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Money Skills from the 1900s that Have Died
matka_Wariatka / Shutterstock.com
matka_Wariatka / Shutterstock.com

When you start looking backward at lost money skills, the first that comes to mind is making physical items from scratch. However, in an era of affordable mass-produced goods, we simply don’t have to put in the labor anymore.

And hopefully we won’t have to do so again due to some major crisis, such as nuclear winter. 

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Morbid speculation aside, consider a few money skills from the 20th Century that we as a culture have largely lost.

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Critical Analysis and Skepticism of Scams

Think fast: who’s more likely to fall for a scam, older or younger adults?

Most of us assume that tech-savvy young adults can spot scams that might dupe a boomer. It turns out most of us are wrong.

Young adults appear to be losing the critical thinking skills and healthy skepticism necessary to avoid online (and offline) scams. A 2023 study by Deloitte found that Gen Z adults were three times as likely to fall for scams as baby boomers. They’re also twice as likely to let their social media accounts get hacked.

Bartering

If two people each had something of value, there was a time when their first impulse was to negotiate a trade rather than fish in their pockets for credit cards or dollar bills.

And if that meant that the government didn’t catch wind of the transaction to tax everyone involved, well, all the better.

Reusing and Repurposing Disused Items

During the Great Depression, millions of Americans suffered such dire poverty that they could not afford to throw anything away.

They saved buttons to reuse in other pieces of clothing and reused flour and rice sacks. When they cooked food that released fat or grease, they saved it in jars.

Every piece of every animal went to good use. Chicken feathers and down went into pillows, mattresses and comforters. People ate the gizzards and innards and put chicken feet into soups.

Depression-era adults repurposed old tires to patch holes in shoe soles, or even as building materials for “Hooverville” shanties. They repurposed paper from magazines and newspapers to wrap and store everyday goods for burning or even for toilet paper.

Need is, in fact, the mother of invention.

Making Clothes from Scratch

Similarly, people in the 20th Century repurposed old pieces of cloth to make clothing. Remember the curtains from “The Sound of Music?”