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Shoemaker's Stalking Horse (1994), Fire Horse (1995), and Dark Horse (1996) all featured jockey-turned-sleuth Coley Killebrew using his racetrack experience in and about his restaurant and the horse world. Shoemaker died on October 12, 2003, of natural causes at his home in San Marino, California. He was 72 years old. [8]
Woodcut of shoemakers from Frankfurt am Main, 1568. Two shoemakers in Vietnam in 1923. Shoemaking is the process of making footwear.. Originally, shoes were made one at a time by hand, often by groups of shoemakers, or cordwainers (sometimes misidentified as cobblers, who repair shoes rather than make them [citation needed]).
x A separate disambiguation page is needed for the Shoemaker names. ~ clearthought 18:11, 5 August 2006 (UTC) I agree that the list of names is not directly relevent to the topic, and should be split off. A notice like "Shoemaker directs here. See [[Shoemaker (disambiguation)]] for other uses". -- Infrogmation 23:12, 5 August 2006 (UTC)
A cordwainer making shoes, Capri, Italy A cordwainer's desk in Hamburg, in the background a shelf with lasts Tombstone of the shoemaker Xanthippos. Marble, Greek artwork, ca. 430–420 BC. From Athens. A cordwainer (/ ˈ k ɔːr d ˌ w eɪ n ər /) is a shoemaker who makes new shoes from new leather.
Schumacher or Schuhmacher is an occupational surname (German, "shoemaker", pronounced [ˈʃuːmaxɐ], both variants can be used as surnames, with Schumacher being the more popular one, however, only the variant with three "h"s can also be used as a job description in modern German spelling).
Bill Shoemaker (1931–2003), American jockey; Carolyn S. Shoemaker (1929–2021), astronomer and co-discoverer of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9; Charles F. Shoemaker (1841–1913), Commandant from 1895 through 1905 of the United States Revenue Cutter Service; Christine Shoemaker, American environmental engineer; Craig Shoemaker (born 1958), American ...
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The T. & A. Baťa Shoe Company was founded on 21 September 1894 [6] in the Moravian town of Zlín, Austria-Hungary (today in the Czech Republic), by Tomáš Baťa, his brother Antonín and his sister Anna, whose family had been cobblers for generations. [1]