Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
By PAUL BELFORD
This chapter examines the way in which industrial landscapes have been perceived
throughout the post-medieval period, and explores the effect on current research and
conservation of prevailing attitudes to ‘landscape archaeology’ and ‘industrial archaeology’.
Using a variety of examples, it is argued that industrial landscapes should be seen as neither
urban nor rural but as entirely separate entities incorporating elements of both. Existing
ways of looking at rural or urban landscapes are therefore inadequate for the technological,
social and cultural complexities represented by industrial landscapes. One key theme that
can be drawn out from the study of industrial landscapes is that of identity, and particular
emphasis is given to investigating the ways in which industrial landscapes have given rise
to specifically English identities.
INTRODUCTION
England is the birthplace of industrialisation. Almost all English landscapes can be said to
be industrial landscapes, in that they have been shaped by the forces of industrialisation.
Sometimes these forces have been very direct and are highly visible: as in the declining
industrial conurbations of the West Midlands, or the former textile towns of West Yorkshire
and Lancashire. Elsewhere, temporally more distant industrial activity has been softened
by later land use: the gentle undulations of Derbyshire lead mining, the heavily wooded
Ironbridge Gorge in Shropshire, or the almost suburban former ironworking landscapes
of Surrey. Even in the apparent rural idyll of the post-medieval country estate it is possible
to find steam-powered corn-mills and pump houses and electrical power stations. Indeed,
the quintessential English farming landscape, with its quilt-like pattern of small fields and
woodland, is a resource that was harnessed in a systematic way to provide food and other
materials for the growth of English industrialisation in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Three main issues can be examined in relation to the industrial landscapes of England.
Firstly, notwithstanding the fact that almost all industrial landscapes owe their underlying
structure to topographical and geological factors, it is also the case that the flesh on these
natural bones is the result of human agency. The extent and impact of this human agency
is often overlooked, particularly, as Marilyn Palmer has recently reminded us, in rural and
upland landscapes.1 Secondly, our understanding of what makes an industrial landscape,
and how we value those landscapes, has changed remarkably over the five centuries or so
20 CROSSING PATHS OR SHARING TRACKS?
of large-scale industrialisation in this country. Again this has had an effect on how such
landscapes have been (and continue to be) designed and managed. Finally, and emerging
from both of the previous concerns, there is the question of our existing relationships with
industrial landscapes.
archaeology of Britain as a whole during the later post-medieval period. Significant studies
with a more localised focus in England have included Clark and Alfrey’s analysis of the
Ironbridge Gorge, and, more recently, Mike Nevell’s more explicitly theoretically informed
study of ‘the archaeology of the industrial revolution in the north-west of England’.9 It is
evident that we should not be looking at industrial landscapes solely through filters given
to us by the schools of ‘landscape’ or ‘industrial’ archaeology. Rather, we should be seeking
to explore the motivations of those who created those industrial landscapes and used them
to express their identity. As David Gwyn has remarked, industrial landscapes are reflections
of social and economic identities – they are a ‘discursive space … in which cultural and
ideological priorities are expressed’.10
LEFT
Figure 14.1 Urban
industry in an
agricultural landscape?
Bliss Mill, Oxfordshire:
built in 1872–3 for the
manufacture of woollen
cloth.
instead only tangentially referring to ‘the tweed of Chipping Norton’ in connection with
the decline of small market towns.17 Yet however much the mill might be an unwelcome
‘urban’ intrusion into a ‘rural’ landscape, its existence both now and in the past cannot be
ignored. Nor can its impact on the people of Chipping Norton. The dramatic example
provided by Bliss Mill is anomalous by the very nature of its intrusiveness, but the example
serves to highlight the false dichotomy prevailing between perceptions of rural and urban.
This tension of opposition is also present in the notion of a ‘designed landscape’. The term
is most frequently adopted for large country estates, although it has also been used to refer
to planned urban settlements.18 It is not usually applied to the broad spectrum of industrial
landscapes.
