By E. C. RAMSBOTTOM IN the issues of this Journal for 1935 (Part IV) and 1938 (Part I), index numbers were given showing the percentage fluctuations in the level of weekly wage rates in a number of industries during the period 1920-37, the average level of 1924 being taken as = 100. This is the highest average ever recorded by the N. I. C. B. Statistics: The American Economy during the 1920s This is taken from the book. Government employees in France - Salaries and wages, 1900 and 1910. Boy's: I.RATES OF WAGES OK TYPICAL CLASSES OF TIME-WORKERS IN CERTAIN INDUSTRIES. Popular Salaries Average Salaries by Industry Accounting Accountant 30,200 /year Accounting Manager 32,800 /year Accounting Technician 21,200 /year Accounts Administrator Wages are shown in German marks. Find additional data by checking other issues of this publication. Shows pay data for private firms. A table of. This catalog is well illustrated and shows prices in English money. Source: Shows wages in British currency with American equivalents. Source: U.S. BLS Bulletin no. He discusses wage levels in agriculture and silk production in the Yangzi Delta, and estimates the average wage in rice cultivation at 0.06 taels per day, adding 'the official standard was 0.04 taels a day which is a bit low compared to the wages in some farms in Huzhou, Zhejiang province'. High 33,000. compared with 6s. Ladies: Source: U.S. BLS Bulletin no. United Kingdom * 40,207 45,369 46,863 46,036 45,455 46,036 46,156 46,647 47,181 sheets, pillowcases, tablecloths, blankets, quilts and calicos), Prices of American agricultural implements. Shows the average price of foodstuffs and firewood in Bucharest throughout the 1910's. 5d. Conversely, $1 earned in 1913 had the same buying power as about $30 in the year 2022. In general, it states women over the age of 18 should expect to be paid at least 10s to 12s a week. City families' average expenditures on food, rent, fuel and more for the year. Topping the list is Hollywood, with Lehigh Acres and Kissimmee close behind in second and third. Source: Australia Labor and Industrial Branch report #2, pp. Loading. Serge dresses, serge suits, tailored suits, "homestead" wear (house dresses, garden wear, etc), skirts, waists, sweaters, underwear, corsets, socks, coats, shawls and newports, shoes, purses, muffs and collarettes, animal fur sets, gloves and mittens, hats, hair goods, handkerchiefs and ribbons, diamonds, necklaces, rings, earrings, watches, other jewelry Full list of years is provided below: Critical analysis of government methods for collecting and reporting wage data in the 1910s. Commodities include beef, pork, eggs, butter, bread, flour, oats, rice, beans, apples, prunes, sugar, tea, coffee, potatoes, starch, coal, wood, and coal oil. Men: Reports hours and wages for women working in retail stores, factories, hotels, restaurants and offices. Shows drawing of the home, floor plan, and estimated cost to build. 170, published May 1915. Women tend to be clustered in certain fields; click these links to jump directly to the sections: Study conducted by several civic leagues in collaboration with the YWCA. Industrial home work - Earnings, early 1920s weekly wage-rate in each case now, as compared with June, 1920, and June, 1914, respectively? The average salary in England was 39,452 for those working full-time, and 13,845 for part-time jobs. Also discusses hours and working conditions. Nebraska: Omaha According to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the mean average salary across the whole of the UK in 2020 was 38,600 for full-time employees and 13,803 for those working part-time. 3.08. - 1919, Horses, mules and farm animals - Average prices, 1867-1920, Tuition and living expenses at college - 1915, Canada - Retail prices of staple commodities, Edinburgh - Wholesale and retail prices in 1900 and 1910, https://libraryguides.missouri.edu/pricesandwages, War and postwar prices and wages, 1914-23 and 1939-44, Wages paid to workers placed by employment offices, 1918, Negro and white worker wages compared, 1918-1919, Wages by occupation for Black persons - St. Louis, 1914, Teacher salaries by race - Georgia, 1917 and 1918, Building and construction trades - Union wages, 1913-1930, Carpenter hours and wages by state and city - 1910, Coal mining - Hours