I noticed this topic arise in several other threads
How many here can saw a straight line, without any guide tool, with a hand saw? Crosscut, rip, back, etc.?
Before I was allowed to touch a power tool, my father first made me master the hand tool. I started with hand tools at about age 4-5, I can't really remember exactly when. We had hand crank drills with the same kind of chuck on it as an electric drill has, as well as a brace & bit. Stanley jack plane. Chisels & gouges. Claw hammers, framing hammers, ball peen hammers, straight peen & cross peen 2-pound sledgehammers, body mechanics hammer, wooden mallets, rawhide mallets, plastic mallets, rubber hammers, 10-pound sledgehammer. 150 year old Disston crosscut saw (uncle had the matching rip saw), back saw, jig saw, bow saw, English rip saw that I bought from Woodcraft. Every imaginable type of steel wrench in fractional sizes. Pipe wrenches from 4" to 18".
I just took tools for granted, growing up with both hand tools & power tools.
My father felt tools were an investment, so SEARS Craftsman was the least quality he would spend on a tool. Screwdrivers WERE NOT pry bars!!!!
My mother got her own set of tools that could be used/abused in any way she saw fit, as long as she understood that the rest of the tools down in the basement were OFF LIMITS!!!!!