One end of this spectrum is represented by landscapes of early mining. Locations of
the desired minerals were dictated by geology, and in such circumstances there would seem
to be little scope for conscious design. However, the rights to mine were closely regulated
and controlled, albeit by a bewildering variety of often archaic systems, and mining
landscapes developed according to known rules of order, structure and form. These include
the Moormaster system prevalent in County Durham, the Cornish Stannary system and
the free miners of the Forest of Dean.19 As on the surface of the landscape, so below it
– the ‘hidden’ subterranean landscape was also closely demarcated and regulated with what
Martin Roe has termed ‘hidden boundaries’.20
As well as landscape modifications associated with mining itself, there were also
settlements of the miners and their families. These often took the form of ‘squatter’
settlements, usually characterised as ‘amorphous … [with] little evidence of planning’.21
However, their location, character and extent resulted from deliberate design decisions
made (or not made) by the free miners who built them and by the manorial landholders on
ENGLISH INDUSTRIAL LANDSCAPES 23
whose land they squatted. As William Court pointed out over seventy years ago, ‘Industrial
capitalism did not grow … upon the ruins of feudalism, but in the interstices of the older
society.’22 Some of the most remarkable of these landscapes developed on the edges of ordered
space in the West Midlands. In north Staffordshire the population of a marginal agricultural
landscape enjoyed relative economic freedom; ‘shielded by seigneurial negligence from the
pressures of improving landlords’, they were free to develop the clay and coal beneath their
feet in more profitable ways.23 As a result, different patterns of land ownership resulted in
different landscape patterns emerging in the Potteries’ six towns.24
Figure 14.2 Development in the interstices of the medieval landscape? Wednesbury Forge,
Staffordshire. This view shows some of the 18th- and 19th-century features, including the base of a
water-power sluices (left), the base of a windmill (centre), one of six wheelpits (bottom right) with
later turbine, and part of a steam engine base (centre right) (photo: Graham Eyre-Morgan)
24 CROSSING PATHS OR SHARING TRACKS?
and the development of substantial ironworking enterprises from the 16th century.26 All of
these activities took place away from the original nucleus of settlement.
The most significant industrial complex was Wednesbury Forge. In use for from the
16th to the 21st century, this forge produced guns and tools for export around the world –
it was also a significant locale in the mindset of local people through which shared identities
were constructed.27 The site represents many of the complexities inherent in extra-urban
industrial landscapes. An early post-medieval rural scene: a water-powered site, built with
timbers hewn from the intersticial Cannock Chase; the wheelpits and tailraces cut through
the coal seams that were being exploited in adjacent fields (Fig. 14.2). Yet over time the
growth of the forge encouraged the development of a new urban landscape on the fringes
of the old one. By the end of the 19th century there were rows of workers’ housing, streets,
a church, a school and – that most important piece of infrastructure for urban identity – a
football pitch. The development of Wednesbury was echoed in other parts of the Black
Country, where, despite appearances of homogeneity to the outsider, each locale maintained
its own industrial and cultural identities well into the 20th century.28
Comparable developments can be traced elsewhere. Mike Nevell and colleagues
have shown how the transition from ‘farmer to factory owner’ in the Manchester region
was a multi-layered process that took place over several generations.29 The process of
industrialisation affected rural and urban places in different ways at different times;
manufacture took place both in towns and farms, and the whole was interlinked by a
complex system of networks of social and economic exchange.30 Such landscapes were
only embryonic industrial communities from our own Whiggish perspective of progressive
history. As Barrie Trinder has reminded us, at the time they were places where people –
however they made their living – ‘lived lives closely shaped by the seasons and the elements’.
31
Coal miners in Gloucestershire, metal workers in Worcestershire and cloth weavers in
Lancashire were also subsistence farmers. Such patterns of life continued well into the 20th
century (see, for example, Eleanor Casella and Richard Newman, this volume).
This ambiguity about place at the other end of the spectrum is clearly illustrated in
the development of Sheffield. This was a town (by any measure an urban place) famous for
its metalwork manufactures, although most of that manufacture took place in semi-rural
locations, on the various water-powered sites on the streams that flowed into the Sheffield
basin.32 As in the Black Country, villages in the Sheffield hinterland developed particular
specialisms, which in turn fostered social and cultural identities. The subsequent urbanisation
of Sheffield took place in locales that were defined by earlier rural experience. The earliest
expansion occurred in the ‘Crofts’, to the west of the medieval town. Here, planned urban
development took place with reference to an earlier rural landscape. The ‘Crofts’ themselves
were the enclosed relics of former open strip fields, a liminal – indeed intersticial – place,
outside the town boundary and outwith the control of manor, church and embryonic craft
gild. The street layout preserved the memory of the former rural landscape both in its form
and in the naming of locales within it. The ‘Crofts’ was the scene of much early industrial
innovation; later grid-plan developments attempted to overcome the perceived moral and
physical degeneracy that was regarded as pervading earlier ‘organic’ landscapes such as the
‘Crofts’, but ultimately failed to do so.33
ENGLISH INDUSTRIAL LANDSCAPES 25
LEFT
Figure 14.3 An urban
industrial landscape?
The Grand Union
Canal at Great Barr
Street, Birmingham.
