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Peddler

A peddler, in British English pedlar, also known as a chapman, packman,[1] cheapjack, hawker, higler, huckster, (coster)monger, colporteur or solicitor (not in Britain), is a door-to-door and/or travelling vendor of goods. In 19th century America the word "drummer" was often used to refer to a peddler or traveling salesman; as exemplified in the popular play Sam'l of Posen; or, The Commercial Drummer by George H. Jessop.[2]

A Peking fruit seller, c. 1869
Peddler in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

In England, the term was mostly used for travellers hawking goods in the countryside to small towns and villages. In London, more specific terms were used, such as costermonger.

From antiquity, peddlers filled the gaps in the formal market economy by providing consumers with the convenience of door-to-door service. They operated alongside town markets and fairs where they often purchased surplus stocks which were subsequently resold to consumers. Peddlers were able to distribute goods to the more geographically-isolated communities such as those who lived in mountainous regions of Europe. They also called on consumers who, for whatever reason, found it difficult to attend town markets. Thus, peddlers played an important role in linking these consumers and regions to wider trade routes. Some peddlers worked as agents or travelling salesmen for larger manufacturers and so were the precursor to the modern travelling salesman.

Images of peddlers feature in literature and art from as early as the 12th century. Such images were very popular with the genre and Orientalist painters and photographers of the 18th and the 19th centuries. Some imagery depicts peddlers in a pejorative manner, and others portray idealised romantic visions of peddlers at work.

Etymology and definitions edit

 
Three East Karelian "laukkuryssä"[3] peddlers from Kestenga, Russia in Lohja, Finland in the late 19th century.

The origin of the word, known in English since 1225, is uncertain, but is possibly an Anglicised version of the French pied, Latin pes, pedis "foot", referring to a petty trader travelling on foot.

A peddler, under English law, is defined as: "any hawker, pedlar, petty chapman, tinker, caster of metals, mender of chairs, or other person who, without any horse or other beast bearing or drawing burden, travels and trades on foot and goes from town to town or to other men's houses, carrying to sell or exposing for sale any goods, wares, or merchandise immediately to be delivered, or selling or offering for sale his skill in handicraft."[4][5] The main distinction between peddlers and other types of street vendor is that peddlers travel as they trade, rather than travel to a fixed place of trade. Peddlers travel around and approach potential customers directly whereas street traders set up a pitch or a stall and wait for customers to approach them. When not actually engaged in selling, peddlers are required to keep moving. Although peddlers may stop to make a sale, they are precluded from setting up a pitch or remaining in the same place for lengthy periods. Although peddlers normally travel by foot, there is no reason why they cannot use some means of assistance, such as a cart or a trolley, to assist in the transportation of goods.

History edit

 
Ribbon seller at the entrance to the Butter Market, engraving by J.J. Eeckhout, 1884

Peddlers have been known since antiquity. They were known by a variety of names throughout the ages, including Arabber, hawker, costermonger (English), chapman (medieval English), huckster, itinerant[7] vendor or street vendor. According to marketing historian, Eric Shaw, the peddler is "perhaps the only substantiated type of retail marketing practice that evolved from Neolithic times to the present."[8] The political philosopher John Stuart Mill wrote that "even before the resources of society permitted the establishment of shops, the supply of [consumer] wants fell universally into the hands of itinerant dealers, the pedlars who might appear once a month, being preferred to the fair, which only returned once a year."[9]

Typically, peddlers operated door-to-door, plied the streets or stationed themselves at the fringes of formal trade venues such as open air markets or fairs. In the Greco-Roman world, open-air markets served urban customers, while peddlers filled in the gaps in distribution by selling to rural or geographically distant customers.[10]

 
At Khan Al-Tujjar: At the Arab fair, the peddlers open their packages of tempting fabrics; the jeweler is there with his trinkets; the tailor with his ready-made garments; the shoe-maker with his stock, from rough, hairy sandals to yellow and red morocco boots; the farrier is there with his tools, nails, and flat iron shoes, and drives a prosperous business for a few hours; and so does the saddler, with his coarsesacks and his gayly-trimmed cloths.

In the Bible the term 'peddler' was used to describe those who spread the word of God for profit. The book of Corinthians has the following phrase, "For we are not as so many, peddling the word of God" (Corinthians 2:17). The Greek term translated "peddling" referred to small-scale merchant who profited from acting as a middleman between others.[11] The Apocrypha has the following, "A merchant shall hardly keep himself from doing wrong; and an huckster shall not be freed from sin" (Ecclesiasticus 26:29).

In some economies the work of itinerant selling was left to a greater or lesser extent to nomadic minorities, such as gypsies, travellers, or Yeniche who offered a varied assortment of goods and services, both evergreens and (notoriously suspicious) novelties. In 19th century USA, peddling was often the occupation of immigrant communities including Italians, Greeks and Jews.[12] The more colourful peddlers were those that doubled as performers, healers, or fortune-tellers.[13]

Historically, peddlers used a variety of different transport modes: they travelled by foot, carrying their wares; by means of a person or animal-drawn cart or wagon or used improvised carrying devices. Abram Goodman, who took to peddling in the US in the 1840s, reports that he travelled by foot, used a sleigh when roads were snowbound and also travelled, with his pack, by boat when traversing longer distances.[14]

As market towns flourished in medieval Europe, peddlers found a role operating on the fringes of the formal economy. During this time it was common to see long-distance peddlers, who sold remedies, potions and elixirs.[15] They called directly on homes, delivering produce to the door thereby saving customers time travelling to markets or fairs. However, customers paid a higher price for this convenience. Some peddlers operated out of inns or taverns, where they often acted as an agent rather than a reseller.

Peddlers played an important role providing services to geographically isolated districts, such as in the mountainous regions of Europe, thereby linking these districts with wider trading routes.[16]

A 16th-century commentator wrote of the:

many pedlars and chapmen, that from fair to fair, from markett to markett, carieth it to sell in horspakks and fote pakks, in basketts and budgelts, sitting on holydays and sondais in chirche porchis and abbeys dayly to sell all such trifells.[17]

By the 18th-century, some peddlers worked for industrial producers, where they acted as a type of travelling sales representative. In England, these peddlers were known as "Manchester men." Employed by a factory or entrepreneur, they sold goods from shop to shop rather than door to door and were thus operating as a type of wholesaler or distribution intermediary.[18] They were the precursors to the modern sales representative.

