I think very few living today can relate to what was probably actually done. Its not so much because the materials and tools were so different , but more that we live in such a disposable society where if you need something or something breaks , you just toss it and go buy another .
I can remember my grandfather until his death in 1986 , logging , year around with a team of horses . He simply refused to use a chain saw and when the subject came up , he would say that for the cost of running , packing and maintaining the saw , he would need another team just for the saw . In his last years he did use a modern saw and it nearly took his leg , but he simply would not stop
When I was small , his mill was even water driven . I don’t know what it was called but there was a big granite stone wheel that was used as a type of centrifugal weight, when it cracked he converted the mill to running off the belt drive on an old Case tractor .
About the only time he went to town was to deliver lumber or if there was simply no other way , buy a part . Which also brings up I think another difference from today to back then .
They new how to make things work . In other words just because something broke , it didn’t mean an end to production .
It meant more work until such time as a item could be either fixed or replaced .
Literally for a lot of these older folks , you could go to them and say ; I need to do this X.
In a few minutes of spitting chew and scratching their head with the end of a lead pencil, they could tell you how to do it and what was needed . Might not be the best way , but it would work .
They could think on the run as well . . Not far from me is one of the last large gold dredges here in our area . Its owned by the park service and you can walk through it . Seeing how that ,,, Ship works , is simply amazing . Literally ropes and pulleys every where. Its not hard to imagine someone saying ; Run a rope to there . Put a pulley there . Go up there , then over there and back to here .
There are ropes as large as a mans leg , running right across the floor . Open belts and pulleys everywhere . To work inside that dredge , meant you had to be constantly thinking about not only what you were doing , but what was going on around you . One laps in judgment and you became gear lube or belt dressing .
I also think for tooling in the large Mills , the probably had a Tool shop where the folks inside , did nothing but replace and repair tools . These folks knew the cost of a dime and it had very little to do with monetary value . I don’t believe the would toss money away unless there was just no other way