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Farming Practice in the Western Highlands and Islands before Crofting: A Study in Cultural Inertia or Opportunity Costs?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
Extract
Farming in the western Highlands and Islands of Scotland was transformed over the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries by the clearance of some townships to make way for commercial sheep production and the reorganisation of others into crofts. Commentaries on the region prior to these changes portray it as a cultural backwater, with communities employing a range of seemingly archaic and primitive practices. Early agricultural surveyors and ‘Improvers’ who visited or worked in the region were especially important in laying the foundation for this view. Admittedly, their near moral conviction about change and the virtues of new husbandry made them disdainful of traditional practice everywhere, even in the Lowlands. When it came to the western Highlands and Islands, though, their tone underwent a perceptible change, with words like primitive and barbaric creeping into their descriptions. Early travellers added to this picture of a region rooted in the past, with customs and practices that seemingly set it apart, chronologically as well as geographically, from the rest of Britain.
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References
Notes
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79. A fine illustration of this point is provided by a township on Unish Moor, Vaternish, Skye, that appears to have been abandoned by the early seventeenth century. One or two fields have the broad gentle undulations of plough rigs, but there are no signs anywhere of the sharp, narrow rigs produced by the spade or caschrom. However, townships that lie a few miles further south - where dense settlement can be traced through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries - are heavily corrugated by spade rigs.
80. Detailed figures are provided by SRO RHP8826/2, General Description of Tirii; SRO RH2/8/24, Blackadder's Description of Sky and North Uist 1799 and 1800; E7292/9/1 Journal of Archibald Menzies 1768; Dunvegan Castle, MacLeod Papers, Survey of Harris, 1772.
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97. SRO, Forfeited Estates, E788/42, Report on Barrisdale and Kinlochmoidart c.1755.
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