What carear should I go for?

I love history engineering and physics I'm also gifted in the English language but despise poetry.
I love working with wood and metal making stuff and that's what I do in my spare time along with doodling playing games like fifa call of duty and my favourite minecraft I love making historical monuments in minecraft like aqueducts the coliceum and the famous Nuremberg courtyard
I'm extremely open minded and would love to be an archaeologist but I'd hate to be away from my family for long periods of time
I have some ideas like engineering archeology or teaching at 2nd level in history and engineering have you any recommendations I will appreciate all ideas

Try this website. It names all kinds of college majors and jobs you can get within the majors. I found it really helpful. Http://www.mymajors.com/list-of-college-majors

Here is some good advice. I want you give this thought, and remember, I'm not trying to talk you out of college. I'm just giving you life advice. You do NOT have to go to college. Your parents, or teacher, or friends, or siblings, or relatives… One of them is bound to tell you "College will make you become successful and have a good life and stable good paying job"… That is a complete lie. That is how you are taught in school. Get good grades, and you will get into a good college and pick any major you want, then get a great job after you graduate in your field of study. NO. NO. NO. America was not built on people going to college. It was built on trades. For example… Aviation is a trade. Gemology is a trade. It goes on and on. You may not one to do any of those but those are examples. Some jobs REQUIRE a degree (obviously) but if you don't want to spend 4 years in college and use up all your or your parents money, DON't GO. If you are relying on student loans, DO. NOT. GO. You MUST pay them back. Students think that they will not have to pay the student loans back but you are indentured for life. You can't escape it. Trust me, it sucks. Make sure you know what your stepping into when you get in college. It can make your life miserable and you won't even know it. Find something you love, and pursue it. Good luck on your journey. You are NOT a failure. Whatever people say, you have a gift, but you have to find that gift. Choosing your career based on college majors isn't the only route you can take. The average sheep follows the rest of the herd, it takes mental strength and an independent heart to venture off away from the herd.

Engineering is a career. Wood and metal working are trade careers and need to be studied at college that teaches trades.

The only careers available in history and English are teaching in schools there are no other careers in these subjects. There are no jobs in archeology.

So if you want a job in the subject I would recommend studying for a trade at college or going for an apprenticeship in engineering.

If you're good enough to get good A level grades in maths and physics, a degree in some kind of engineering is looking good to me. Mechanical engineering, civil engineering, chemical engineering, all different types are on offer. Maths is vital: universities look at that more than physics when you apply. I have a physics degree myself so I understand why - the further you go with engineering or physics, the more it turns into maths.

But if your inclination is more "hands on" and actually DOING rather than thinking (graduate careers in engineering tend to be more about designing things than making them: civil engineers, for example, design buildings and bridges, doing all the calculations about how strong it needs to be to withstand stresses, that kind of thing), especially if maths is hard for you, you will be better off finding an apprenticeship. Here's a place to search for them http://www.apprenticeships.org.uk/ You get a job with a day or two off a week to go to college and study for an engineering qualification.

The other subjects you mention don't really have any job opportunities other than teaching them, and you need a university degree to do that. Most people who do degrees in them end up with an unrelated job they just got because the employer doesn't care what subject the degree is in, they just want someone bright enough to have been able to do a degree.