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Agriculture, Technology, and Industrialization: The Rural Textile Sector in the Netherlands, 1830–1860

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 October 2008

Joyce M. Mastboom
Affiliation:
Department of History, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.

Extract

In 1833 in a small village in the eastern Netherlands, a school opened for training weavers in using a new technology imported from England: the flying shuttle. The school began by training boys and girls between the ages of 11 and 16; when that proved successful it opened its doors to all weavers sent by manufacturers from the greater region, which soon necessitated several branch schools. By far the majority who came were home-based workers and after their training, a matter of a few weeks for those not new to the task, they could take a new loom with them on a payment plan. Once home, they in turn trained others, while local carpenters learned to build new looms. As a result, weaving in the rural textile regions of Twente and the Achterhoek (see figures 1 and 2) was transformed rapidly so that by 1836 no more new pupils came, and the schools were closed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1994

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References

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31. Competition came from England, Scotland, Ireland, Flanders, Silesia, and Müsterland. Boot, J.A.P.G., ‘Fabrikeurs en Textielzaken Omstreeks 1750’ in Textielhistorische Bijdragen 5 (1964), p. 26.Google Scholarvan Bath, B. H. Slicher, ‘Historische Ontwikkeling van de Textielnijverheid in Twente’ in Textielhistorisch Bijdragen 2 (1961), p. 34.Google Scholar

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36. In 1812 a provincial official wrote to the central government that the weavers in Winterswijk and Dinxperlo had suffered much as a result of the maritime war and that their number had dwindled to barely a quarter of the old days. A year later, the mayor of Neede complained that ‘… goods are not shipped but are piled up like bricks in Amsterdam and elsewhere which means that manufacturers lay off their workers’. See Gedenkstukken der Algemeene Geschiedenis van Nederland van 1795 tot 1840 6 (The Hague, 1912), p. 1332Google Scholar, and Gemeente Archief (G.A.) Neede, ‘Brieven & Besluiten die worden afgezonden door den Maire, aangelegt den 11 Mey 1813’, letter to the sous prefect, 1 September 1813. The word translated here as worker, was knecht in the original which is closer to helper or assistant.

37. Weaving for domestic use continued throughout this period and the rest of the nineteenth century. Even though peasant/weavers could no longer sell much cloth to fabrikeurs (merchant manufacturers), they made it for use by their own families and servants. Therefore, weaving skills and looms continued to exist in most rural households, even among those people who no longer considered themselves weavers. Some weavers in Winterswijk found a unique solution to their problems. It was reported in 1811 that every year in February or March, fifteen weavers left Winterswijk for Friesland to weave there until the fall. Rijksarchief in Gelderland (R.A.G.), Bataafs-Franse Archieven (B.F.A.), nr. 5487, Opgaven van werklieden in dit departement,…1811; nr. 7486, Lijst en staat houden opgaaf over 1811, 1812 van de seizoen arbeiders…

38. Damsma, D., de Meere, J.M.M.. Noordegraaf, L., Statistieken der 19e Eeuw, Supplement (The Hague, 1979)Google Scholar. R.A.G., Gedeputeerde Staten, Verhuisnummer 458, Staat der fabrieken en trafieken in de provincie Gelderland op den eersten Augustus 1816.

39. R.A.G., Provinciate Staten, Verslag Provincie Gelderland, 1834.

40. R.A.G., Gedeputeerde Staten, 25.05 Handel en Nijverheid, 1/1 105/1, 74/1, 45/1, 33/1, 23/1, 67/1, 15/1; Provinciale Staten, Verslag Provincie Gelderland, 1835, 1839. Gouverneur/Commissaris der Koning, Verbalen 6–3–1847, Nominatieve opgaaf der fabrieken in de provincie Gelderland… A.R.A., N.H.M., nrs. 1996–2034, Bijlagen tot de Notulen van de Directievergaderingen 1835–1860. J.W. Meyerink Kasboek 1935.

41. R.A.G., Provinciate Staten, Verslag Provincie Gelderland 1841, 1842, 1843. Calico weaving in Arnhem, 's Heerenberg and Ruurlo stopped.

42. Mansvelt, , Nederlandsche Handel-Maatschappij, 2:108, 113.Google Scholar

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49. R.A.G., Gedeputeerde Staten, 3.313/1 Gemeente Verslagen Aalten 1855–1858; 25.05 Nijverheid, 1/1 Aalten, 105/1 Winterswijk, 74/1 Neede. Ledeboer, A., ‘De Nederlandsche Katoennijverheid Sedert 1860. Gegevens en Beschouwingen’, De Economist 41 (1892), p. 581.CrossRefGoogle Scholarvan Schelven, A.L., ‘Een Overzicht van de Twents-Achterhoekse Textielindustrie uit 1867’, Textielhistorische Bijdragen 3 (1962), pp. 117–18.Google Scholar

50. G.A. Aalten, Drost en Geerfden, nr. 155, Kohieren voor de Inning van de ‘Liberate Gift’. A.R.A., Nassause Domeinraad, Hingman, nrs. 5413–5413a, Rapport, p. 22. R.A.G., B.F.A., nr. 234, Lijsten van het Aantal Zielen…, 1795. Landbouwhogeschool Wageningen, Afd. Sociale en Economische Geografie, ‘Loop van de bevolking in de gemeente …’.

