MORE than seventeen
hundred years ago the Romans discovered the fertility of the soil of
East Lothian. There is every probability that their legions were fed
from the produce of the crops of grain grown on it. They were a people
who understood agriculture well, and would, no doubt, exert their
energies and skill in developing the resources of the land and in
producing good crops. To say that a grain market existed in Haddington
at the time the Romans held possession of the country would (if the town
was in existence at the time) perhaps be a stretch of exaggerated
historical antiquity, and would be liable to be gainsaid; but true it is
that Haddington Grain Market existed at a very early period, certainly
in the year 1296, when Alexander, the Barker or Tanner, was the first
Provost on record. It is still the leading market in Scotland for the
sale of the finest quality of grain, especially for seed corn.
The monks were great and
skilful agriculturists of old. They possessed granges and mills in
numerous parts of East Lothian during the thirteenth and fourteenth
centuries. For instance, they had a domestic farm at Abbey Mains, and
their mill at the Abbey which still exists. Agricultural establishments
owned by nobles and monks were then the fashion of the age; and there is
no doubt Haddington Market existed at that time. Before the days of
turnpike roads, and wains or carts, the grain was brought to market on
horses’ backs. In a very old table of the town’s custom we find the
custom on corn was entered under the head of “horse loads" and was “four
pennies Scots the ilk bag; and the mettage for ilk bag of bear or oats
four pennies Scots; each bag of wheat, beans, or peas, eight pennies
Scots.” The market for the sale of grain and meal was long held on the
spot where the Assembly Rooms now stand, and afterwards on the streets
until 1854, when the Corn Exchange was erected.
Haddington Market seems
always to have been a stock one, and never a sample one, unless when
parcels were sold by special contract and delivered according to the
fiars’ prices of East Lothian. Large parcels were sold on six months’
credit. The market was always under the jurisdiction of the magistrates,
as it continues to be. Many changes have necessarily taken place since
Haddington Market was first begun, in customs, manners, modes of
business, and transit of grain. The carting of grain to Edinburgh, &c.,
was at one time an important trade; but the opening of the North British
Railway knocked it up all at once. Most of the grain bought in the
market was stored in granaries and carted away during the week ; hence
arose the custom of giving luckpennies or “couping fill.” The principal
Edinburgh and west-country bakers, as well as the town and country ones,
got their supplies from Haddington Market on account of its excellent
baking qualities of strong fallow growth. It is stated in the Farmers'
Magazine for April 1801, that the corporation of bakers in Edinburgh
used yearly about 55,000 bolls of wheat, the greater part of which was
believed to be of East Lothian growth. The bakers kept large stocks of
it. There was little foreign wheat used long ago, except in bad years,
and few large steam flour-mills as in the present day. The quantity of
grain of all kinds sold in Haddington Market, crop 1858, from 1st
October 1858 to 30th September 1859, was 83,114 quarters— money value,
^158,061; from 30th September 1859 to 21st September i860, crop 1859,
was 77,481 quarters —money value, £15 5,141. It is believed that the
same amounts have been kept up since then, if not exceeded.
The greatest change,
perhaps, in Haddington Market within the last thirty or forty years is
in the absence of old “familiar faces” of farmers, corn-merchants, and
buyers of barley for distillery purposes. Among the old corn-merchants
there were James Tod of Ormiston, Alexander Robertson of Joppa, William
Gibson of Edinburgh, Mr Glen of Edinburgh, Thomas Hay and Robert Aitken
of Musselburgh, Robert Stenhouse of Tranent, J. B. Thomson of Edinburgh,
John Inglis of Brunstain, Thomas Dods of Dalkeith, and many others. The
distillers were represented by Andrew Taylor of Westbams, John Stott of
Linton, Archibald Dunlop of Haddington, John Lauder for W. & J.
Aitchison, Clement Wells, and Messrs Rate of Milton. The once well-known
names of farmers, viz., Rennie of Phantassie, Brown of Markle,
Bairnsfather, Yule, Carfrae, Walker, Bogue, Hay, Brodie, Crawford, Mylne,
Skirving, Hepburn, Cuthbertson, Kerr, Slate, &c., are now all extinct or
nearly so. Old farmers are getting fewer every year. There were in those
days numerous farmers1 clubs, where they dined and made themselves
comfortable.
It was often remarked
that those who had the farthest to go were the last to leave. There were
the “Union Club” in the George, “Whitehead’s Club” in the King’s Arms,
“Lamb's Club” in Kilpair Street, one in the Bell and the Black Bull, and
some others.
The reports of the prices
of grain in Haddington Market have been published in the Edinburgh
newspapers for at least one hundred or one hundred and fifty years. The
prices have a very important bearing in striking the fiars of the county
of Haddington, in so far that they regulate the stipends of the
Established clergy, and the payment of grain rents. In old times, sales
were often made after the harvest, for delivery during the winter and
spring—the prices to be fixed by the fiars' prices of East Lothian, and
six months' credit given, which was the reason Sheriff Law, in striking
the fiars, added 2½ per cent, to the average prices of each kind of
grain. This reason does not now exist, as all grain is sold for ready
money. Another reason given was that the fiars were struck in the end of
February, and it was supposed that grain was of more value after
February and March, and when, perhaps, the bulk of the wheat crop
remained to be thrashed and brought to the market. But such a
supposition is far from being correct, for it is found that in the
present time wheat and other kinds of grain are often cheaper after
March than before it, not taking into account the extra good condition
of the grain, which is equal to 2s. per quarter at least For instance,
the fiars' prices for crop 1874:—First wheat was 46s. 8f d., second,
44s. 10d.; for barley, 43s. 10d., second, 41s. 10d. The average price of
wheat on 4th June at Haddington was 42s. 10d., difference, 3s. 10d.;
barley, 35s. 6d., difference, 7s. 6d. Oats a little higher on account of
the small crop last year.
