Correct Answer !
A small wooden shelter commonly used by shoe-makers of the 19th Century. These small structures were typically built by independent proprietors whose cottage shoe-making enterprises were evolving from a home-based industry to one where travelling teams of specialists performed specific tasks at these small, yet specialized facilities. Eventually, the ten-footers and travelling technicians gave way to the more efficient industrialized factories of the late 19th and 20th Centuries. For a further description, see "Mitigating Impact from Development: The 'Old Coe Place'".