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Lumberjack
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{{short description|Worker who performs the initial harvesting of trees}} {{Other uses}} {{redirect|Wood cutter||Woodcutter (disambiguation)}} {{redirect|Lumberjill|the British WWII group|Women's Timber Corps}} [[File:A lumberjack standing at the base of a huge tree showing a cut in the tree, ca.1900 (CHS-3368).jpg|250px|right|thumb|A lumberjack {{circa|1900}}]] '''Lumberjack''' is a mostly [[North America]]n term for workers in the logging industry who perform the initial harvesting and transport of trees. The term usually refers to loggers in the era before 1945 in the United States, when trees were felled using hand tools and dragged by oxen to rivers. The work was difficult, dangerous, intermittent, low-paying, and involved living in primitive conditions. However, the men built a traditional culture that celebrated strength, [[masculinity]], confrontation with danger, and resistance to modernization.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hayner |first=Norman S. |date=April 1945 |title=Taming the Lumberjack |journal=American Sociological Review |volume=10 |issue=2 |pages=217β225 |doi=10.2307/2085640 |jstor=2085640}}</ref> {{TOC limit|3}}
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