This is a complex
designed landscape of
interlinked systems with
global connections. In
this view, among other
features: Fyffes’ banana
warehouse (1890); the
Gun Barrel Proof House
for official testing of
guns prior to export
(1813); and the former
terminus of Curzon
Street Railway Station
(1839).
LANDSCAPES OF SYSTEMS
The process of industrialisation also created distinctively new landscapes that are
simultaneously rural and urban. For linear networks such as canals, railways and roads
it is ‘not always possible to determine where a site begins or ends’,34 and so a different
archaeological approach needs to be taken.35 In England, the investigation of linear networks
has always been one of the strengths of industrial archaeology. Such networks transcend the
distinction between rural and urban landscapes; they also provide a physical and conceptual
link between industrial production and consumption (Fig.14.3). A canal, for instance,
had the power to turn somewhere like Paddington ‘from a quiet rural village … into the
animated terminus of an efficient transport system’.36 More recent networks of electricity
supply and mobile telephone communications have continued this trend, blurring the
distinction between rural and urban. These systems connected places within and between
such locales as the Black Country, Lancashire, South Yorkshire and elsewhere, themselves
part-urban and part-rural landscapes that transcended older-established boundaries of land
ownership and administration.
Although the early empiricism of thinkers such as Francis Bacon owed much to the revival of
Aristotle, later developments were strongly influenced by Platonic thought, and in particular
Plato’s Theory of Forms – in which the myriad observable natural particular forms could
be structured into a hierarchy of universal forms. The work of early thinkers such as Bacon,
Galileo and Descartes paved the way for later development by scientific pioneers such as
Boyle, Hooke and Newton. The work of these early scientists – what would now be called
‘pure science’ – informed improvements in real-world technologies, particularly metallurgy
– in other words, ‘applied science’. This enabled what David Cranstone (this volume) has
elegantly termed a ‘chemical industrial revolution’ during the 17th and 18th centuries.
This changing understanding of the world took place amid the not unrelated social
and cultural upheaval of the Reformation. In England, the most significant material
expression of the Reformation was the dissolution of the monasteries. The Ironbridge
Gorge provides a typical example of the positive effect which the process of dissolution had
on the development of industrialisation. Here, part of the estates of the Priory of Much
Wenlock – already containing coal mines and ironworks – were acquired by Sir Robert
Brooke.37 The two succeeding generations (Sir John Brooke and Sir Basil Brooke) developed
a substantial coal, iron and steelmaking enterprise from the 1570s through to the Civil
War.38 The Brookes used their industrial wealth to develop the former monastic grange at
nearby Madeley into a substantial Elizabethan country house, emphasising their legitimacy
as creators and controllers of the surrounding landscape (Fig. 14.4). Their enthusiasm for
the aesthetics of this landscape was demonstrated to their peers by the construction of the
Lodge in c. 1600. Located above the confluence of Coalbrookdale with the Severn Gorge,
the Lodge was the perfect spot to view coal mining, limestone quarrying, the smoke and
noise of the furnaces, and the broad sweep of the River Severn carrying manufactured
LEFT
Figure 14.4 Madeley
Court, Shropshire.
The late-16th-century
gatehouse built by the
Brooke family with
profits from their
mines and ironworks in
Coalbrookdale.
ENGLISH INDUSTRIAL LANDSCAPES 27
goods away to profitable markets. At precisely this moment, the actual word and concept of
‘landscape’ (or ‘landskip’) was being introduced into the English language from the Dutch
‘landschap’.39
The marriage of art, science and technology was perpetuated through the 18th century.
At Coalbrookdale, the Brooke ironworking complex was further developed by the Darby
family, with the substantial involvement of their fellow Quaker capitalists, the Goldneys. The
focus of their operations was iron founding. Abraham Darby I had developed a technique
for coke smelting and sand casting through a combination of empirical observations and
experimentation.40 The resulting Coalbrookdale Company specialised in lightweight
precision castings, which in turn enabled the development of steam technology. Like their
Catholic forebears the Brookes, various Quaker families that ran Coalbrookdale were to
some extent outside the establishment. And, like the Brookes, they used the landscape as
a mechanism for displaying the commercial and aesthetic productivity of their industrial
enterprises. This landscape was illustrated in 1758 by the deeply fashionable landscape
engraver Francois Vivares (Fig. 14.5). The Coalbrookdale engravings depict the furnaces
and chimneys of the ironworks, the burning of coke, the smoke and fumes, and even the
export of the finished products – yet they also show an ornamental tower on the hill above,
dominating a landscape of substantial gentry houses, with associated polite landscape
features such as a geometric walled garden and an avenue.
