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  2. Shoemaking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoemaking

    A shoe repair shop is a type of business establishment that fixes and remodels shoes and boots. Besides a shoe repair shop, a shoe repairer could work in department stores or shoe stores. Men's shoes on display in a shopping outlet. Sewing machine for shoemaking, shoe repair, and bag and heavy fabric repair work.

  3. Calceology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calceology

    Calceology (from Latin calcei "shoes" and -λογία, -logiā, "-logy") is the study of footwear, especially historical footwear whether as archaeology, shoe fashion history, or otherwise. It is not yet formally recognized as a field of research. Calceology comprises the examination, registration, research and conservation of leather shoe ...

  4. Cordwainer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordwainer

    Historically, cobblers also made shoes, but only using old leather recovered from discarded or repaired shoes. [10] Today, many makers of bespoke shoes will also repair their own work, but shoe repairers are not normally in a position to manufacture new footwear. [citation needed] A statue of a cordwainer in the Cordwainer ward of the City of ...

  5. Plumb (tools) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plumb_(tools)

    In 1869, Fayette R. Plumb entered a partnership with Jonathan Yerkes, an established hammer manufacturer operating in the Frankford neighborhood of Philadelphia. Shortly thereafter, a new facility was built in the Bridesburg neighborhood of that city, operating as Yerkes & Plumb.

  6. Diamond Calk Horseshoe Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond_Calk_Horseshoe_Company

    The Diamond Calk Horseshoe Company of Duluth, Minnesota, USA was founded in 1908 by blacksmith Otto Swanstrom.. Initially manufacturing horseshoes with a special type of calk to improve the animals' foothold on slippery surfaces, the company successfully adapted to the development of motorised transport for the masses and produced a range of adjustable wrenches and pliers from the 1920s.

  7. Down-the-hole drill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Down-The-Hole_Drill

    DTH drill tool operated with drilling mud (Drillstar MUDHammer) A down-the-hole drill, usually called DTH by most professionals, is basically a jackhammer screwed on the bottom of a drill string. The fast hammer action breaks hard rock into small cuttings and dust that are evacuated by a fluid (air, water or drilling mud). The DTH hammer is one ...

  8. Hammer drill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammer_drill

    A corded hammer drill next to a drill bit and a chuck key. A hammer drill, also known as a percussion drill or impact drill, is a power tool used chiefly for drilling in hard materials. [1] [2] It is a type of rotary drill with an impact mechanism that generates a hammering motion.

  9. Howard R. Hughes Sr. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_R._Hughes_Sr.

    The manufacturing operations of Hughes' Sharp-Hughes Tool Company at 2nd and Girard Streets in Houston, Texas. Hughes Sr. married Allene Stone Gano, on June 24, 1904, in Dallas County, Texas, and engaged in various mining business endeavors before capitalizing on the Spindletop oil discovery in Texas, as a result of which he began devoting his full time to the oil business.