A worker who maintains, cleans, or repairs flues (the pipes that carry smoke and gases away from fireplaces and stoves).
Compound of 'flue' (a duct for smoke) and 'man,' referring to a tradesperson. This occupational term became common during the industrial era when heating systems became more complex.
Before modern HVAC systems, fluemen were essential tradespeople who climbed into dangerous, sooty chimneys—a job that was actually quite hazardous because they could inhale toxic gases or get stuck!
Historical occupational term defaulting to masculine ('man') despite women performing chimney-sweeping and flue-cleaning labor. Reflects workplace segregation in industrial-era labor classification.
Use 'flue worker' or 'flue cleaner' to reflect actual labor force composition without gendered assumptions.
["flue worker","flue cleaner","flue technician"]
Women were critical to chimney maintenance and flue work in early industrial economies, often undercounted in occupational records due to male-default terminology.
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