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The Role of Social Networks in Agricultural Innovation: The Sutherland Reclamations and the Fowler Steam Plough, c.1855-c.1885

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 September 2014

ANNIE TINDLEY
Affiliation:
School of Humanities, University of Dundee, Nethergate, Dundee, DD1 4HN, Scotland, UKa.tindley@dundee.ac.uk
ANDREW WODEHOUSE
Affiliation:
Department of Design, Manufacture and Engineering Management, University of Strathclyde, 75 Montrose Street, Glasgow, G1 1XJ, Scotland, UKandrew.wodehouse@strath.ac.uk

Abstract:

The nineteenth century saw an explosion in creativity and innovation, often applied to and motivated by an urge to improve, refine and make more efficient industrial and agricultural processes. There were many innovations in the field of agriculture, supported by the sponsorship of societies and associations and, in the 1850s and 1860s, by strong investment under High Farming. This article examines one of these innovations, the steam plough, with reference to its application in the Scottish Highlands in the 1870s and 1880s. In particular, it illuminates the social networks which lay behind the development and utilisation of the steam plough in the rural Highland context, delineating how aristocratic, religious and local networks combined to have a major impact on rural society in Scotland and beyond. It will examine how these networks interacted to promote the contemporary culture for agricultural and rural innovation through the development of the Fowler's steam plough. What makes this example of particular interest is the fact that agriculturally and financially, the Sutherland land reclamations were an unconditional failure. The environment was too challenging for the technology and despite vast financial resources, the landowner, the third Duke of Sutherland, was, after fifteen years, finally convinced by his advisors that further efforts were futile and irresponsible. This article will interrogate why, despite its essential unfeasibility, the project was pursued, and will argue that the momentum created by the dynamic between the three networks involved propelled it forward despite growing evidence of failure. This article therefore uses an inductive approach by examining a particular example of agricultural design innovation and analysing the pertinent social issues in what would have been termed by contemporaries ‘entrepreneurial spirit’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

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References

Notes

1. Inverness Courier, 6th August 1874.

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26. National Library of Scotland, Acc. 10225, Policy Papers, 69, Wright to Peacock, 14th July 1871; 70, Wright to Peacock, 7th May 1877; see also Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, pp. 66–7.

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28. Winter, Secure from Rash Assault, pp. 9–11; Bonnett, Farming with Steam, pp. 7–8.

29. Bonnett, Saga of the Steam Plough, pp. 26–7; Winter, Secure from Rash Assault, p. 63.

30. Museum of English Rural Life, TR FOW DO2/1 and 2, drawings, registers, 1860s–1892; Bonnett, Farming with Steam, pp.12–13; Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, pp. 93–4.

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32. Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, pp. 96–7.

33. Roberts, ‘Sutherland Reclamation’, p. 426; Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, pp. 96–7.

34. For more on the technology in the imperial context, see Pickard, J., ‘Wire Fences in Colonial Australia: Technology Transfer and Adaptation, 1842–1900’, Rural History, 21:1 (2010), 2758CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, pp. 96–7.

35. Museum of English Rural Life, TR FOW, letters patent, specifications, licences, agreements and patent litigation, C05/33/8, No. 3151 (1872, 1873); CO5/33/12, No. 319 (1874); C05/33/38, No. 2938 (1877).

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54. Windsor, D. B., The Quaker Enterprise: Friends in Business (London, 1980)Google Scholar. Often, these networks were based on key families, and this was the case with the Fowlers and others. Other businesses founded by Quakers included Barclays and Lloyds banks, Allen and Hanbury pharmaceuticals, Huntley and Palmer biscuits, Cadbury's, Fry's and Rowntree's chocolate, and Clark's shoes.

55. Collins, E. J. T., Steam in Agriculture (Reading, 1973)Google Scholar; Tyler, C., Digging by Steam (Watford, 1977), p. 127Google Scholar.

56. Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, 7.

57. Highland and Agricultural Society, 1878.

58. Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, p. 65.

