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The Flight from the Land? Rural Migration in South-East Shropshire in the Late Nineteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 September 2006

GWYNETH NAIR
Affiliation:
School of Social Sciences, University of Paisley, Paisley, PA1 2BE, Scotland, UK.
DAVID POYNER
Affiliation:
School of Social Sciences, University of Paisley, Paisley, PA1 2BE, Scotland, UK.

Abstract

Using the 1881 census, we have tracked 1172 individuals who left their birthplaces in the villages of Billingsley, Chelmarsh, Highley and Kinlet in south-east Shropshire. This has allowed us to investigate the destinations and motivations for rural migrants in the second half of the nineteenth century. Half the migrants (fifty-two per cent) remained in rural environments; a further eighteen per cent moved to rural market towns. Thus only thirty per cent of the sample moved to truly urban destinations. Furthermore fifty per cent of the adult male migrants remained as agricultural labourers or in closely related occupations; even in the urban cohort twenty-one per cent followed agricultural-related occupations. Using the Armstrong classification of social status, it was not possible to measure any significant increase in status following rural to urban movement. Thus most rural migrants in this sample did not move to urban locations; instead rural to rural movement, making use of traditional skills, was apparently perceived as the most beneficial strategy.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2006 Cambridge University Press

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