 
Fruit peddlers with draft horses and covered wagon, Saint Paul, Minnesota, c. 1928
 
Fanciful drawing by Marguerite Martyn in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch of October 21, 1906, featuring the image of a travelling salesman of lightning rods, in the striped suit

In the United States, there was an upsurge in the number of peddlers in the late 18th century and this may have peaked in the decades just before the American Civil War.[19] However, their numbers began to decline by the 19th century. Advances in industrial mass production and freight transportation as a result of the war laid the groundwork for the beginnings of modern retail and distribution networks, which gradually eroded much of the need for travelling salesmen. The rise of popular mail order catalogues (e.g. Montgomery Ward began in 1872) offered another way for people in rural or other remote areas to obtain items not readily available in local stores or markets. A relatively short-lived upsurge in the number of peddlers was witnessed in the period following the second World War, when the wartime manufacturing boom came to an abrupt end, and returning soldiers finding themselves unable to secure suitable work, turned to peddling which generally offered a decent income.[20]

In the United States, the travelling salesman became a stock character in countless jokes. Such jokes are typically bawdy, and usually feature small town rubes, farmers and other country folk, and frequently another stock character, the farmer's daughter.[21]

Throughout much of Europe, suspicions of dishonest or petty criminal activity was long associated with peddlers and travellers.[22][23] Regulations to discourage small-scale retailing by hawkers and peddlers, promulgated by English authorities in the 15th and 16th centuries and reinforced by the Church, did much to encourage stereotypical and negative attitudes towards peddlers. From the 16th century, peddlers were often associated with pejorative perceptions, many of which persisted until well into the 19th and 20th centuries.[24]

In the modern economy a new breed of peddler, generally encouraged to dress respectably to inspire confidence with the general public, has been sent into the field as an aggressive form of direct marketing by companies pushing their specific products, sometimes to help launch novelties, sometimes on a permanent basis. In a few cases this has even been used as the core of a business.

Life of a peddler edit

 
Belgian milk peddlers, c. 1890-1900

Very few peddlers left written records. Many were illiterate and diaries are rare.[25] Most peddlers handled cash transactions leaving behind few or no accounting records such as receipts, invoices or day- books. However, a very small number of peddlers kept diaries and these can be used to provide an insight into the daily life of a peddler. Ephraim Lisitzky (1885-1962), an immigrant from Russia, arrived in the US in 1900 and took up peddling for a brief period following his arrival. His autobiography, published in 1959 under the title, In the Grip of the Cross-Currents, describes his various encounters with householders and the difficulties he experienced making a sale as door after door was slammed in his face.[26]

After arriving in America in 1842, Abram Vossen Goodman also maintained a diary of his experiences, which has been published by the American Jewish Archives.[27] Excerpts from the diary detail his experiences and thoughts about the life of a peddler. When, Goodman's initial attempts to find employment as a clerk were unsuccessful, he wrote on September 29, "I had to do as all the others; with a bundle on my back I had to go out into the country, peddling various articles." (p. 95) In the first few weeks, he found the lifestyle onerous, uncertain and solitary.

"Can a man, in fact, be said to be "living" as he plods through the vast, remote country, uncertain even as to which farmer will provide him shelter for the coming night? In such an existence the single man gets along far better than the father of a family. Such fools as are married not only suffer themselves, but bring suffering to their women. How must an educated woman feel when, after a brief stay at home, her supporter and shelterer leaves with his pack on his back, not knowing where he will find lodging on the next night or the night after?" (p.96)
"Last week in the vicinity of Plymouth I met two peddlers, Lehman and Marx. Marx knew me from Furth, and that night we stayed together at a farmer's house. After supper we started singing, and I sat at the fireplace, thinking of all my past and of my family." (p.100)
[By October,1842 Goodman is travelling with a brother] "Not far from [Lunenburg] we were forced to stop on Wednesday because of the heavy snow. We sought to spend the night with a cooper, a Mr. Spaulding, but his wife did not wish to take us in. She was afraid of strangers, she might not sleep well; we should go our way. And outside there raged the worst blizzard I have ever seen... After we had talked to this woman for half an hour, after repeatedly pointing out that to turn us forth into the blizzard would be sinful, we were allowed to stay." (p.101)
"On Monday morning, December 5th, we set out for Groton in a sleigh and at night stayed with an old farmer, about two miles from that place. It was a very satisfactory business day, and we took in about fifteen dollars... After spending Wednesday in Milford, we traveled beyond on Thursday and Friday, spending Saturday at Amherst and Sunday at the home of Mr. Kendall in Mount Vernon. Business, thanks be to God, is satisfactory, and this week we took in more than forty-five dollars. (p. 103)
"It is hard, very hard indeed, to make a living this way. Sweat runs down my body in great drops and my back seems to be breaking, but I cannot stop; I must go on and on, however far my way lies...Times are bad; everywhere there is no money. This increases the hardship of life so that I am sometimes tempted to return to New York and to start all over again. (pp 107-108)

Modes of transport edit

Today, peddlers continue to travel by foot, but also use bicycle, hand-held carts, horse-drawn carts or drays and motorized vehicles such as motor-bikes as transport modes. To carry their wares, peddlers use purpose-built back-packs, barrows, hand-carts or improvised carrying baskets. Rickshaw peddlers are a relatively common sight across Asia.

Legislation and regulation edit

A number of countries have enacted laws to protect the rights of peddlers, and also to protect the public from the sale of inferior goods. In many states of the US, peddlers are required to apply for a license.[28] India has special laws enacted, by the efforts of planners which give mongers higher rights as compared to other businessmen. For example, mongers have a right of way over motorized vehicles.

In Britain, peddling is still governed by the Pedlars Act 1871, which provides for a "pedlar's certificate". Application is usually made to the police. In the late 20th century, the use of such certificates became rare as other civic legislation including the Civic Government (Scotland) Act 1982 and the Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1982 for England & Wales introduced a street trader's licence. As of 2008 the pedlar's certificates remain legal and in use, although several local councils have sought to eradicate peddlers by way of local bylaws or enforcement mechanisms such as making them apply for a street trader's licence.

Types and names edit

 
A typical door-to-door vendor in rural Zhangpu County, Fujian, China.
 
A peddler woman in Nishapur.
 