59. Thomas Fowler, brother of John and Robert, for example, was a cotton trader based in Alexandria and assisted Fowler and Company in gaining a foothold in that country: Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, pp. 63, 68, 77.

60. Mathias, First Industrial Nation, pp. 181–2; Macdonald, ‘Progress of the Early Threshing Machine’, p. 6; Wrigley, E. A., Continuity, Chance and Change: The Character of the Industrial Revolution in England (London, 1988)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; for patents relevant to the Sutherland plough see Museum of English Rural Life, TR FOW, C05/33/8, No. 3151 (1872, 1873); CO5/33/12, No. 319 (1874); C05/33/38, No. 2938 (1877).

61. Bonnett, Saga of the Steam Plough, pp. 65–82.

62. Hannah, ‘Moral Economy’, pp. 249–99; Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, p. 66.

63. Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, p. 93.

64. Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, pp. 5–6, 61, 93.

65. For instance, the firm that handled Fowler's Egyptian business was Briggs and Company of Alexandria, the same firm that represented Ransomes, Sims and Jefferies, a Norfolk based Quaker operation; Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, p. 65.

66. Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, p. 62.

67. Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, p. 61.

68. Winter, Secure from Rash Assault, p. 73.

69. Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, p. 90.

70. Pickard, ‘Wire Fences in Colonial Australia’, 28, for another successful colonial transfer; Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, p. 91.

71. Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, p. 96.

72. Roberts, ‘Sutherland Reclamation’, 409.

73. Museum of English Rural Life, TR FOW, CO5/33/8: No. 3151; CO5/33/12: No. 319; C05/33/38, No. 2938; Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, p. 93.

74. Museum of English Rural Life, TR FOW, SP2 records of work events; Winter, Secure from Rash Assault, p. 74; Lane, Story of the Steam Plough Works, p. 95; Inverness Courier, 6th August 1874.

75. Hannah, ‘Moral Economy’, p. 299.

76. Tindley, ‘The Iron Duke’, 304.

77. For example, Times, 12th September 1876; Cannadine, Aspects of Aristocracy, p. 183.

78. See Cameron, E. A., Land for the People? The British Government and the Scottish Highlands, c.1880–1925 (East Linton, 1996)Google Scholar.

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81. A story related by one of the factors to the Napier Commission about the Duke's confidence ran as follows: ‘the Duke of Sutherland one day, standing on the hill pasture, asked me, would it not be a good thing for the employment of the people if we were to set a-going a small farm here, on which we could show the people what crops could be grown by proper trenching and draining and farming.’ PP. 1884, xxxii-xxxvi [C. 3980 I–IV] Evidence of the Commission of Inquiry into the Condition of the crofters and cottars of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, [hereafter Napier Commission Evidence] Evander McIver, p. 1763.

82. National Library of Scotland, Acc. 10225, Reclamations, 5, ‘Lairg and Kildonan Reclamations: Statement as to Cost’ (1892).

83. Census of Scotland, 1911 (Edinburgh, 1912), p. 2233; Hunter, Making of the Crofting Community, pp. 107–8.

84. See for example, Times, 7th September 1874.

85. See for example, Napier Commission Evidence, pp. 1704–31, 1764–70; Bonnett, Farming with Steam, p. 14.

86. Hunter, Crofting Community, pp. 131–3; Winter, Secure from Rash Assault, p. 75.

87. Tindley, Sutherland Estate, pp. 58–64.

88. Tindley, ‘The Iron Duke’, 316–17.

89. Roberts, ‘Sutherland Reclamation’, 441

90. See for instance Staffordshire County Record Office, D593/V/6/79, ‘Report on the Sutherland Reclamations by the President and Secretary of the Scottish Chamber of Agriculture’, July 1878; Roberts, ‘Sutherland Reclamation’, 467; National Library of Scotland, Acc. 10225, Policy Papers, 93, Loch to Peacock, 1st December 1872.

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92. Cannadine, Decline and Fall, pp. 133–4.

93. National Library of Scotland, Acc. 10225, Reclamations, 42, table: ‘Statement as to Cost and Rent of Reclaimed Farms’, 1883.