Popular Jobs From The Past You Won’t See Today (17 GIFS)

Posted in INTERESTING       13 Nov 2024       991       2 GALLERY VIEW

“Gas station attendant who pumps your gas for you, washes the windshield, checks your fluids, and performs minor repairs (i.e., brake lamps, headlamps, belts, batteries, etc.) I was one, and it was hectic at times but, overall, a fun job.”

 

“Today, it’s hard to believe there was a need for elevator operators, but they weren’t always automated. I remember growing up in the ’50s, and when few buildings in our town had elevators, there was always an operator. A New York City operator strike in the ’40s led manufacturers to create the elevators we have today.”

 

Telephone operators

“My mom was an operator for decades! She went from the switchboard to early computers (the mainframe took up an entire floor, and you could walk around inside it).”

 

Paperboy

“The sound of the paper hitting the porch used to gently wake me up every morning.”

 

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Fotomat attendant

“I loved this job during college! Once you sorted your envelopes, you could do your homework; they didn’t mind. Also, they would relocate you anywhere you wanted; they were everywhere. In my area, they all became locksmith shops.”

 

“Toll collectors. There used to be manned booths on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, but they’ve completely disappeared.”

 

“When I was very young, I remember the ice man bringing blocks of ice to our house for refrigeration. I was probably about four years old when we got an electric refrigerator.”

 

“It’s not dead yet, but COVID took out the dry cleaning business pretty hard. We used to have a van going door to door with people’s dry cleaning, but remote work killed that job.”

 

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Travel agents

“They are still around. They offer many package tours, which are hard to put together on your own, especially when multiple people are going. They are worth their weight in gold, IMO.”

 

“Going but not gone: we have a milkman who delivers up to twice a week. They come by every two weeks, delivering to the milk box by our door. It’s a luxury but worth it.”

 

“Phone book delivery. I remember those big, thick things being dropped on our doorstep.”

“I was still receiving them up until about 10 years ago. I haven’t had a landline in 25 years, so I’m not sure why I got one. Glad they finally stopped, I always threw them straight into the recycle bin.”

 

Printing press operators

“As well as a slew of supporting jobs in the industry — typesetters, comp graphic operators, paste-up artists, process camera operators, scanners and Scitex operators, film etchers, strippers, plate makers, proofers, paper loaders, collators, and bindery workers.”

 

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“My uncle was a TV repairman for many years. After he passed, we cleaned out his house, and he had scores of vacuum tubes and repair manuals.”

 

“Secretary. In the ’80s and even early ’90s, every middle manager and up had a secretary to coordinate their schedule, type all sorts of things up, take their calls and messages, and often literally ‘guard’ their door as they were generally stationed right outside their office. There were tons of them, and they were always women. I had a shared one when I started my first corporate job as a junior individual contributor ‘manager’ in the ’90s.

Administrative assistants these days seem more reserved for executives and serve as general-purpose personal assistants doing what secretaries once did and more. There are far fewer of them.”

 

“I miss the fruit and vegetable trucks that slowly cruised neighborhoods in the summer with the dial and basket scale hanging off the back and the driver yelling, ‘Apples! Bananas! Potatoes! Come and get ’em!'”

 

“My first job was in the mail room of a large company. I’m pretty sure that job has disappeared.”

 

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“Y2K programmer. There were people who would travel to different companies and rework all of their software so that they would still work after January 1, 2000. They did a great job and hopefully made a great deal of money, but after that, they had to go back to regular programming.”

 



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2   Comments ?
0
1.
Virdie 1 day ago
#4 Paper delivery is still around. My town has them.

#8 home delivery dry cleaning would be a great no-contact business, but people didn't need fancy clean clothes if they didn't have to go to the office, so the business just changed. Dry cleaners exist.

#14 Changing toast gender neutral name and paying them a real wage has created the new job of "personal assistant", where you can abuse a professional with personal stuff, not just business stuff, it's gross.
       
0
2.
Nibby 9 hours ago
#4 My paperboy drives a loud scooter. Can't use him as alarmclock though. Some days the paper comes at 6:30, some days at 10.
       
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