Peddlers in the street, Boston, c. 1915
 
Peddling fruit, Turkey, 1872-1885

Literal compounds formed from these synonyms are:

Metaphoric compounds, since the 16th century mostly pejorative, formed from these synonyms are:

  • Disease mongering
  • Flesh monger, procurer for prostitution
  • Gossip monger (a quidnunc)[30]
  • Merit-monger, in the 18th century a "do-gooder"
  • Power monger
  • Rumor monger
  • Scandal monger
  • Scare monger
  • Warmonger, recorded since 1590 (Spenser's "Faerie Queene"), likely more widespread than any of the literal uses[clarification needed][citation needed]

Names, most archaic, of product- or industry-specific types of peddlers include:

Names, some pejorative, of other sub- or supertypes or close relatives of peddlers include:

Individual peddlers (of myth and history)

Although there are basic similarities between the activities in the Old World and the New World there are also significant differences. In Britain the word was more specific to an individual selling small items of household goods from door to door. It was not usually applied to Gypsies.

  • Food traders were normally badgers
  • Sellers of chapbooks were chapmen; compare the term stationer which described a bookseller (usually near a university) whose shop was fixed and permanent.
  • In Russia a Khodebshchik (Russian: ходебщик) was a person carrying a billboard advertising a product or service, a street hawker or peddler of wares, or house-to-house salesman in the 16th–19th centuries.

In literature and art edit

 
The Pedlar by Hieronymous Bosch, c. 1500

Peddlers have been the subject of numerous paintings, sketches and watercolours in both Western art and in the Orient, where they depict familiar scenes of every day life. Some of the earliest paintings of peddlers were made in China. The 12th century Chinese artist, Su Hanchen made several paintings of peddlers as did one of his contemporaries, Li Song, both of whom painted The Knick knack Peddler.

The Peddlar by Hieronymous Bosch is perhaps the most icononic image of a peddler. Painted in about 1500, the peddler in this painting wears a costume almost identical to thieves in other Bosch paintings.[31] From the 18th-century, engravings featuring peddlers and street vendors featured in numerous volumes dedicated to representations of street life.[32] One of the first of such publications was a French publication, Etudes Prises Dans let Bas Peuple, Ou Les Cris de Paris (1737) (roughly translated as Studies Taken of the Lower People, Or The Cries of Paris).[33] In 1757, the first English publication in this genre was The Cries of London Calculated to Entertain the Minds of Old and Young; illustrated in variety of copper plates neatly engrav'd with an emblematical description of each subject, was published.[34] and followed by Cries of London (1775)[35] These were followed by numerous illustrated works which continued into the twentieth century.

Bonnie Young has pointed out that the theme of the monkey and the peddler was relatively common in Medieval art across Europe. These scenes, which appear in books and on silverware, often depict bands of monkeys robbing the peddler while he sleeps. Such images may have been popular in medieval society, because the peddler shared many of the same vices as a monkey; he was seen as "a showman, a bit of a trickster and not always acquiring his wares by honest means and plying them without too much regard for the quality of the merchandise."[36]

The Cheap Jack stereotype appears often in 19th century literature. The most famous example is probably Charles Dickens' ‟Doctor Marigold‟. A short story it was originally written for one of his Christmas editions of All the Year Round. In collected editions of Dickens' works, it appears in the volume Christmas Stories.

Russian lubok prints (popular prints) also feature peddlers along with other popular stereotypes. Some scholars suggest that the origin of the term, lubok, may have come from the word lubki - a type of basket typically carried by peddlers as they carried a myriad of different wares into villages in old Russia.[37] Korobeiniki is a Russian folk song that describes a meeting between a peddler and a girl. Their haggling is a metaphor for their courtship.

The Lady and the Peddler, (1947) is an American play by Yosefa Even Shoshan and adapted from a story by S.Y. Agnon. The plot concerns a Jewish peddler who takes up residence with a mysterious gentile woman. Residing in a forest setting, the situation is idyllic for the travelling salesman, as the woman provides for all his needs and never asks for anything in return. Soon, however, he comes to realise that the woman is an evil spirit in disguise. The story is thought to be a metaphor for the dislocation and destruction of European Jews.[38]St Patrick and the Peddler by Margaret Hodges is a novel about a peddler who is visited by St Patrick in his dreams and through a circuitous route uncovers great riches.

Robin Hood and the Peddler is a ballad that now forms part of the collection at the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress.[39]

The Merchant of Four Seasons (1972) is a critically acclaimed film about a German fruit-peddler, directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder.[40]