51. See Mastboom, ‘Eastern Gelderland’, pp. 158–60. Note that there is no clear connection between the expansion of rural industry and population growth. Rural industry did not expand until the 1830s, while population growth took off at the beginning of the century. Moreover, population growth in the eastern Achterhoek was smaller than in the province as a whole, i.e., areas without rural industry grew most rapidly. The reasons for this are not clear, but it has been argued that anerbenrecht encouraged smaller families because only one child would inherit. Increased employment opportunities decreased the importance of inheriting the farm, but apparently eastern Achterhoekers did not view this as a reason to discard old customs and traditions that had helped them survive for so long. See ibid., pp. 229–30.

52. van Zanden, J.L., De Economische Ontwikkeling van de NederlandseLandbouw in de Negentiende Eeuw, 1800–1914 (Utrecht, Neth., 1985), p. 111.Google Scholar

53. See Mastboom, , ‘Eastern Gelderland’, pp. 146–9, 169–74.Google Scholar

54. Ownership of horses is a good measure of the growth of medium and large size farms in sandy regions because: a. Horses were expensive and ownership indicates a certain level of income, b. horses became less important as the decades wore on because they were no longer needed to haul turf around. It is therefore significant when their number increased; c. there is a close relationship between number of horses and size of farm. See Van Zanden, , Nederlandse Landbouw, pp. 375–7.Google Scholar

55. Ibid, pp. 329–30, and note 28. See also Mastboom, ‘Eastern Gelderland’, Appendix L. A parellel development took place in the municipality of Woensel in eastern Noord-Brabant (see figure 1). Between 1832 and 1880 the quantity of land under cultivation increased while the number of farmers decreased. Hence, the average size of farms grew, By 1880 there were fewer small farms and more medium-sized farms (5–15 ha). See van den Brink, Gabriël, “De Arbeid is Alles, de Mensch Niets…' Aard en Ontwikkeling van het Boerenbedrijf in de Kempen 1800–1900’ in Tijdschrift voor Sociale Geschiedenis 17 (1991), pp. 56–7.Google Scholar

56. A graphic example of a shift in emphasis from carpentry to farming is documented in a customer book kept by three generations of carpenter/farmers in the eastern Achterhoek between 1750 and 1820. See Mastboom, Joyce M., ‘The Emergence of an Independent Farmer in the Netherlands: an Analysis of the Customer Book of Three Generations of Peasant/Carpenters, 1750–1810’, paper presented at the American Historical Association meetings, 1990.Google Scholar

57. A.R.A., N.H.M., nr. 1997, Bijlagen…1836, Circulaire 30 Juli; nr. 2000, Bijlagen…1838 2e halfjaar, Circulaire Juli.

58. R.A.G., Gedeputeerde Staten, 3.313/15 Borculo 1851, 3.313/23 Dinxperlo, 1853; G.A. Winterswijk, Gemeente Verslag 1853.

59. A.R.A., N.H.M., nr. 2000, Bijlagen…1838 2e halfjaar, 19 September 1838, bijlage 5906, Rapport over eene reize naar Overijssel en Gelderland van 20 tot 28 Augustus 1838.

60. Ligterink, G.H., De Landverhuizers. Emigranten naar Noord-Amerika uit het Gelders-Westfaalse Grensgebied tussen dejaren 1830–1850 (Zutphen, Neth., 1981), pp. 33–4, 15, 121–3.Google Scholar

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62. See Mastboom, , ‘Eastern Gelderland’, pp. 212–4.Google Scholar

63. ‘[This] opens up a depressing future for the lower classes of the population; in many places manufacturing has been emphasized at the expense of agriculture. Already numerous weavers cannot find work anymore, and as a result of the reduction in prices, incomes have been much reduced as well.’ R.A.G., Provinciale Staten, Verslag Provincie Gelderland 1840.

64. See Mastboom ‘Eastern Gelderland’, Appendix J, Table J.3. See also figure 3 above.

65. G.A. Winterswijk, Nieuw Archief, nr. 320 Gemeente Verslagen Winterswijk 1862–1865. H. Willink & Co.'s factory worked throughout the Civil War.

66. See Scranton, , ‘None-Too-Porous Boundaries’, p. 736.Google Scholar