and earnings, 1919-1933, Doctor's earnings, 1914 (Harvard grads only), Engineers, civil - Compensation in the early 1910s, Engineering graduates' income by years of experience - 1915, Farm workers - Wages and income, 1909 to 1938, explanation and historical context for this table, New Haven, CT city employee salaries from 1873-1921, Higher education - Salaries for college teachers and administrators, 1913, Iron and steel industry wages and hours, 1907-1931, Iron and steel industry workers, 1907-1924, Judicial branch salaries (federal employees), 1908-1922, Lawyers graduated from Harvard - Average annual earnings, 1914, Lumber, millwork, and furniture industries,1907 to 1913, Lumber, millwork, and furniture industries, wages and hours, 1915, Military pay for enlisted men in the Marines, Navy and Army, 1917-1920, Railroad cars, building and repair - Wages, 1907-1913, Railroad employees rates of pay, 1907-1915, Railway (electric) employees - average compensation, 1912, 1917, 1922, Railway workers' hours and wages by occupation, 1914-1923, Atlantic coast, Gulf coast and Great Lakes, Slaughtering and meat-packing industry, wages and hours - 1917, Street railway employment in the U.S., 1917, description of occupations in street railway industry, Telephone industry - average compensation per employee, 1912, 1917, 1922, Woolen and worsted good occupation earnings, 1914, Manufacturing industries - Wages, hours and earnings, 1914-1919, Factory employee average annual wages - 1914, 1919, Manufacturing industry - Average monthly earnings, 1918-1920, Candy makers - Wages in Philadelphia, 1919, Boot and shoe manufacturing - Wages and hours, 1910 to 1932, Boot, shoe, hosiery and underwear manufacturing wages, 1907-1913, Clothing industry - Wages and hours of labor, 1911 and 1912, Clothing (men's) manufacturing - Wages, 1911 to 1924, Clothing (women's) manufacturing - Piece rates, New York City - 1912 and 1913, Clothing (cloak, suit, and skirt manufacture) - Wages, 1912-1913, Hosiery and underwear manufacturing - Wages and hours, 1907-1932, Cotton goods manufacturing and finishing industry - Wages and hours, 1916, Cotton goods manufacturing and finishing industry - Wages and hours, 1918, Cotton, woolen, and silk industry wages, 1890-1912, Woolen goods manufacturing - Wages and hours of labor, 1910 to 1930, Furniture manufacturing industry - Wages and hours, 1910 to 1929, Cigar industry - Wages and hours of labor, 1911 and 1912, Estimated salaries and cost of living for teachers by state, 1918, Average salaries of college professors, 1908-1914, Elementary school teacher and principalsalaries, High school teacher and principal salaries, Elementary school district superintendent salaries, Average salary per month (male, female and general) by county, Statewide average salary per month by sex, Average annual salary (male, female and general) by type of high school maintained and for schools not in villages, towns or cities, Average annual salary (male, female and general) in town versus country schools, 1868/1869-1936/1937, see the Hathi Trust record, Texas school personnel salaries (white only), 1872-1953, Wages by occupation in Massachusetts, 1910, Average yearly earnings - Massachusetts, 1910, Lawrence, MA - Textile industry wages, 1911, Weekly earnings in woolen and worsted mills, Weekly hours worked in woolen and worsted mills, Missouri - Average weekly wages by occupation, 1914, Wages in Kansas City and St. Louis, 1913-1920, St. Louis city employee salaries and wages, 1913, Wage in the Missouri shoe industry, 1913-1922, Grand Rapids, MI - Furniture manufacturing workers, 1910, Wages and hours for all union occupations in New York state - 1912, Metals, machinery and ship building job wages, Hotel, restaurant and retail trade job wages, African Americans' earnings in New York City, ca. The information available is insufficient to enable the increase in rates of wages to be estimated. Jobs in Reed.co.uk, ranging from 55,000 to 55,000. This truly amazing source has an extensive list of occupations, including those seldom seen in other documents: theatrical costumers, musicians for silent movie shows, orchestral musicians, house movers, hearse drivers, piano movers, writers working at newspapers (journalists), sail makers, photo-engravers, bartenders in saloons, elevator