The Tin Men (1987), a feature film directed by Barry Levinson and starring Richard Dreyfuss and Danny De Vito, is a comedy set in 1963, concerning two aluminium salesmen and the dirty tricks they use to make a sale as they try to out-compete each other.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Words Packman and Peddler have similar meaning – Thesaurus.plus
  2. ^ Erdman, Harley (Fall 1995). "M. B. Curtis and the Making of the American Stage Jew". Journal of American Ethnic History. University of Illinois Press. 15 (1): 28–45.
  3. ^ THE LANGUAGES OF FINLAND 1917–2017 - University of Helsinki
  4. ^ The Pedlars Act, 1871, Section 3
  5. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Hawkers and Pedlars". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 97.
  6. ^ itinerant on Wiktionary
  7. ^ habitually moving / wandering / travelling from place to place.[6]
  8. ^ Shaw, E. H. "Ancient and medieval marketing" in Jones, D.G. Brian and Tadajewski, Mark, The Routledge Companion to Marketing History, London, Routledge, p. 24. ISBN 9781134688685
  9. ^ Mill, J.S., Principles of a Political Economy, London, Longman, 1909, Bk.I, Ch.II
  10. ^ Braudel, F. and Reynold, S., The Wheels of Commerce: Civilization and Capitalism, 15th to 18th Century, Berkeley, CA, University of California Press, 1992
  11. ^ Kurke, Leslie (1999). Coins, bodies, games, and gold : the politics of meaning in archaic Greece. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-691-00736-6. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
  12. ^ "Street Peddling," Encyclopedia of Chicago, <Online: http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/1206.html>
  13. ^ Diner, H., "German Jews and Peddling in America." In Immigrant Entrepreneurship: German-American Business Biographies, 1720 to the Present, vol. 2, edited by William J. Hausman, German Historical Institute, 2014, <Online:http://www.immigrantentrepreneurship.org/entry.php?rec=191>
  14. ^ Goodman, A.V., A Jewish Peddler's Diary: ABRAM VOSSEN GOODMAN, 1842-43, American Jewish Archives, p. 101, <Online:http://americanjewisharchives.org/publications/journal/PDF/1951_03_03_00_doc_kohn_goodman.pdf>
  15. ^ Black, Christopher (2001). Early modern Italy : a social history. London: Routledge. pp. 41–42. ISBN 0-203-17015-6. OCLC 49414898.
  16. ^ Casson, M. and Lee, J., "The Origin and Development of Markets: A Business History Perspective," Business History Review, Vol 85, Spring, 2011, doi:10.1017/S0007680511000018, pp 31-32
  17. ^ Tudor Documents cited in Casson, M. and Lee, J., "The Origin and Development of Markets: A Business History Perspective," Business History Review, Vol 85, Spring, 2011, doi:10.1017/S0007680511000018, p. 32
  18. ^ Casson, M. and Lee, J., "The Origin and Development of Markets: A Business History Perspective," Business History Review, Vol 85, Spring, 2011, doi:10.1017/S0007680511000018, p. 33
  19. ^ Malcolm Keir, R., "The Tin-Peddler," Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 21, No. 3, March, 1913, pp. 255-258 <Online: https://www.jstor.org/stable/1819807>
  20. ^ Buck, D.S., Deaf Peddler: Confessions of an Inside Man, Washington, Gallaudet University Press, 2000 pp 4-5
  21. ^ Buck, D.S., Deaf Peddler: Confessions of an Inside Man, Washington, Gallaudet University Press, 2000 pp 5-8
  22. ^ Mayhew, Henry, London Labour and the London Poor. Researched and written, variously, with J. Binny, B. Hemyng and A. Halliday.
  23. ^ Chesney, K., The Victorian Underworld, Penguin, 1970. Recounts criminal and quasi-criminal activity in countryside and city.
  24. ^ Jones, P.T.A., "Redressing Reform Narratives: Victorian London's Street Markets and the Informal Supply Lines of Urban Modernity," The London Journal, Vol 41, No. 1, 2006, pp 63–64
  25. ^ Brown, D., The Autobiography of a Pedlar: John Lomas of Hollinsclough, Staffordshire (1747-1823), Midland History, 1996
  26. ^ Lisistzky's story is recounted in Rubin, S.J. (ed), Writing Out Lives: Autobiographies of American Jews, 1890-1990, Jewish Publication Society
  27. ^ Goodman, A.V., A Jewish Peddler's Diary: ABRAM VOSSEN GOODMAN, 1842-43, American Jewish Archives, <Online:http://americanjewisharchives.org/publications/journal/PDF/1951_03_03_00_doc_kohn_goodman.pdf>
  28. ^ Massachusetts, Consumer Affairs, http://www.mass.gov/ocabr/government/oca-agencies/dos-lp/dos-licensing/hawker-and-peddler-license/information.html; Michigan State Licenses, http://www.michigan.gov/statelicensesearch/0,1607,7-180-24786_24828-81612--,00.html; Denver State Business, https://www.denvergov.org/content/denvergov/en/denver-business-licensing-center/business-licenses/peddler.html
  29. ^ Quidnunc Definition & Meaning – Dictionary.com
  30. ^ a person eager to learn gossip, news or scandal; or a busybody.[29]
  31. ^ Gilchrist, S.F., "The Good Thief Imagined as a Peddler," Notes in the History of Art, Vol. 17, No. 2, 1998
  32. ^ Shesgreen, S., Images of the Outcast: The Urban Poor in the Cries of London, New Brunswick, N.J., Rutgers University Press, 2002, especially Chapter 1; Harms, R., Raymond, J. and Salman, J., Not Dead Things: The Dissemination of Popular Print in England and Wales, Brill, 2013
  33. ^ Bouchardon, Edmé, Etudes Prises Dans let Bas Peuple, Ou Les Cris de Paris Paris, E. Fessard, 1737.
  34. ^ The Cries of London Calculated to Entertain the Minds of Old and Young; illustrated in variety of copper plates neatly engrav'd with an emblematical description of each subject, Vol. III. London, H. Roberts, c.1760 was published
  35. ^ Cries of London, London, I. Kirk, 1757
  36. ^ Young, Bonnie, "The Monkeys & the Peddler," The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, 26.10, 1968, pp 441–454. <Online: https://www.metmuseum.org/pubs/bulletins/1/pdf/3258815.pdf.bannered.pdf>
  37. ^ Watstein, J., "Ivan Sytin: An Old Russia Success Story," The Russian Review, Vol. 30, No. 1, pp. 43-53, DOI: 10.2307/127474, Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/127474
  38. ^ Sheward, D., "Gimpel the Fool & The Lady and the Peddler," [Off-Off-Broadway Review], Backstage, 20 January 2012, <Online: https://www.backstage.com/review/ny-theater/off-off-broadway/gimpel-the-fool-the-lady-and-the-peddler>
  39. ^ Library of Congress, Catalogue, https://www.loc.gov/item/afc9999005.34318/
  40. ^ Magill, Frank Northen (June 30, 1985). Magill's Survey of Cinema, Foreign Language Films. Salem Press. ISBN 9780893562489 – via Google Books.

Bibliography edit

  • Dolan, J.R. (1964), Yankee Peddlers of Early America.
  • Spufford, M. (1981), Small Books and Pleasant Histories: Popular Fiction and its Readership in seventeenth Century England.
  • Spufford, M. (1984), The Great Reclothing of Rural England: Petty Chapmen and their Wares in the Seventeenth Century.
  • Wright, R.L. (1927), Hawkers and Walkers in Early America.
  • Station Chief at Etymonline.com
  • Peddler at Etymonline.com

