The Weirdest Ways People Made Money In The Past—Were They Genius Ideas Or Just Bizarre?

The Weirdest Ways People Made Money In The Past—Were They Genius Ideas Or Just Bizarre?

Cashing In On The Strange Side Of History

People have always found ways to make a living, even when the job sounded awful, risky, or completely bizarre. Before modern sanitation, medicine, alarm clocks, and public services, someone had to do the dirty work. These strange old money-makers prove that “genius idea” and “terrible job” have often been the same thing.

AI-generated image of chimney sweep in Victorian cityFactinate

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People Got Paid To Eat Sins

In parts of Britain and Wales, some families hired sin-eaters after a death. The sin-eater would eat bread or drink near the body, symbolically taking on the dead person’s sins. It was spiritual outsourcing, and the pay was usually small for a job with a very heavy reputation.

Somber meal by the deathbedFactinate

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Gong Farmers Cleaned The Unthinkable

Tudor England had no modern sewer system, so gong farmers emptied cesspits and privies by hand. They usually worked at night because the job was so foul and disruptive. It was dirty and dangerous work, but it could pay better than ordinary labor.

File:Town Crier with Stick and Gong (Hearing).jpgAdriaen van Ostade, Wikimedia Commons

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Pure Finders Sold Dog Waste

Victorian London had people called pure finders who collected dog droppings from the streets. Tanneries used the material in leather processing, especially for softening hides. It was disgusting, but in a city full of horses, dogs, and poverty, even waste had a market.

Pure FindersFactinate

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Leech Collectors Fed Medical Fashion

In the 18th and 19th centuries, doctors used leeches for bloodletting. Collectors gathered medicinal leeches from marshes and ponds, sometimes by letting them attach to animals or even their own legs. The demand became enormous, which made this unpleasant job surprisingly useful.

Both doctors and quacks used the blood-sucking creatures to treat a number of ailments, ranging from headaches toJim Griffin , Wikimedia Commons

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Resurrection Men Sold The Dead

In late 18th- and early 19th-century Britain, medical schools needed bodies for anatomy lessons. Resurrection men stole fresh corpses from graves and sold them to surgeons. The trade was feared, illegal, and profitable enough to inspire locked grave cages called mortsafes.

Illustration of resurrectionists at work, accompanying the story of John Holmes and Peter Williams, whipped for stealing dead bodies.Hablot Knight Browne, Wikimedia Commons

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Knocker-Uppers Were Human Alarm Clocks

Before cheap alarm clocks, industrial workers sometimes paid knocker-uppers to wake them. These workers tapped on doors or upper windows with sticks, poles, or even pea-shooters. It sounds funny now, but being late to a factory shift could cost someone real money.

Caller-upNationaal Archief (flickr.com), Wikimedia Commons

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Mudlarks Searched River Mud For Treasure

Poor Londoners once combed the Thames foreshore for anything they could sell. Mudlarks looked for coal, rope, bones, metal, and lost objects in dangerous tidal mud. What is now a heritage hobby began as survival work for people with few choices.

This statue commemorates Mudlarks in Portsmouth, England. Mudlarks would scramble in the mud at the shore to retrieve coins thrown by passerbys. The children who both spend the coins and take them home to their families.
The statue was paid for by privateKatherine Weikert, Wikimedia Commons

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Toshers Hunted Sewers For Valuables

Some Victorians went even lower than the riverbank. Toshers searched London’s sewers for coins, metal scraps, and other saleable finds. The work was hazardous, illegal in some periods, and proof that desperation could turn any hidden corner into a workplace.

The Sewer-hunter or ‘Tosher’, 1851Unknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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Rat Catchers Turned Vermin Into Income

Rat catchers were paid to control infestations in crowded cities. Some used dogs, ferrets, traps, and showmanship to build reputations. The famous Victorian rat catcher Jack Black even bred unusual rats and helped popularize fancy rats as pets.

Anne Claude Philippe, Comte de Caylus / After Edme Bouchardon / Francois Joullain, Wikimedia Commons

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Crossing Sweepers Sold Clean Steps

In 19th-century London, crossing sweepers cleared paths through filthy streets for pedestrians. Horse-drawn traffic left roads muddy and messy, so wealthier passersby might tip someone for a cleaner crossing. It was informal work, but it turned a broom into a business.

Punch cartoon from 1856 depicting a youngPunch magazine, Wikimedia Commons

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Link Boys Lit The Night

Before widespread street lighting, people could hire link boys to guide them through dark streets with torches. The fee was small, but the service was practical in cities where darkness could be dangerous. Some link boys helped honest travelers, while others had a sketchier reputation.

Engraving showing a link boy extinguishing his torch in a link extinguisher at a doorway in Grosvenor Square, Londonunknown engraver, Wikimedia Commons

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Lamplighters Made Cities Glow

Lamplighters were paid to light, extinguish, and maintain street lamps. They walked regular routes at dusk and dawn, keeping public lighting working before automation took over. It was a practical job that disappeared as technology advanced.

Lamplighter in Wrocław's Ostrów Tumski (Klearchos Kapoutsis from Santorini, Greece, Wikimedia Commons

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Fullers Cleaned Cloth With Urine

In ancient and medieval textile work, fullers cleaned and thickened wool cloth. One of the traditional materials used in the process was stale urine, valued for its ammonia. The job was smelly, but cloth production was essential and profitable.

Detail of an 18th century engraving of Scotswomen waulking (fulling) cloth, and singing.Unknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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Tanners Worked In A World Of Stink

Leather-making often required soaking, scraping, fermenting, and treating animal hides. Tanners used unpleasant materials, including lime, urine, dung, and rotting matter. Their work smelled terrible, but leather was vital for shoes, belts, armor, books, and countless everyday goods.

