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Before asphalt and concrete, roads were built stone by stone. In this AgedSkills history episode, we travel to the Bergisches Land in western Germany, where quarrymen and stone cutters transform rough quarry rock into precise cobblestones entirely by hand. Working in a quarry equipped with narrow-gauge tracks and its own blacksmith shop, this operation remained active well into the early 1970s. The film follows the complete process—from extracting massive blocks of Devonian greywacke from steep quarry faces to splitting, sizing, and hand-cutting paving stones with hammer and chisel. Quarrymen first read the stone’s natural grain, splitting it along invisible bedding planes. A single wrong strike can shatter a block into useless waste. Prepared rough stones are then passed to skilled stone cutters, who sit at open cutting sheds and shape each cube by eye and hand. Every cobblestone is measured using hand spans, rotated repeatedly, and trimmed with cutting hammers to achieve exact dimensions. Different stone sizes serve different purposes: small mosaic stones for sidewalks, medium pavers for streets, and large blocks for heavily trafficked roads and harbor construction. Tool maintenance is constant, with the quarry blacksmith sharpening and forging cutting hammers on site. This documentary preserves a physically demanding and highly skilled trade that shaped European roads for generations—an industry where experience, sound, and touch mattered more than machines. Original source material: Das Handwerk der Oberbergischen Pflastersteinhauer Published by Alltagskulturen im Rheinland © LVR-Institut für Landeskunde und Regionalgeschichte CC BY 4.0