Further reading edit

  • Brown, D., The Autobiography of a Pedlar: John Lomas of Hollinsclough, Staffordshire (1747-1823), Midland History, 1996

peddler, peddle, redirects, here, surname, peddle, surname, other, uses, pedlar, pedlar, disambiguation, confused, with, pedal, disambiguation, peddler, british, english, pedlar, also, known, chapman, packman, cheapjack, hawker, higler, huckster, coster, monge. Peddle redirects here For the surname see Peddle surname For other uses of Pedlar see Pedlar disambiguation Not to be confused with Pedal disambiguation A peddler in British English pedlar also known as a chapman packman 1 cheapjack hawker higler huckster coster monger colporteur or solicitor not in Britain is a door to door and or travelling vendor of goods In 19th century America the word drummer was often used to refer to a peddler or traveling salesman as exemplified in the popular play Sam l of Posen or The Commercial Drummer by George H Jessop 2 A Peking fruit seller c 1869Peddler in Ho Chi Minh City VietnamIn England the term was mostly used for travellers hawking goods in the countryside to small towns and villages In London more specific terms were used such as costermonger From antiquity peddlers filled the gaps in the formal market economy by providing consumers with the convenience of door to door service They operated alongside town markets and fairs where they often purchased surplus stocks which were subsequently resold to consumers Peddlers were able to distribute goods to the more geographically isolated communities such as those who lived in mountainous regions of Europe They also called on consumers who for whatever reason found it difficult to attend town markets Thus peddlers played an important role in linking these consumers and regions to wider trade routes Some peddlers worked as agents or travelling salesmen for larger manufacturers and so were the precursor to the modern travelling salesman Images of peddlers feature in literature and art from as early as the 12th century Such images were very popular with the genre and Orientalist painters and photographers of the 18th and the 19th centuries Some imagery depicts peddlers in a pejorative manner and others portray idealised romantic visions of peddlers at work Contents 1 Etymology and definitions 2 History 3 Life of a peddler 4 Modes of transport 5 Legislation and regulation 6 Types and names 7 In literature and art 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further readingEtymology and definitions edit nbsp Three East Karelian laukkuryssa 3 peddlers from Kestenga Russia in Lohja Finland in the late 19th century The origin of the word known in English since 1225 is uncertain but is possibly an Anglicised version of the French pied Latin pes pedis foot referring to a petty trader travelling on foot A peddler under English law is defined as any hawker pedlar petty chapman tinker caster of metals mender of chairs or other person who without any horse or other beast bearing or drawing burden travels and trades on foot and goes from town to town or to other men s houses carrying to sell or exposing for sale any goods wares or merchandise immediately to be delivered or selling or offering for sale his skill in handicraft 4 5 The main distinction between peddlers and other types of street vendor is that peddlers travel as they trade rather than travel to a fixed place of trade Peddlers travel around and approach potential customers directly whereas street traders set up a pitch or a stall and wait for customers to approach them When not actually engaged in selling peddlers are required to keep moving Although peddlers may stop to make a sale they are precluded from setting up a pitch or remaining in the same place for lengthy periods Although peddlers normally travel by foot there is no reason why they cannot use some means of assistance such as a cart or a trolley to assist in the transportation of goods History edit nbsp Ribbon seller at the entrance to the Butter Market engraving by J J Eeckhout 1884Peddlers have been known since antiquity They were known by a variety of names throughout the ages including Arabber hawker costermonger English chapman medieval English huckster itinerant 7 vendor or street vendor According to marketing historian Eric Shaw the peddler is perhaps the only substantiated type of retail marketing practice that evolved from Neolithic times to the present 8 The political philosopher John Stuart Mill wrote that even before the resources of society permitted the establishment of shops the supply of consumer wants fell universally into the hands of itinerant dealers the pedlars who might appear once a month being preferred to the fair which only returned once a year 9 Typically peddlers operated door to door plied the streets or stationed themselves at the fringes of formal trade venues such as open air markets or fairs In the Greco Roman world open air markets served urban customers while peddlers filled in the gaps in distribution by selling to rural or geographically distant customers 10 nbsp At Khan Al Tujjar At the Arab fair the peddlers open their packages of tempting fabrics the jeweler is there with his trinkets the tailor with his ready made garments the shoe maker with his stock from rough hairy sandals to yellow and red morocco boots the farrier is there with his tools nails and flat iron shoes and drives a prosperous business for a few hours and so does the saddler with his coarsesacks and his gayly trimmed cloths In the Bible the term peddler was used to describe those who spread the word of God for profit The book of Corinthians has the following phrase For we are not as so many peddling the word of God Corinthians 2 17 The Greek term translated peddling referred to small scale merchant who profited from acting as a middleman between others 11 The Apocrypha has the following A merchant shall hardly keep himself from doing wrong and an huckster shall not be freed from sin Ecclesiasticus 26 29 In some economies the work of itinerant selling was left to a greater or lesser extent to nomadic minorities such as gypsies travellers or Yeniche who offered a varied assortment of goods and services both evergreens and notoriously suspicious novelties In 19th century USA peddling was often the occupation of immigrant communities including Italians Greeks and Jews 12 The more colourful peddlers were those that doubled as performers healers or fortune tellers 13 Historically peddlers used a variety of different transport modes they travelled by foot carrying their wares by means of a person or animal drawn cart or wagon or used improvised carrying devices Abram Goodman who took to peddling in the US in the 1840s reports that he travelled by foot used a sleigh when roads were snowbound and also travelled with his pack by boat when traversing longer distances 14 As market towns flourished in medieval Europe peddlers found a role operating on the fringes of the formal economy During this time it was common to see long distance peddlers who sold remedies potions and elixirs 15 They called directly on homes delivering produce to the door thereby saving customers time travelling to markets or fairs However customers paid a higher price for this convenience Some peddlers operated out of inns or taverns where they often acted as an agent rather than a reseller Peddlers played an important role providing services