Al Agnew Posted December 8, 2017 Posted December 8, 2017 My first year of teaching (I became a professional artist after 7 years of teaching), I made a whopping $6500. That was three years after that motor was made.
jdmidwest Posted December 8, 2017 Posted December 8, 2017 I used to move Shelby Mustangs around my Great Uncle's used car lots in my teens in St. Louis. He would buy them from Hertz and resell them for around $1500 and make a tidy profit. "Life has become immeasurably better since I have been forced to stop taking it seriously." — Hunter S. Thompson
dave potts Posted December 10, 2017 Posted December 10, 2017 On 12/7/2017 at 11:12 AM, fishinwrench said: The widow up the street used to give me 10.00 and a cup of hot chocolate to scoop snow off her sidewalk. Took me all of about 25 minutes. We could also go stack pallets of bricks for 5.00/hr. at that time. Talk about a job that'll give you the Kung Fu grip ! Twenty years ago a brick skidder could make $60,000 per year loading brick off the kiln cars onto shipping pallets at A.P. Green. Back breaking work but great pay. fishinwrench 1
Mitch f Posted December 11, 2017 Posted December 11, 2017 In 1979 I got hired by Emerson Electric on West Florissant as a machinist for $6.50 per hour. I worked one day and they sent me home because they found out I wasn’t 18 years old yet. One month later they brought me back. I left after 1.5 years and went to McDonnell Douglas as a machinist. Started at $10.25 an hour in Nov, 1980. Went out on my own in ‘95. "Honor is a man's gift to himself" Rob Roy McGregor
fishinwrench Posted December 11, 2017 Author Posted December 11, 2017 My first good paying job was started in 1983 (Schatz Underground const.) Started at 8.00/hr. and by the end of my second year with them I was at 14.50 plus perdeium. They are a good company that really knows how to treat their employees that show up and care about the work they do.
snagged in outlet 3 Posted December 11, 2017 Posted December 11, 2017 1985 hired into General Motors for around $27/hour. Got tired of layoffs, relocations and night shift. Left in 2000 after getting my degree. Never looked back.
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