Pickaroon is what we called that tool. Ours had a much longer handle used for moving pulp logs around on a sled or pulp truck. In use in Northern Minnesota, when pulp cutting was still manual labor not totally mechanized as it is today.
I did spend some time in a US Forest Service camp. One of the other employees cut and trimmed a sapling, he left one sturdy limb close to the butt end as a stub that he later whittled into a sort of hook that he used to wrangle pots and especially pot lids. He called this tool a hookumsnuffy. He was a Vermont man, had words that a midwestern, lake states natives were not used to. I still make them, great for fishing camp coffee pots from the fire. I even have a small one handy next to the kitchen range for lifting lids and snuffing stews and other creative cooking dishes.