The chief industry of
the Forfarshire towns is the manufacture of linen goods, and for
these fabrics the county has a world-wide reputation. If it be
remembered that in respect of this manufacture amongst Scottish
counties Fifeshire is second only to Forfarshire, and that these two
shires are separated only by the estuary of the Tay, the great
importance of the whole district as a textile centre will be at once
manifest. It is doubtless because the soil of Angus was so well
suited for growing flax that, in days when spinners and weavers
depended for their raw material on home production, the industry
should have established itself in this district. But manufacturers
now look to foreign countries for the supply of the raw material. In
the early days, moreover, that is in the closing decades of the
eighteenth and in the opening ones of the nineteenth century, the
work was largely carried on in rural districts, the burghs then
serving as markets for what was spun and woven in country hamlets.
At that time such parishes as Barry, Monifieth, Coupar-Angus,
Dunnichen, Kirkden, Logie-Pert, Glamis, Kinnettles, Mains, Menmuir,
and Stracathro had scarcely a village where the inhabitants were not
mainly weavers. The small farmer grew the flax, his wife spun it,
and in winter-time, when out-door work did not demand his energies,
he himself turned weaver. There was of course much spinning and
weaving in the towns too; but country people brought their yarns and
their woven goods to the nearest town—Dundee, Kirriemuir, Forfar,
Arbroath, Brechin, or Montrose—and sold them in open market. The
time came when every piece of cloth was inspected and stamped by
regular officials before it could be produced in the markets, a
practice which enhanced the value and the reputation of the
productions.
The application of
steam power and the invention of spinning and weaving machines
produced great changes in Forfarshire. These together with the
almost universal employment of foreign raw material practically put
an end to textile work in rural districts. The click of the weaver’s
shuttle is no longer heard in the country cottage; such rural mills
as gave employment to country weavers now stand tenantless or have
long been utilised for other purposes; and, worst of all in every
respect but that of the vast "development of trade, urban population
has enormously increased at the expense of the rural districts.
As early as 1526
Hector Boece speaks of Dundee as a town “in which the people travel
very painfully about making and weaving of cloth.” In 1727, when the
manufactures of other Forfarshire towns were yet in their infancy,
Dundee turned out 1,500,000 yards of linen. In 1738 Arbroath,
previously little more than a village, hit almost by accident on the
production of a cloth known technically as osnaburgs. After 1746 the
flax trade rapidly prospered in Brechin, where also osnaburgs were
the chief fabric made. In the same year Forfar began the same
manufacture. About this time the manufacture of brown linen was
introduced into Kirriemuir, and carried on so successfully that in
1816 the town was second to Dundee in the staple industry. Before
1740 Montrose was distinguished chiefly for its shipping, but about
that time it entered the linen trade, which rapidly became of great
importance. Its annual market was long the principal one in the
county for linen yarn, which was brought from all centres within
Forfarshire and even from beyond its limits.
The linen industry
was fostered by government bounties till 1832, by which time it was
thoroughly established. While linen manufacture has been on the
whole steadily and even rapidly progressive, at times it has
undergone great depression, as in 1826 and 1847. But perhaps the
most critical period was 1830-40, when cautiously and tentatively
the manufacturers of Dundee began to spin and weave jute. Even after
it was finally adopted as the staple trade, and after machinery
suited to the working of the new fibre had been perfected, the
industry was hampered because the jute was imported through London
and Liverpool. In more recent years a fleet of magnificent ships has
brought the raw material direct from India to Dundee. Foreign
competition, and especially that of Calcutta, has operated
adversely. Nevertheless the ever-increasing markets opened up in
nearly every country of the globe and the fact that certain classes
of goods can st'II be best made in the old centres of manufacture
have enabled Dundee to more than hold its own.