to geographically isolated districts such as in the mountainous regions of Europe thereby linking these districts with wider trading routes 16 A 16th century commentator wrote of the many pedlars and chapmen that from fair to fair from markett to markett carieth it to sell in horspakks and fote pakks in basketts and budgelts sitting on holydays and sondais in chirche porchis and abbeys dayly to sell all such trifells 17 By the 18th century some peddlers worked for industrial producers where they acted as a type of travelling sales representative In England these peddlers were known as Manchester men Employed by a factory or entrepreneur they sold goods from shop to shop rather than door to door and were thus operating as a type of wholesaler or distribution intermediary 18 They were the precursors to the modern sales representative nbsp Fruit peddlers with draft horses and covered wagon Saint Paul Minnesota c 1928 nbsp Fanciful drawing by Marguerite Martyn in the St Louis Post Dispatch of October 21 1906 featuring the image of a travelling salesman of lightning rods in the striped suitIn the United States there was an upsurge in the number of peddlers in the late 18th century and this may have peaked in the decades just before the American Civil War 19 However their numbers began to decline by the 19th century Advances in industrial mass production and freight transportation as a result of the war laid the groundwork for the beginnings of modern retail and distribution networks which gradually eroded much of the need for travelling salesmen The rise of popular mail order catalogues e g Montgomery Ward began in 1872 offered another way for people in rural or other remote areas to obtain items not readily available in local stores or markets A relatively short lived upsurge in the number of peddlers was witnessed in the period following the second World War when the wartime manufacturing boom came to an abrupt end and returning soldiers finding themselves unable to secure suitable work turned to peddling which generally offered a decent income 20 In the United States the travelling salesman became a stock character in countless jokes Such jokes are typically bawdy and usually feature small town rubes farmers and other country folk and frequently another stock character the farmer s daughter 21 Throughout much of Europe suspicions of dishonest or petty criminal activity was long associated with peddlers and travellers 22 23 Regulations to discourage small scale retailing by hawkers and peddlers promulgated by English authorities in the 15th and 16th centuries and reinforced by the Church did much to encourage stereotypical and negative attitudes towards peddlers From the 16th century peddlers were often associated with pejorative perceptions many of which persisted until well into the 19th and 20th centuries 24 In the modern economy a new breed of peddler generally encouraged to dress respectably to inspire confidence with the general public has been sent into the field as an aggressive form of direct marketing by companies pushing their specific products sometimes to help launch novelties sometimes on a permanent basis In a few cases this has even been used as the core of a business Life of a peddler edit nbsp Belgian milk peddlers c 1890 1900Very few peddlers left written records Many were illiterate and diaries are rare 25 Most peddlers handled cash transactions leaving behind few or no accounting records such as receipts invoices or day books However a very small number of peddlers kept diaries and these can be used to provide an insight into the daily life of a peddler Ephraim Lisitzky 1885 1962 an immigrant from Russia arrived in the US in 1900 and took up peddling for a brief period following his arrival His autobiography published in 1959 under the title In the Grip of the Cross Currents describes his various encounters with householders and the difficulties he experienced making a sale as door after door was slammed in his face 26 After arriving in America in 1842 Abram Vossen Goodman also maintained a diary of his experiences which has been published by the American Jewish Archives 27 Excerpts from the diary detail his experiences and thoughts about the life of a peddler When Goodman s initial attempts to find employment as a clerk were unsuccessful he wrote on September 29 I had to do as all the others with a bundle on my back I had to go out into the country peddling various articles p 95 In the first few weeks he found the lifestyle onerous uncertain and solitary Can a man in fact be said to be living as he plods through the vast remote country uncertain even as to which farmer will provide him shelter for the coming night In such an existence the single man gets along far better than the father of a family Such fools as are married not only suffer themselves but bring suffering to their women How must an educated woman feel when after a brief stay at home her supporter and shelterer leaves with his pack on his back not knowing where he will find lodging on the next night or the night after p 96 dd Last week in the vicinity of Plymouth I met two peddlers Lehman and Marx Marx knew me from Furth and that night we stayed together at a farmer s house After supper we started singing and I sat at the fireplace thinking of all my past and of my family p 100 dd By October 1842 Goodman is travelling with a brother Not far from Lunenburg we were forced to stop on Wednesday because of the heavy snow We sought to spend the night with a cooper a Mr Spaulding but his wife did not wish to take us in She was afraid of strangers she might not sleep well we should go our way And outside there raged the worst blizzard I have ever seen After we had talked to this woman for half an hour after repeatedly pointing out that to turn us forth into the blizzard would be sinful we were allowed to stay p 101 dd On Monday morning December 5th we set out for Groton in a sleigh and at night stayed with an old farmer about two miles from that place It was a very satisfactory business day and we took in about fifteen dollars After spending Wednesday in Milford we traveled beyond on Thursday and Friday spending Saturday at Amherst and Sunday at the home of Mr Kendall in Mount Vernon Business thanks be to God is satisfactory and this week we took in more than forty five dollars p 103 dd It is hard very hard indeed to make a living this way Sweat runs down my body in great drops and my back seems to be breaking but I cannot stop I must go on and on however far my way lies Times are bad everywhere there is no money This increases the hardship of life so that I am sometimes tempted to return to New York and to start all over again pp 107 108 dd Modes of transport editToday peddlers continue to travel by foot but also use bicycle hand held carts horse drawn carts or drays and motorized vehicles such as motor bikes as transport modes To carry their wares peddlers use purpose built back packs barrows hand carts or improvised carrying baskets Rickshaw peddlers are a relatively common sight across Asia nbsp Modern day peddler in Amsterdam Netherlands c 2020 nbsp Vegetable peddler Japan 19th century nbsp Cycle mounted Breton onion salesmen are a familiar sight across southern England and Wales nbsp Mush Fakers and Ginger Beer Makers London circa 1877 nbsp Fruit peddler and barrow Sydney circa 1885 nbsp Peddler from Russia circa 1900s