Blacksmith Business
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Under a spreading
chestnut-tree
The village smithy stands;
The smith, a mighty man is he,
With large and sinewy hands;
And the muscles of his brawny arms
Are strong as iron bands
- From "The Village Blacksmith" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
THE BLACKSMITH
The most indispensable trade was the blacksmith.
In his special work the farmer, however ingenious, could not
compete. In general, he had reached what then passed for middle
life with experience in several tasks in various stages of
development. While the shoeing of horses and to some extent of
oxen constituted, perhaps, the bulk of his work during the winter,
the summer brought with it the making of ploughs (or their
sharpening), harrows, cultivators, hoes, scythes, rakes, and tools
used in field or garden. He must not only have acquired a fixed
skill (something that would always stand him in stead) but must be
able to work rapidly.
When something went wrong with a prairie plough
leaving men and oxen idle, or with a threshing machine where from
ten to fifteen men and almost as many horses were left for the
time with nothing to do, the blacksmith was expected to drop
everything else and without regard to meals, sleep, or rest, to
persevere until his task was done. This was the essence of his
unconscious contract with his customers and he must keep it; if
there was one thing that the industrial leader in a Pioneer
community dreaded, more than another, it was that men assembled
for a given task should be left idle while daylight and good
weather were running.
The neighborhood that commanded the services of a
really expert and artistic blacksmith could count itself
fortunate. His trade was naturally the primary attraction, but it
meant even more to have a smith who was really interested in the
people who were his constituents and had their own peculiar
interests. His shop was the recognized meeting place, a social
center, even more important than the country store. It was the
resort of boys of all ages, the older of whom were often gratified
in their desire to blow the bellows or even to handle that
mysterious tool, the great sledge, when two red hot heavy bars of
iron were to be cut or welded, or others were to be split into
strips. The passing matron or school girl looked in through the
open door with a sort of awe; so that the blacksmith who either
had, or might develop, the qualities of the curmudgeon was
destined to a brief career or absolute failure and might just as
well make up his mind to move.
It was, however, as the meeting place of an ever
ready debating society for religious questions that the smithy was
most distinguished. There, the fate of those mighty and universal
questions, such as baptism, infant baptism, free will,
foreordination, election, predestination, the final perseverance
of the saints (what this common though cryptic phrase might mean)
were constantly under discussion. The smith literally earned his
living by the sweat of his brow, but a day was never more than a
day even if prolonged far into the night. No true smith could
resist the challenge to talk on these subjects, then the primary
problems of surrounding humanity. He was nearly always active
sometimes even unctuous in the Wednesday night prayer meeting, or
in the Sunday class meeting, so that in those historic days nobody
even so much as thought it among possibilities that there could be
an un-devout blacksmith. Curiously enough, in many villages the
number of blacksmiths who derived from Huguenot or Scotch-Irish
origins was out of proportion to the representatives of their
races and sects in the communities where, finding no
representative churches of their own, they had been thrown into
association with the Methodists and Baptists. Perhaps the very
rigidity of their hereditary ultra-Protestantism made them more
active in the bodies with which they had affiliated from
necessity.
No man, even in the busy life of his neighborhood,
was more industrious than the smith. he began his work early in
the morning, perhaps by five o'clock in summer, making stock
against his daily or other needs. He fashioned horseshoes from
the bar, made his own nails, bolts, nuts, spikes, and the other
articles since standardized on machines. No piece of iron or
steel, however small or apparently useless, was cast aside if
malleable, because all were material for his bellows, anvil,
hammer, and strong right arm. If castoff articles were brought to
him for making over he did his work with whatever skill he
possessed, separating or uniting, as the arcane of his craft
permitted; if it was a superfluity in the hands of owner, finder,
or collector, he would take it in payment for work, or even in the
time of severe money stringency would pay for it in cash.
A thousand miles from an ore-bank, or a
rolling-mill, nothing that could be shaped on the anvil must be
lost or neglected; he would turn all these to the most curious
account whether for his customer or himself. He would fashion an
old scythe into a corn-cutter (just the right thing in weight or
quality); make a worn out file into a butcher knife; transform the
steel in a heavy awkward hoe into something light, fitted to the
touch of man or boy (it sometimes seemed that he had a peculiar
genius for making life easier for the growing lad who was hard
pressed with work and premature responsibilities); or by a touch
little short of magical, he would turn into a thing of use and
beauty a ploughshare that some faraway workman had bungled.
No man in any Pioneer category was more really
trusted than the blacksmith. his nature united with his trade to
make him as nearly strictly honest as men can be. Other men, the
carpenter, the shoemaker, the weaver, the tinker, or the
storekeeper, might be suspect, and the customer could go somewhere
else; but the blacksmith was the destined monopolist of a
neighborhood, so that while he held his place there was little
chance to question his position or his probity. While seldom a
leader in matters of high public import, he was knowing to
everything that was going on.
Taken all in all, the blacksmith was a fine figure
in the Pioneer life, as indeed he had been in his association with
the yeoman during the preceding five hundred years. His character
and its peculiar traits have been overlaid, though it is not
possible even under the lava -like inclusions of the factory
system entirely to hid him from view.
If I may seem to have lingered over this peculiar
figure it is because he represented in himself the traditions and
achievements of the smith from the days when he was limned by
Homer down through medieval times and into modern literature, and
because by reason of his intrinsic character he belonged to an age
that has now departed forever.