Figure 14.5 A picturesque landscape of industry. One of two engravings of Coalbrookdale made by Francois
Vivares in 1758 (reproduced with the permission of the Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust).
28 CROSSING PATHS OR SHARING TRACKS?
This designed landscape tapped into the prevailing enthusiasm for an industrial
picturesque, part of a broader movement that emphasised antiquity, wilderness and nature
in counterpoint to the modern sensibilities of those who passed through such landscapes.
Visitors were already coming to admire the sublimity of the scene, marvelling at the ‘awful
and magnificent’ prospect of industry.41 Coalbrookdale was an essential stop on the late
18th-century ‘Grand Tour’ of the English landscape. Indeed, English industrial landscapes
generally formed an important part of many itineraries. Astonishingly there was also, in
the late 18th century, a fashion for mine tourism, in which curious and wealthy persons
(including men of the church) were lowered in buckets, dragged in wagons and ferried
in boats deep into the earth in order to marvel at the sublime subterranean scenery.42
Archaeological evidence suggests that some of elements of the Coalbrookdale water power
system were modified to establish a picturesque effect akin to the cascades of large country
houses.43 For Coalbrookdale the culmination of this puritan pursuit of the picturesque was
an extraordinary project to oust Charon himself from this landscape with the products of
Vulcan. The Iron Bridge across the river Severn was completed in 1779 and opened three
years later; it became an instant tourist attraction.
Yet the close interconnections between art and science were already beginning to
unravel. The construction of the Iron Bridge marked a shift in perception of industrial
landscape. The avant-garde lesbian poet Anna Seward was among the first to look critically
at the environmental impact of industry on the landscape. Seward was a friend of the
Darwin family and of the Wedgwoods, and so occupied the fringes of the social world
occupied by Boulton, Watt and other Lunar Society luminaries.44 She was thus uniquely
laced to offer an insightful analysis of the processes of industrialisation. In her poem of
c. 1785 entitled Colebrookdale she equated the industrial development of the eponymous
ironworks with sexual violation of the landscape:
… thou venal Genius of these outraged groves, / And thy apostate head with thy soil’d
wings / Veil! – who hast thus thy beauteous charge resign’d / To inhabitants ill-suited; hast
allow’d / Their rattling forges, and their hammer’s din, / And hoarse, rude throats, to fright
the gentle train, / Dryads, and fair hair’d Naiedes; – the song, / Once loud and sweet, of the
wild woodland choir / To silence; – disenchant the poet’s spell, / And to a gloomy Erebus
transform / The destined rival of Tempean vales.45
Seward is no Wordsworth, but her imagery is powerful. While few would necessarily go
as far as Sharon Setzer has done in arguing for Seward’s ‘nascent ecofeminist consciousness’,
she was certainly beginning to challenge masculine narratives of progressive history, and to
question the rationale of industrialisation.46
was to develop the notion of conservation, both of the so-called natural environment and
of what we would now call the historic environment. David Matless has argued that the
development of a conservation ethos in the early 20th century was not, in fact, a backward-
looking expression of despair; rather it was part of a forward-looking approach that saw
planning – both urban and rural – as the cornerstone for the development of a new English
society.47 Such a society required demarcation between different attributes – this was not
an egalitarian project but one in which everyone (and everything) knew its place. Industrial
activity, therefore, was predominantly urban. However, as Matthew Johnson has more
recently elaborated, such voices were as much a continuation of two centuries of Seward-
like Romantic angst as they were a product of mid-20th-century hand-wringing over ‘that
old society falling into ruin’.48
This neo-Romantic perception still informs much conservation and management
policy and strategy at national and local level. Influence is brought to bear on decision-
making in these areas from powerful lobby groups such as the National Trust (founded
in 1895) and the Council for the Protection of Rural England (founded in 1926). This
thinking has subsequently been enshrined in legislation, from the Town and Country
Planning Act (1947) onwards. Of course, the notion of a pre-industrial rural idyll as the
natural state of English landscape is clearly nonsense – even the most remote upland has
had vegetation controlled by grazing, and has usually been the scene of mining and other
industrial activities. Yet industrial activities in the landscape are acknowledged only if well
and truly relict. Here, the gradual decay of buildings, the smoothing over of spoil heaps
and the silting up of pools, conspire to provide an ‘antiquarian aesthetic’49 that conforms
to notions of the modern picturesque and obscures the original motivations behind human
interactions with the landscape.