nbsp A door to door peddler 1905 nbsp David and Harry Silverman in their fruit peddling cart Saint Paul Minnesota c 1920 nbsp Mandalay rickshaw peddler nbsp The Produce Peddler Fez Morocco nbsp Street vendor in Maracaibo with improvised carry container nbsp Banana vendor Uganda nbsp Balloon Salesman nbsp Food peddlers are the mainstay of the floating markets in Thailand nbsp Ice cream seller in Paris France 2010 nbsp Goat wagon peddler late 19th centuryLegislation and regulation editA number of countries have enacted laws to protect the rights of peddlers and also to protect the public from the sale of inferior goods In many states of the US peddlers are required to apply for a license 28 India has special laws enacted by the efforts of planners which give mongers higher rights as compared to other businessmen For example mongers have a right of way over motorized vehicles In Britain peddling is still governed by the Pedlars Act 1871 which provides for a pedlar s certificate Application is usually made to the police In the late 20th century the use of such certificates became rare as other civic legislation including the Civic Government Scotland Act 1982 and the Local Government Miscellaneous Provisions Act 1982 for England amp Wales introduced a street trader s licence As of 2008 the pedlar s certificates remain legal and in use although several local councils have sought to eradicate peddlers by way of local bylaws or enforcement mechanisms such as making them apply for a street trader s licence Types and names edit nbsp A typical door to door vendor in rural Zhangpu County Fujian China nbsp A peddler woman in Nishapur nbsp Peddlers in the street Boston c 1915 nbsp Peddling fruit Turkey 1872 1885Literal compounds formed from these synonyms are Cheesemonger cheese Costermonger apples Fishmonger seafood Ironmonger iron wares Upholsterer monger a peddler of fabrics and stitching Metaphoric compounds since the 16th century mostly pejorative formed from these synonyms are Disease mongering Flesh monger procurer for prostitution Gossip monger a quidnunc 30 Merit monger in the 18th century a do gooder Power monger Rumor monger Scandal monger Scare monger Warmonger recorded since 1590 Spenser s Faerie Queene likely more widespread than any of the literal uses clarification needed citation needed Names most archaic of product or industry specific types of peddlers include Chandler ship s stores Collier coal Milliner hats Lanier now only a surname formerly a peddler of wool Cooper barrels Names some pejorative of other sub or supertypes or close relatives of peddlers include Arabber Costermonger Door to door salesman Haberdasher Hawker Huckster Pusher Merchant Seller Tout Travelling salesman Rag and bone man Street vendorIndividual peddlers of myth and history Pedlar of Swaffham 1699 James Macfarlan 1832 1862 Scottish poet and peddlerAlthough there are basic similarities between the activities in the Old World and the New World there are also significant differences In Britain the word was more specific to an individual selling small items of household goods from door to door It was not usually applied to Gypsies Food traders were normally badgers Sellers of chapbooks were chapmen compare the term stationer which described a bookseller usually near a university whose shop was fixed and permanent In Russia a Khodebshchik Russian hodebshik was a person carrying a billboard advertising a product or service a street hawker or peddler of wares or house to house salesman in the 16th 19th centuries In literature and art edit nbsp The Pedlar by Hieronymous Bosch c 1500Peddlers have been the subject of numerous paintings sketches and watercolours in both Western art and in the Orient where they depict familiar scenes of every day life Some of the earliest paintings of peddlers were made in China The 12th century Chinese artist Su Hanchen made several paintings of peddlers as did one of his contemporaries Li Song both of whom painted The Knick knack Peddler The Peddlar by Hieronymous Bosch is perhaps the most icononic image of a peddler Painted in about 1500 the peddler in this painting wears a costume almost identical to thieves in other Bosch paintings 31 From the 18th century engravings featuring peddlers and street vendors featured in numerous volumes dedicated to representations of street life 32 One of the first of such publications was a French publication Etudes Prises Dans let Bas Peuple Ou Les Cris de Paris 1737 roughly translated as Studies Taken of the Lower People Or The Cries of Paris 33 In 1757 the first English publication in this genre was The Cries of London Calculated to Entertain the Minds of Old and Young illustrated in variety of copper plates neatly engrav d with an emblematical description of each subject was published 34 and followed by Cries of London 1775 35 These were followed by numerous illustrated works which continued into the twentieth century Bonnie Young has pointed out that the theme of the monkey and the peddler was relatively common in Medieval art across Europe These scenes which appear in books and on silverware often depict bands of monkeys robbing the peddler while he sleeps Such images may have been popular in medieval society because the peddler shared many of the same vices as a monkey he was seen as a showman a bit of a trickster and not always acquiring his wares by honest means and plying them without too much regard for the quality of the merchandise 36 The Cheap Jack stereotype appears often in 19th century literature The most famous example is probably Charles Dickens Doctor Marigold A short story it was originally written for one of his Christmas editions of All the Year Round In collected editions of Dickens works it appears in the volume Christmas Stories Russian lubok prints popular prints also feature peddlers along with other popular stereotypes Some scholars suggest that the origin of the term lubok may have come from the word lubki a type of basket typically carried by peddlers as they carried a myriad of different wares into villages in old Russia 37 Korobeiniki is a Russian folk song that describes a meeting between a peddler and a girl Their haggling is a metaphor for their courtship The Lady and the Peddler 1947 is an American play by Yosefa Even Shoshan and adapted from a story by S Y Agnon The plot concerns a Jewish peddler who takes up residence with a mysterious gentile woman Residing in a forest setting the situation is idyllic for the travelling salesman as the woman provides for all his needs and never asks for anything in return Soon however he comes to realise that the woman is an evil spirit in disguise The story is thought to be a metaphor for the dislocation and destruction of European Jews 38 St Patrick and the Peddler by Margaret Hodges is a novel about a peddler who is visited by St Patrick in his dreams and through a circuitous route uncovers great riches Robin Hood and the Peddler is a ballad that now forms part of the collection at the American Folklife Center Library of Congress 39 The Merchant of Four Seasons 1972 is a critically acclaimed film about a German fruit peddler directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder 40 The Tin Men 1987 a feature film directed by Barry Levinson and starring Richard Dreyfuss and Danny De Vito is a comedy set in 1963 concerning two aluminium salesmen and the dirty tricks they use to make a sale