19th Century Dorset Farming


 
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VICTORIAN COUNTY HISTORY
A HISTORY OF DORSET
Agriculture
Page 277

We are indebted to Mr. R. H. Rew of the Board of Agriculture, whose name will be familiar to Dorset men, for the following interesting Return, which gives proportion per 1,000 acres of land in the county, and the use to which it is put. The figures are for the year 1906 :-

  Acres
Arable 271
Grass 497
Woods 62
Hills and Heaths 45
  875
All other uses 125
  1,000

Agricultural statistics in Great Britain do not go back very many years, but the revolutionary period in our agriculture lies within the dates for which we have fairly precise returns, so that the first three-quarters of the nineteenth century may be briefly dealt with in Dorset as elsewhere. From 1801 to 1815 was a war period, with a feverish effort to cultivate as much land as possible for wheat, barley, oats, and pulse. With three per cent. consols down to sixty, it was not a time for government expenditure on statistics, agricultural or otherwise, and we shall never know exactly what areas were cultivated. All published estimates must be decreed void by reason of uncertainty. Owing to the war with France and the consequent self-dependence of the country, good and bad harvests exerted an extraordinary effect. Thus in February 1801 at Dorchester 200s. per quarter was paid for wheat ; but in October 70s. was accepted.

In 1809 we get a curious sidelight on the want of technical instruction. Dorset labourers were paid 9s. a week only, but girls could get 30s. a week, if clever, at plaiting straw. On 20 April of this year three days' incessant rain began in Dorset, and caused the worst floods since 1773. The winter was wonderfully cold and the autumn-sown wheat was often killed, though a Dorset farmer notes in 1810 that the wheat berry of what ripened was remarkably fine. But the general result was so bad that it was estimated the crop would not exceed 10 bushels an acre.

In 1815 began the great struggle for Free Trade. The Conservative government then in office passed a law prohibiting wheat imports when the price was under 80s. a quarter. As the then average was 65s. 7d. per quarter the import trade was practically killed. The issue, as we all know, was determined in 1846. Thirty years' struggle had embittered feeling to the verge of civil war, and the victorious party showed no more moderation on their side than their opponents had done. It was 'all or nothing' with the combatants ; yet, though the strife ended in 1846, it was not until 1879 that British cereal agriculture really felt the full effect of the change. As late as 1877, or thirty-one years after the Free Trade Act, the average price of wheat was 56s. 9d. a quarter, or 2s. 1d. higher than in 1846, the actual year of the statute. Thus it comes about that the full figures for Dorset which we have for 1873 are, although only thirty-three years old, of all the service that we want, for they relate to a time when foreign competition had made no inroad worth mentioning on the county agriculture. It will be well, therefore, to take the separate branches of agriculture in their respective divisions and place figures and comments together.

The cultivation of corn crops of all kinds has steadily declined, with the exception of the quantity of oats and rye sown. Oats show the greatest percentage of increase, though that for rye is but slightly smaller. In 1873 the percentage of corn crops to all crops was 24.8. In 1906 it was 16.07 with a total of 76,551 acres under grain. With the exception of the year 1894, which shows an increase over the preceding year of 3,500 acres, the Returns show a steadily diminishing quantity of about, in the earlier years, 3,000 acres per year, and latterly of about 1,000 acres. Bad seasons, low prices, and the laying down of land to pasture have all been responsible for this decrease, and it is questionable, when one comes to examine Dorset agriculture from the point of view of the Dorset farmer, whether he is not proceeding on the right lines. So far as feeding stuffs are concerned he can buy all the food he requires as cheaply as he can produce it. Indeed, there are farmers in Dorset who say that had they not to keep their land in cultivation it would pay them better not to grow corn crops at all.

Of the corn crops the principal, of course, is wheat, though it does not cover so large an acreage as some others. In 1873 wheat was grown on 46,740 acres. Even at that time wheat was unremunerative, and the total area was steadily diminishing. In 1875 the area was 44,384 and in 1876 41,329 acres, a decline of 3,000 acres. From 1876 to 1879 the decline, however, was only about 1,500 acres, but the latter superlatively bad year had its reflex in the Returns of 1880, which give the total area of wheat as only 35,909 acres, a difference of 4,000 acres. Then the decline steadily continued year by year until 1899, when wheat rose to a total of

Source: Victorian County History - Dorset (1906)

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