1. Bowling Alley Pinsetter

2. Human Alarm Clock

3. Ice Cutter

4. Pre-radar Listener for Enemy Aircraft

5. Rat Catcher

6. Lamplighter

7. Log Driver

8. Switchboard Operator

9. Resurrectionist

10. Lector Who Entertained Factory Workers

Back in the day, there were jobs to do just about everything. You could be paid to reset the pins at a bowling alley or knock on people’s windows to wake them up. Here's a list of 10 jobs that no longer exist today...Bowling alley pinsetters were young boys employed at bowling alleys to set up the pins for clients.Knocker-uppers were essentially alarm clocks – they were hired to ensure that people would wake up on time for their own jobs. They would use sticks, clubs or pebbles to knock on clients’ windows and doors.Before modern refrigeration techniques became widespread, ice cutters would saw up the ice on frozen lakes for people to use in their cellars and refrigerators. It was a dangerous job often done in extreme conditions.Before radar, troops used acoustic mirrors and listening devices like these to focus and detect the sound of engines from approaching aircraft.Rat catchers were employed in Europe to control rat populations. They ran high risks of suffering bights and infections, but helped prevent these from spreading to the public.Lamplighters used long poles to light, extinguish and refuel street lamps – until electric lamps were introducedBefore the technology or infrastructure was available to transport logs by truck, log drivers would float and guide them down rivers from logging sites to processing areas.Resurrectionists, or “body snatchers,” were hired in the 19th century to remove corpses from graves for universities to use as cadavers. Cadavers from legal means were rare and difficult to obtain, so universities had to resort to other means to procure cadavers for their students.Broadly speaking, a lector is simply someone who reads. However, they were often hired with money pooled from workers to read to large rooms full of manual laborers to keep them entertained. Some read left-leaning or union publications to the workers.(via Bored Panda