockwinder
Clockwinder
A clockwinder did exactly what the name insinuates — wind clocks. It was only a matter of time before electric clockwinders, which required less maintenance and fewer repairs, were produced during the Industrial Revolution.
Icemen
Icemen
In the early 1800s, ice cutting was the common task of hand-sawing individual ice blocks from lakes and rivers to help store cold food throughout the winter. Then refrigerators were invented and the heavy-lifting job chilled out.
PHOTO: Columbia Valley Pioneer
Eggler
Eggler
We're not going to lie, there's nothing too "eggsquisite" about this job. The egg carton was invented in 1911, and Egglers began to sell bulk batches of eggs and sometimes switched it up with other poultry. At the end of the day, they couldn't wing it with just eggs and poultry and added other food to the mix. Today, you can find these folks at farmers' markets.
PHOTO: Getty
Fuller
Fuller
A fuller is a job that every parent can relate to — washing clothes. In the medieval era, fullers cleaned cloth to rid the textiles of oil and dirt. Afterward, the material was bound together to create clothing and other items.
PHOTO: Getty
Hobbler
Hobbler
We assume a hobbler got its nickname in the mid-1800s from hobbling around and balancing on boat decks, but the real job was to tow river and canal boats. Similar deckhand positions still exist today, but they don't go by hobblers.
PHOTO: Getty
Hush Shopkeeper
Hush Shopkeeper
Sneaky hush shopkeepers got their name from keeping their liquor sales on the hush-hush during prohibition. Now, you can find a cocktail after a stressful day of work just about anywhere. Cheers!
PHOTO: Getty
Knockerupper
Knockerupper
Before the first mechanical alarm clock was invented in 1847, people hired knockeruppers to help shoot peas at their windows or tap the glass with long poles so they didn't oversleep for work or during an afternoon snooze. Then the alarm was born, which we all now have a love-hate relationship with.
PHOTO: Getty
Lamplighter
Lamplighter
A lamplighter in the late 1800s and early 1900s was precisely that — someone who is employed to light street lamps. Only a small number still exist today as the majority of street lighting is now electric.
PHOTO: Getty
Lector
Lector
We all can relate to needing a little distraction at work. Well, lectors were the source of entertainment back in the 20s. They read news and literature out loud to employees, almost like an adult bedtime story without the bedtime. Although some pastors and educators are called lectors today, this type of lector was dismissed for most-likely being too distracting at work.
PHOTO: Wikimedia
Leech Collector
Leech collector
In the 19th century, medicinal leeches were thought of as medical miracles that would suck toxic blood and disease from the body. The profession was stopped as even more disease began to spread, sucking the life out of the entire leech-collector operation.
PHOTO: Getty
Log Drivers
Log Drivers
Up until the 1970s, log drivers helped move huge tree trunks from the forest to sawmills for construction purposes. The job didn't make the cut as modern transportation progressed.
PHOTO: Getty
Lungs
Lungs
Ironically, "lungs" were people employed to fan the fire in alchemist shops, primarily between the 14th and 16th centuries. Due to all the toxic materials in the labs, the worker's actual lungs became blackened, and the job was put to rest.
PHOTO: Getty
Mudlarks
Mudlarks
Typically an occupation dominated by those in extreme poverty, mudlarks scavenged through river mud in search of valuable items that were resold to the public. In 1904 this job was and was frowned upon.
PHOTO: Getty
Necessary Women
Necessary Women
Necessary women were, well, definitely necessary before the colonial period. These women were known to empty chamber pots filled with waste throughout the day. It wasn't until the end of the colonial period that indoor bathrooms became commonplace, and the job was flushed down the toilet.
PHOTO: Getty
Phrenologist
Phrenologists
Phrenologists were considered ahead of the game because they were masters in ," or in other words, reading intelligence based on the shape of your head. This practice fizzled and eventually became disbanded in 1967.
PHOTO: Getty
Powdermonkey
Powdermonkey
During the Age of Sail, young men on warships who stuffed gunpowder in cannons were dubbed powdermonkeys. "Monkey" could've stemmed from monkeying around, but we're not certain. As artillery innovation spurred, the powdermonkey position went kaboom!
PHOTO: Getty
Quarryman
Quarryman
We take things like heavy-duty construction equipment for granite these days. In the late 19th century, Quarrymen rocked construction sites, mining stone that was used for other purposes.
PHOTO: Getty
Ratteners
Rattners
According to , in the Victorian Era, ratteners would capture and sell rats to pubs where they were eaten by dogs and played with for entertainment. Rats, can't believe we missed that "premium" entertainment.
PHOTO: Getty
Resurrectionist
Resurrectionist
In the 18th and 19th centuries, med students needed bodies to practice on and resurrectionists came to the rescue — they would literally dig up dead corpses and sell them to medical schools for extra money. We're not positive what ever happened to the occupation, but we're pretty sure the job was banned due to ethics.
PHOTO: Getty
Signalman
Signalman
A signalman helped manage multiple switches and levers by hand to ensure all trains were moving in the right direction. Once railways were computerized in the late 60s, signalmen got the caboose.
PHOTO: Getty
Town Crier
Town Crier
A town crier was in charge of screaming important news from street corners — a tradition dating back all the way to the 18th century. Their booming voices paraded down the streets with bold presence … and then radio, TV and Twitter happened.
PHOTO: Getty
Badger
Badger
You would think farmers would sell their own produce during the Market Revolution, but nope. Badgers were the middlemen who would buy produce from farmers and then up-sell it to customers at the farmers' market. thinks the phrase, "To badger someone" came from a badger's persistent sales tactics. Middlemen exist today, but the term "badgers" does not.
PHOTO: Getty
Film Boxer
Film Boxer
A film boxer worked at video entertainment companies in the 90s to collect and package film canisters to be stored or shipped. As technology progressed, both film and the position became obsolete.
PHOTO: Getty
Gong Farmer
Gong Farmer
This job sure did stink. A gong farmer was someone who dug out and removed human waste from privies and cesspits between the 15th and 17th centuries. As modern sewage systems became more widespread, gong farmers disappeared.
PHOTO: Getty
Haberdasher
Haberdasher
Back in the day, mothers would stop by a haberdasher to pick up sewing tools such as buttons, ribbons and zips. was one of the first . The odd title got its name from , aka notions. Selling these little accessories only last so long and the position was wiped out when larger arts and crafts stores were launched.
PHOTO: Wikimedia
Redsmith
Redsmith
By the 1700s, American redsmiths were caught redhanded with loads of copper artifacts because that was their job. The term redsmith comes from the shiny bronze color of copper and there are still a handful present today. However, the job title "metalsmith" has become more commonplace.
PHOTO: Getty
You won't find any of these gigs on today's resumes
Related Content
- 10 best summer jobs for teens that make great money
- McDonald’s partnering with AARP to hire more 'senior workers'
- UPS hiring over 100,000 seasonal workers for holidays
- One city in Iowa has been dubbed ‘Antique City’
- Been there, done that: A short history of NASA's moon missions
- GM bought back the vintage car that insipired the Corvette for $1.3M
It seems like every day another job is taken over by technology, and these outdated occupations are no exception. Some of these may have gotten the boot because they are just downright ridiculous, but we'll let you decide. Take a stroll down memory lane and see if any of these strange, obsolete professions ring a bell.