Industrial landscapes are almost uniquely caught between the polarised forces of
archaeology and conservation. This is largely related to the origins of the discipline of
industrial archaeology, which had as its primary focus the repair and restoration of historic
buildings and machinery. The pioneers of industrial archaeology in the 1950s and 1960s
were not doing ‘archaeology’, rather they were engaged in machine- and site-specific
conservation. Today – as the papers in this volume so eloquently make clear – the study
of the industrial past is firmly part of mainstream archaeology. More work on sites and
landscapes associated with industrialisation is being done every year in the real world of
commercial archaeology, by people who will record Bronze Age enclosures one week with
the same enthusiasm as they will record a 16th-century watermill or 20th-century domestic
floor surfaces the following week. Nevertheless, conservation of industrial sites proceeds,
and often, in this author’s experience, without due regard for archaeological findings. The
development of Ironbridge is a case in point. Before the 1990s a great many buildings were
demolished, and archaeology destroyed by the insertion of structures intended to protect
certain parts of the historic environment. Today, the largely wooded landscape is valued
without irony as a ‘natural resource’ by middle-class property owners who have gentrified
the former industrial settlement and imposed their own romantic view on the scene.
In short, industrial landscapes appear to be more highly valued when they are firmly
post-industrial. They are no longer (to paraphrase Anna Seward) the thrusting playboys
30 CROSSING PATHS OR SHARING TRACKS?
of youth, despoiling the forest glades with their contaminated ejaculations; instead they
become tired old men reminiscing about the good old days: sagging and wilting, and
objects of affection. We put some of them in care and create heritage landscapes around
them instead. The result of this rose-tinted approach to landscape has meant that the post-
medieval historic environment has actually lost out – both to the heritage of earlier periods
and to other aspects of the environment. In mitigating the impact of new development
and other landscape changes today, the so-called natural environment (which does not
actually exist and is infinitely renewable) is accorded a much higher priority than the
historic environment (which clearly does exist, and is finite and non-renewable). Ironically,
it is now easier to prevent destruction of the historic environment by using the natural
environment as a shield than it is by arguing for any intrinsic historic environment value
of such features.
natural resources, environmental degradation, poor working and living conditions, and the
export of cheap consumer goods to the wider world.
Unfortunately the English industrial landscape is often either pigeonholed or
overlooked entirely. As the chapters in this volume by David Gwyn, David Cranstone,
Richard Newman and Chris Dalglish demonstrate, industrial landscapes contain so much
more than relic industrial remains. They also provide evidence for the complex processes of
creating and displaying identities. Such landscapes are important for the future – however
much of a certain type of English identity is to do with rejection of that industrial past.
Clearly we have failed to argue a convincing case for the importance of industrial landscapes
in helping to shape English identities. To ignore their significance in this regard is to deny
the possibilities which a global historical archaeology can offer for changing the world
around us. The issues so central to the study of English industrial landscapes – pollution,
religious conflict, environmental degradation, population movement, territorial aggression,
capitalism and globalisation – are most urgently relevant to the world today. Archaeologists
of industrial landscapes – neither ‘industrial’ nor ‘landscape’ archaeologists but a hybrid
with a foot in both camps – need to explicitly engage with ongoing theoretical debates
in global historical archaeology, and move beyond that to a broader engagement with
the modern world. Future approaches should develop what David Cranstone has called
the archaeology of ‘psychology and mindset’,50 analysis of which can take place on many
different social, temporal and spatial levels. In modern England we need to do much more
than hark back to a non-existent pre-industrial state; rather we need to discover the stories
of industrialisation, and celebrate the process that originated in England and ultimately
changed the world.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author is grateful to the conference organisers and editors for the opportunity to
contribute to both the conference and the published volume. A particular debt is owed to
Marilyn Palmer for her discussion of an early draft of this chapter and suggestions which have
improved the final version. Many thanks are also due to various people for their input over
many years to a number of projects, ideas and discussions that have, in one way or another,
formed the corpus of thinking on which this chapter is based. These include: Mary Beaudry,
Mark Bowden, Kate Clark, David Cranstone, David Crossley, Brian Dix, Emma Dwyer,
Graham Eyre-Morgan, Jon Finch, Kate Giles, David Gwyn, Mark Horton, Edward Impey,
William Mitchell, John Powell, Simon Roper, Paul Stamper, James Symonds, Barrie Trinder,
Anna Wallis, Sophie Watson and Tom Williamson. Inaccuracies of fact, interpretation and
language are of course entirely the fault of the author, for which indulgence from the reader
is sought. Particular thanks must go to Kate Page-Smith, whose natural talent for landscape
archaeology is inspirational, and whose love and support has been invaluable.
32 CROSSING PATHS OR SHARING TRACKS?
NOTES
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