men in hotels, and thousands more. Hourly earnings in manufacturing industries averaged 69.1c for the first 11 months of 1937, as compared with 60.6c in 1920, 59.0c in 1929, and 61.7c in 1936. prices of British made men's shoes in 1900 and 1910. Tells wages for the years 1911 to 1914, 1919, and 1922. AVERAGE WEEKLY WAGES. (Hansard, 30 July 1925) Search Again. USDA Professional Paper #410, Nov 11, 1916. Includes beef, pork, fish, rice, wheat, flour, soja beans, barley, eggs, soy sauce, cotton, wool, leather, boots, shoes, lumber, coal, iron, petroleum, brick, salt, sugar, tea, milk, and rent. James S. Olson. Shows data by state for 1914 and 1916. In 1960, I was secretary to the managing director of a large wholesale electrical company in Manchester - I got paid about 5.50 a week!. Table 26 shows daily wages for laborers, with board for every year from 1780-1937; the, The pay for nurses was $720 annual for the first period of three years' service, $780 for the second period of three years' service, $840 for the third period of three years' service, $900 for the fourth period of three years' service, and $960 after twelve years' service in the Army Nurse Corps. Source: BLS. See list of the most common occupations for women in 1910 and 1920, outside of agricultural work. Clothes, bonnets, booties, supplies, carriages. At a hearing in. Source: the Historian of the U.S. California: Los Angeles and San Francisco. Source: Bulletin of the Women's Bureau No. catalog, 1917, Sporting gear and clothing prices - 1916, Average expenditure for individual articles of clothing, 1918-1919, B. Altman & Co. - Clothing mail order catalog, 1915, Average retail price of fabric in 45 cities - 1917, Ladies' undergarments, nightgowns, etc. Men's: Shows prices of food. Source: This document compares the affordability of food and consumer goods from one year to the next and provides price. Lists wages in many cities across the U.S., including blacksmiths, boilermakers, bricklayers, carpenters, cleaning women, male and female cooks, drivers and teamsters, dock workers, farm hands, hod carriers, house servants, wiremen, laundry operators, machinists, painters, plasterers, plumbers, saleswomen, seamstresses, sewing machine operators, stenographers (male and female), telephone switchboard operators, waiters, waitresses, and more. Items for the home, including: For an inflation-adjusted comparision with the past, see US Average Real Income. This two-page table shows wholesale and retail prices of commodities (mostly food) at St. Petersburg in 1900 and 1910. Source: BLS. Source: BLS. Source: Shows the average weekly and hourly wages of different occupations in the Missouri shoe industry between 1913-1922. Provides retail food prices in Denmark, Norway, and Sweden in 1914 and in the years leading up to the war outbreak. Wages are shown in Spanish pesetas. Lists union wages by city and then by occupation. Special study of the occupations and wages of students aged 13-19 years old from two schools. Maine: Portland In this article, the average wage is adjusted for living expenses "purchasing power parity" (PPP). Includes beef, hogs, sheep, cattle, meats and provisions, grain, hides, boots and shoes, men's underwear, coal, iron, steel, oil, petroleum, linseed oil, farming implements, and brick. Tools used in building trades, tool kits, sewing machines and cameras. Table compares prices of food products in Detroit, Michigan and Windsor, Ontario as taken from newspaper advertisements from February 25, 1910. Occupations include bookkeepers, clerks, messengers, office boys, stenographers, custodians, storekeepers, watchmen, inspectors, cooks, drivers, electricians, elevator operators, machinists, photographers, nurses, unskilled laborers and more. Details the price of various building materials on pp. (The federal minimum wage wouldn't be enacted until 1938.) 59-71. This four-page table compares wholesale and retail prices of articles at Moscow in 1900 and 1910, including beef, veal, pork, ham, mutton, fat, fish, eggs, butter, sugar, potatoes, poultry, bread, woolen goods, clothing, and coal. Wages of, Tables in this report show salaries (in dollars) of, Shows salaries of post office employees in Liverpool and Birkenhead in 1910 as well as, Tables show salaries paid to post-office and.