Farming Industry
By Jon Sutherland and Diane Canwell
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Farming Industry - Jon Sutherland
First published in Great Britain in 2010 by
REMEMBER WHEN
an imprint of
Pen & Sword Books Ltd,
47 Church Street,
Barnsley,
South Yorkshire.
S70 2AS
Copyright © Jon and Diane Sutherland, 2010
A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN 978 184468 113 6
eISBN 9781844683178
The right of Jon and Diane Sutherland to be identified as Authors of this Work has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the Publisher in writing.
Typeset by S L Menzies-Earl
Printed and bound by MPG
Pen & Sword Books Ltd incorporates the Imprints of
Pen & Sword Aviation, Pen & Sword Maritime, Pen & Sword Military, Wharncliffe Local History, Pen & Sword Select, Pen & Sword Military Classics, Leo Cooper, Remember When, Seaforth Publishing and Frontline Publishing.
For a complete list of Pen & Sword titles please contact
Pen & Sword Books Limited
47 Church Street, Barnsley, South Yorkshire, S70 2AS, England
E-mail: enquiries@pen-and-sword.co.uk
Website: www.pen-and-sword.co.uk
Contents
Introduction
Chapter One
English Farming at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century
Chapter Two
Scottish Farming at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century
Chapter Three
Irish Farming in the Late Nineteeth Century
Chapter Four
Welsh Farming in the Late Nineteeth Century
Chapter Five
Farming in the 1930s
Chapter Six
1930s Rural England
This is a print that was created in London by the artist William Hincks, dated 20 June 1791. It shows a farmer ploughing, another man sowing flax seed and in the background a man driving a team of horses pulling a harrow. To the left there is a woman with children seated beside a tree and encouraging her husband to take a break from the work. This print was dedicated to Lord Lieutenant General and General Governor of Ireland and is supposed to represent a scene near Scaroa in County Down, now in Northern Ireland.
Introduction
From the sixteenth century the traditional organic agricultural methods that were highly labour intensive in Britain were gradually replaced by a new farming system. This agricultural revolution is greatly misunderstood. It is often associated with the selective breeding of livestock and also the restrictions on access to common land plus the introduction of new systems of cropping. Many people know the names of some of these early agricultural pioneers that are credited with bringing in the agricultural revolution to Britain, such as Jethro Tull. Tull was not, as many people believe, the person that invented the seed drill and this piece of equipment was not used until a hundred years after he had written about it in the 1730s.
In England the agricultural revolution happened around 1750. The population of England was about 5.7 million. Prior to this the agricultural industry found it difficult to feed any more people, but something certainly happened, as a hundred years later the population had risen to 16.6 million and agriculture had to move with it. Output grew and new farming systems were used to rotate crops, land was reclaimed, such as the draining of fenlands in eastern England. The old, low intensity farming was now being replaced by high intensity systems growing arable crops. Woodlands were cleared, upland pastures were being used and around thirty per cent of all the agricultural areas were transformed within a century.
During the industrial revolution the mix of crops changed; low yield crops such as rye were replaced by wheat or barley. Land that had been used for grazing was now turned over to crops, with the animals being fed from the fodder crops, particularly clover and turnips. These crops also helped reclaim lowland heaths and rough pasture to create highly productive arable farms. Turnips were incredibly important; they could be sown in rows and the weeds removed while it was growing. In 1700 fallow land accounted for around twenty per cent of all of the arable land in England but by the 1870s it was just four per cent.
Cereals were also highly important; the yields increased by at least twenty per cent in the hundred years from 1700 and then by another staggering fifty per cent in the fifty years from 1800.
Farmers at this time did not know anything about nitrogen or its importance. Livestock manure was routinely ploughed back into the land and the introduction of legumes, such as peas and beans, helped convert nitrogen in the atmosphere to nitrates for the soil. Clover also dramatically increased the amount of nitrogen in the soil, which was so vital for the cereal crops.
This is an aerial photograph of ridges and furrows in the Midlands. By looking carefully at the photograph we can see the patterns of the furrows, or ridges, which show how the land was ploughed before enclosures and hedgerows became commonplace. The land was ridged to help with drainage and in this photograph you can clearly see how the ridges were used to cope with the slopes.
The new farming systems were very sustainable; the output had increased without endangering agriculture’s long-term viability.
After 1750 agricultural workers could produce more food per head. This meant that fewer workers were needed on the land. This, in turn, enabled a proportion of the former farm workers to move to towns and cities and become industrial workers. In effect, the agricultural revolution made the industrial one possible. In fact by 1850, around the same time that the first photographs were being taken, Britain had the smallest proportion of agricultural workers in the world, at just twenty-two per cent. Britain had a big advantage; there was far more animal power available than in many other countries. By the 1820s machinery was coming into use, which improved cutting and threshing grain.
There are no national agricultural statistics before 1866, so it is difficult to be precise about the pace of the change. But what we do know is that by the time the first photographs were being taken of British farms, workers, techniques and machinery, the entire nature of farming had radically changed and it would only go on changing in the years to come.
This is a