Industries auxiliary
to spinning and weaving, the main branches of the linen trade, are
bleaching, dyeing, and calendering. The bleach-field is a necessary
adjunct of every factory or of every textile district. In no part of
the county, however, is bleaching so characteristic an employment as
in the valley of the Dighty, doubtless because of its proximity to
Dundee. This rivulet not only supplied water for bleaching but in
the beginning of last century was spoken of as the hardest worked
stream in Great Britain in proportion to its size, for there were
then on its banks nine bleach-fields, 17 mills for washing and
cleaning yarn, and five mills for beating thread and cloth.
The following excerpt
from the latest annual report of the Dundee Chamber of Commerce
contains interesting figures in connection with the local staple
trade :
The local imports of
jute for the year ending 31st December, 1911, amounted to 201,000
tons. The imports of flax were 12,600 tons, tow 4250 tons, and hemp
2500 tons. The exports of jute yarn from the United Kingdom for the
year 1911 amounted to 22,020 tons, valued at ^704,000. Jute piece
goods were exported to the extent of 149,450,000 yards, valued at
^2,045,000. Jute sacks were exported to the extent of 60,153,000
sacks, valued at £1,051,400 in 1911. Jute manufactures were imported
from abroad to the value of £2,162,000, and were re-exported to the
value of £1,324,000, leaving a difference of £839,000 as the
apparent value of foreign jute manufactures retained for home
consumption.
While in a general
sense Dundee is the centre of the linen manufacture, and while in
Forfarshire linen is still a great industry, the manufacture of
linen is small in comparison with that of jute. Dundee is
emphatically “juteopolis.”
At one time Dundee
had cotton manufactures, and had a wide reputation for knitted
bonnets: indeed one of its districts was known as “the Bonnet Hill.”
Certain streets in the city still retain names associated with other
trades—the refining of sugar, which was continued until about 1830,
the making of soap, and the manufacture of glass. Tanning, the
preparation of leather, and the making of boots and shoes were
extensively carried on, though at present these are in abeyance, in
Dundee at least. Arbroath, however, still does a large trade in
goods of that class. At one time there were no fewer than 60
master-brewers in Dundee, and brewing is still carried on. The
export whiskey trade is very extensive. In Dundee, Montrose, and
other centres, a considerable trade is done in flour-milling. Sweets
and preserves are made in enormous quantities in Dundee, its
marmalade being known all the world over.
Dundee has for
centuries been noted for ship-building; and even in these days when
iron ships have all but superseded those made of wood, vessels
intended for use in the Arctic and the Antarctic, for whale-fishing
and for exploration, are largely made in its yards.
Of the finer kinds of timber imported,
much is used in Dundee for fitting out passenger steamers. But a
striking feature of the local timber trade is its extensive case and
box manufacture. A large proportion of the wood imported is of
course used in the building trade. Paper is manufactured on both
sides of the Tay, and esparto grass, wood pulp, and other necessary
materials enter the district through Dundee and its sub-ports.
Next to the staple
trade the manufacture of iron goods and machinery is the most
important in Forfarshire. Practically all the machinery required for
preparing, weaving, and finishing jute textures has all along been
made in Dundee. The normal production of jute looms in this centre
is from four to five thousand annually. The bulk of these is now
exported to Calcutta, but large numbers are also sent to continental
countries, Japan, China, and Argentina. The value of textile
machinery manufactured here approximates to £300,000 per annum, and
from three thousand to four thousand hands are employed in the
industry.
Dundee engineering
firms also make marine engines, boilers, forgings, and castings;
besides which there are such specialities as high speed gearing for
electric transmission, and machine-cut wheels. This has grown to
such an extent that one firm is now recognised as amongst the
largest makers of this class of gearing in the world. Another
important industry in Dundee is the production of linoleum machinery
for local, continental, and American factories. Machine making is
also extensively carried on in Arbroath.
Dundee is a very
important financial centre. Indeed it is questionable whether the
capital of its great investment companies, which do business mainly
with America, is not greater than that devoted to its staple trade.
Forfarshire does its
own share in printing and publishing. Some of its newspapers have a
circulation almost co-extensive with Scotland. Dundee possesses one
of the largest photographic publishing businesses in the world. |