The tannerAnonymous artist, Wikimedia Commons

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Saltpeter Men Collected Nasty Ingredients

Gunpowder required saltpeter, and early modern governments wanted steady supplies. In England, saltpeter men searched stables, dovecotes, cellars, and soil rich in nitrogenous waste. Their job connected household filth directly to warfare.

A typical nitrary  (Germany, circa 1580) with leaching deposits (A) filled with decaying vegetal matterial mixed with manner. A worker collects efloresced saltpeter from deposits, transporting it then to be concentrated in the factory (B) boilers.Mcapdevila, Wikimedia Commons

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Professional Mourners Sold Grief

Ancient Egyptian funerals sometimes included professional mourners who performed public grief. These women wailed, gestured, and helped turn mourning into a visible ritual. In some cultures, grief was not only personal, it was a paid performance.

Town crier who was specialized in announcing deaths and the arrival of wine. (15th century)Franckgerardin, Wikimedia Commons

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Court Jesters Made Risky Money

Jesters entertained rulers with jokes, music, tricks, and sharp commentary. A successful jester could earn food, lodging, gifts, and influence. The danger was obvious, because making powerful people laugh sometimes meant insulting them just enough.

File:The Court Jester by John Watson Nicol.jpgJohn Watson Nicol, Wikimedia Commons

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Chimney Sweeps Crawled Into Danger

Before modern equipment, chimney sweeping often involved small boys climbing narrow flues. The work exposed them to soot, falls, suffocation, burns, and disease. It was one of history’s bleakest examples of poverty turning children into tools.

Women at work during the First World War
Mrs Rosanna Forster from Kent is a chimney sweep, carrying on her husband's business while he serves abroad.  Here, she walks along a road, her brooms over her shoulder.Horace Nicholls, Wikimedia Commons

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Ice Cutters Sold Winter In Summer

Before mechanical refrigeration, workers harvested blocks of ice from frozen lakes and rivers. The ice was stored in insulated ice houses and later sold for cooling food and drinks. It was seasonal, physical work that helped make summer refrigeration possible.

Cutting ice from the river, Toronto, CanadaJohn Boyd, Wikimedia Commons

Human Computers Did The Math

Before electronic computers became dominant, “computer” could mean a person who performed calculations. At NASA and its predecessor organizations, many women worked as human computers on aeronautics and space problems. It was strange only by modern wording, because the job was intellectually demanding and historically important.

Human computer with IBM 704 in 1959NASA, Wikimedia Commons

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Rag-And-Bone Men Bought Household Scraps

Rag-and-bone men collected old cloth, bones, metal, and other castoffs for resale. Their work turned household junk into raw material for recycling and manufacturing. Long before modern recycling programs, poverty and profit kept discarded goods moving.

A rag-and-bone man with his horse and cart on the streets of Streatham, south-west London in  1985 (Tony Rees photograph)Tony 1212, Wikimedia Commons

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Alewives Brewed For A Living

In medieval and early modern communities, many women brewed ale for household sale. Brewing could bring income, but it also brought scrutiny when ale quality, pricing, or public behavior became controversial. A home-based side hustle could quickly become a regulated trade.

Mother Louse, alewife

General Collections
Keywords: Mother Louse, AlewifeDavid Loggan, Wikimedia Commons

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Barber-Surgeons Mixed Grooming And Gore

Barber-surgeons did far more than cut hair. In medieval and early modern Europe, some performed bloodletting, tooth-pulling, wound care, and minor surgery. The red-and-white barber pole still echoes that messy overlap between grooming and medicine.

A barber-surgeon extracting stones from a woman's head; symbolising the expulsion of 'folly'(insanity). Watercolour by J. Cats, 1787, after B. Maton.

Iconographic Collections
Keywords: ic; Jacob Cats; Bartholomaeus Maton; barber-surgeonMike Rosoft, Wikimedia Commons

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Plague Doctors Sold Fear And Hope

During outbreaks, some towns hired plague doctors to treat or record victims. Their famous beaked masks came later, but the job itself was real and frightening. These doctors worked where others fled, although their treatments were often limited by the medicine of the time.

Plague doctors; Costume d'un Medecin de Lazaret de Marseille en 1720

General Collections
Keywords: public health: plagueFæ, Wikimedia Commons

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Pearl Divers Risked Their Lives For Luxury

Pearl diving was dangerous work in places such as the Persian Gulf, Indian Ocean, and Pacific. Divers held their breath, descended repeatedly, and faced drowning, exhaustion, and marine hazards. The reward was a natural luxury item prized by elites.

Arab pearl-divers at work in the Persian Gulf from: George Frederick Kunz, The Book of the PearlGeorge Frederick Kunz, Wikimedia Commons

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Some Weird Jobs Were Secretly Smart

Many of these jobs look bizarre because modern life hides the systems that replaced them. Sewers, clocks, refrigeration, street lighting, sanitation, and medical regulation all made old trades vanish. The people doing the work were not always odd, but the economies around them certainly were.

Worcester, Massachusetts, 
the man is likely Richard Lionel Jewel

Photographed by William Bullard

Collection of the Worcester Art MuseunJim Griffin, Wikimedia Commons

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You May Also Like: 

The Weirdest Rules People Once Followed At Work

Ancient Foods That Were Once Totally Normal—But Would Be Hard to Stomach Today

The Strangest Jobs That Disappeared With Modern Technology

Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16


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