as they try to out compete each other nbsp The Knick knack Peddler by Su Hanchen 12th Century nbsp The Pedlar by Hans Holbein 1538 Pedlar nbsp The spectacle pedlar Rembrandt van Rijn c 1624 1625 nbsp Coffee Peddler engraving from Etudes Prises Dans let Bas Peuple Ou Les Cris de Paris 1737 nbsp Broom Peddler by Francois Joullain Etching 1737 nbsp Cherry peddler in Bucharest painting by Amadeo Preziosi c 1869 nbsp The Shrimp Girl by William Hogarth 1740 nbsp Portuguese peddler by Henry L Eveque 1814 nbsp Fawcett as Autolycus by Thomas Wageman 1828 nbsp Poultry seller by Jean Davillier 1874 nbsp Pedlar by Carl Spitzweg 1875 nbsp London Pedlar by Gustave Dore late 19th century nbsp Russian peddler by Emile Francois Dessain 1882 nbsp Basket Pedlar by Victor Fournel 1887 nbsp Slovak peddler by Antonin Holper 1888 nbsp Punch 1892 nbsp Brandy Peddler from Paul Clacquesin Histoire de la Communaute des Distillateurs 1900 nbsp Sbitenshchik and Khodebshchik a lubok print 19th century nbsp The Peddler US 1903 chalk drawing unknown artist nbsp Venetian fish seller by Giuseppe Barison 1906See also editCharlatan Joan Dant QuackeryReferences edit Words Packman and Peddler have similar meaning Thesaurus plus Erdman Harley Fall 1995 M B Curtis and the Making of the American Stage Jew Journal of American Ethnic History University of Illinois Press 15 1 28 45 THE LANGUAGES OF FINLAND 1917 2017 University of Helsinki The Pedlars Act 1871 Section 3 nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Hawkers and Pedlars Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 97 itinerant on Wiktionary habitually moving wandering travelling from place to place 6 Shaw E H Ancient and medieval marketing in Jones D G Brian and Tadajewski Mark The Routledge Companion to Marketing History London Routledge p 24 ISBN 9781134688685 Mill J S Principles of a Political Economy London Longman 1909 Bk I Ch II Braudel F and Reynold S The Wheels of Commerce Civilization and Capitalism 15th to 18th Century Berkeley CA University of California Press 1992 Kurke Leslie 1999 Coins bodies games and gold the politics of meaning in archaic Greece Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 72 ISBN 978 0 691 00736 6 Retrieved 2 September 2017 Street Peddling Encyclopedia of Chicago lt Online http www encyclopedia chicagohistory org pages 1206 html gt Diner H German Jews and Peddling in America In Immigrant Entrepreneurship German American Business Biographies 1720 to the Present vol 2 edited by William J Hausman German Historical Institute 2014 lt Online http www immigrantentrepreneurship org entry php rec 191 gt Goodman A V A Jewish Peddler s Diary ABRAM VOSSEN GOODMAN 1842 43 American Jewish Archives p 101 lt Online http americanjewisharchives org publications journal PDF 1951 03 03 00 doc kohn goodman pdf gt Black Christopher 2001 Early modern Italy a social history London Routledge pp 41 42 ISBN 0 203 17015 6 OCLC 49414898 Casson M and Lee J The Origin and Development of Markets A Business History Perspective Business History Review Vol 85 Spring 2011 doi 10 1017 S0007680511000018 pp 31 32 Tudor Documents cited in Casson M and Lee J The Origin and Development of Markets A Business History Perspective Business History Review Vol 85 Spring 2011 doi 10 1017 S0007680511000018 p 32 Casson M and Lee J The Origin and Development of Markets A Business History Perspective Business History Review Vol 85 Spring 2011 doi 10 1017 S0007680511000018 p 33 Malcolm Keir R The Tin Peddler Journal of Political Economy Vol 21 No 3 March 1913 pp 255 258 lt Online https www jstor org stable 1819807 gt Buck D S Deaf Peddler Confessions of an Inside Man Washington Gallaudet University Press 2000 pp 4 5 Buck D S Deaf Peddler Confessions of an Inside Man Washington Gallaudet University Press 2000 pp 5 8 Mayhew Henry London Labour and the London Poor Researched and written variously with J Binny B Hemyng and A Halliday Chesney K The Victorian Underworld Penguin 1970 Recounts criminal and quasi criminal activity in countryside and city Jones P T A Redressing Reform Narratives Victorian London s Street Markets and the Informal Supply Lines of Urban Modernity The London Journal Vol 41 No 1 2006 pp 63 64 Brown D The Autobiography of a Pedlar John Lomas of Hollinsclough Staffordshire 1747 1823 Midland History 1996 Lisistzky s story is recounted in Rubin S J ed Writing Out Lives Autobiographies of American Jews 1890 1990 Jewish Publication Society Goodman A V A Jewish Peddler s Diary ABRAM VOSSEN GOODMAN 1842 43 American Jewish Archives lt Online http americanjewisharchives org publications journal PDF 1951 03 03 00 doc kohn goodman pdf gt Massachusetts Consumer Affairs http www mass gov ocabr government oca agencies dos lp dos licensing hawker and peddler license information html Michigan State Licenses http www michigan gov statelicensesearch 0 1607 7 180 24786 24828 81612 00 html Denver State Business https www denvergov org content denvergov en denver business licensing center business licenses peddler html Quidnunc Definition amp Meaning Dictionary com a person eager to learn gossip news or scandal or a busybody 29 Gilchrist S F The Good Thief Imagined as a Peddler Notes in the History of Art Vol 17 No 2 1998 Shesgreen S Images of the Outcast The Urban Poor in the Cries of London New Brunswick N J Rutgers University Press 2002 especially Chapter 1 Harms R Raymond J and Salman J Not Dead Things The Dissemination of Popular Print in England and Wales Brill 2013 Bouchardon Edme Etudes Prises Dans let Bas Peuple Ou Les Cris de Paris Paris E Fessard 1737 The Cries of London Calculated to Entertain the Minds of Old and Young illustrated in variety of copper plates neatly engrav d with an emblematical description of each subject Vol III London H Roberts c 1760 was published Cries of London London I Kirk 1757 Young Bonnie The Monkeys amp the Peddler The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 26 10 1968 pp 441 454 lt Online https www metmuseum org pubs bulletins 1 pdf 3258815 pdf bannered pdf gt Watstein J Ivan Sytin An Old Russia Success Story The Russian Review Vol 30 No 1 pp 43 53 DOI 10 2307 127474 Stable URL https www jstor org stable 127474 Sheward D Gimpel the Fool amp The Lady and the Peddler Off Off Broadway Review Backstage 20 January 2012 lt Online https www backstage com review ny theater off off broadway gimpel the fool the lady and the peddler gt Library of Congress Catalogue https www loc gov item afc9999005 34318 Magill Frank Northen June 30 1985 Magill s Survey of Cinema Foreign Language Films Salem Press ISBN 9780893562489 via Google Books Bibliography edit nbsp Look up peddle peddler monger canvasser cheapjack or pedlar in Wiktionary the free dictionary Dolan J R 1964 Yankee Peddlers of Early America Spufford M 1981 Small Books and Pleasant Histories Popular Fiction and its Readership in seventeenth Century England Spufford M 1984 The Great Reclothing of Rural England Petty Chapmen and their Wares in the Seventeenth Century Wright R L 1927 Hawkers and Walkers in Early America Station Chief at Etymonline com Peddler at Etymonline comFurther reading editBrown D The Autobiography of a Pedlar John Lomas of Hollinsclough Staffordshire 1747 1823 Midland History 1996 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peddler amp oldid 1185401135, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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