This is a subject which
lies much in the province of the East Lothian Farmers Club to discuss at
their meetings. An able report, by Mr H. M. Davidson, on the whole
subject of the fiars, was published in 1850. It contains all the
necessary information of the mode of striking the fiars, and is quite
conclusive in showing that the necessity of adding the 2\ per cent, does
not now exist.
It has often been thought
by many that an Agricultural Museum in connection with the Corn Exchange
would be an interesting and useful appendage to it. Fine specimens of
East Lothian grain, in straw and sample, models of agricultural
implements, both ancient and modern, geological specimens of East
Lothian, rocks and minerals, birds, animals, and antiquities of all
kinds, &c., would form objects of interest to strangers as well as
natives. Such a project deserves notice from the landed proprietors and
public men of the county.
Other county towns, like
Kelso, Peebles, and Stirling, have excellent museums of natural history,
&c., but Haddington is often “far ahint.”
There were always a
number of speculators long ago who laid up large quantities of wheat,
&c., during the winter and spring months, to be kept until favourable
markets came round for them to realise at a good profit. The latest
principal holders of wheat to any extent in Haddington were the late Mr
Aitchison of Alderston and Mr Archibald Cuthbertson of Greendykes. The
most extensive wheat-merchant in olden times was Mr Alexander Crawford,
farmer at Rhodes, North Berwick. For a long period of years he used to
fill his extensive granaries at North Berwick during winter, and could
at any time supply needy buyers before harvest with wheat of fine
quality. Mr Crawford had numerous correspondents in London, Leith,
Glasgow, Lynn, Wisbeach, Stockton, Newcastle, &c., who came to North
Berwick in the months of August, September, and October to buy his fine
East Lothian produce. His name became well known and famous in the
trade.
The following is
extracted from the East Lothian Quarterly Report of November 1804,
published in the Farmers9 Magazine:—“A circumstance may be stated
extremely creditable to the quality of the wheat raised in this
district; and it is done on the authority of an eminent corn-dealer, who
is in the habit of sending wheat to the London market. This gentleman
oftener than once in the course of the quarter has topped Mark Lane with
wheat purchased at Haddington. One day in particular his price was four
shillings per quarter higher than any other cargo presented.” The
corn-dealer was understood to be Mr Crawford.
A story about Mr Crawford
bargaining for a cargo of wheat with an English merchant is still
remembered in East Lothian, and well worth preserving. The dealer was in
the lofts at North Berwick with Mr Crawford, inspecting the stock with
the view of having a transaction. In such cases it generally happens
that a deal of talk and higgling takes place before a bargain is finally
closed. The Englishman had offered a certain price that he would not
exceed, but which Mr Crawford would not accept. Matthew Cassie, a
well-known North Berwick character, very clever and very eccentric, a
close and familiar attendant on Mr Crawford when he came into the town,
and who always called him “Sandie,” was present at the bargaining in the
granary. He tugged Mr Crawford by his coat tail, and whispered to him, “
Chap him, Sandie, and gie him scrimpie (or scrimp measure). A bargain
was ultimately made by halving the difference, perhaps again and again.
Matthew Cassie’s suggestion spread among almost all the corn-merchants
in Scotland and England. The writer of this has heard it mentioned by
extensive corn-merchants in Mark Lane, Glasgow, &c.
Mr Crawford was a man of
great business energy and shrewdness, hospitable and kind in his own
house. He was esteemed by all his friends and acquaintances, and was a
capital specimen of the old class of East Lothian farmers. Besides
farming five to six hundred acres of land, he burned lime from the
Rhodes limestone quarries to a large extent, and shipped it to other
districts besides supplying the country demand, and carried on an
extensive corn trade, as formerly noticed. He was well known in
Haddington Market, which he attended almost every Friday, and was a
prominent member of Whitehead’s dinner club, in the old King’s Arms Inn,
which was supported by many of the respectable farmers of the county.
“Sandie Crawford of the Rhodes” was a household name in almost all the
farmers’ houses in the district.
The Crawfords had been
tenants of the Rhodes farm for over two hundred years, the oldest
perhaps in the county for such a long period on one estate. The late Mr
Adam Crawford was the last tenant of the Rhodes ; he left it about the
year 1862. On the old family tombstone in North Berwick Churchyard is
the following inscription:—“Hear lyeth John Crawford, portioner of
Coldingham, and tennent in ye Roads, who dyed July 28, 1706, aged 69
years. And Jane Robertson, his spous, who dyed January 1730, aged 78
years.” (Other old inscriptions follow.) “ Mr Alexander Crawford, after
having been tennent in Rhodes for 65 years, died 3rd January 1843, in
his 87th year. Born 1756.”
It was the custom long
ago for farmers and others to chew tobacco to a great extent. Mr
Crawford was fond of it, and used to say that chewing tobacco and
drinking grog would make a man live to ninety or one hundred years of
age. A deal of money for rent must have been paid from first to last to
the Dalrymple family by the Crawfords of the Rhodes.
It is curious to note the
changes in the prices of wheat at the close of the last and beginning of
the present century. The first fiars prices of wheat for crop 1800 was
67s. 3d. per boll, or over 130s. per quarter; for crop 1802, 32s. 11d.
per boll, or 62s. per quarter; for crop 1803, 27s per boll, or 53s. per
quarter. Farmers who were accustomed to the extreme high prices of 1799
and 1800, grumbled mugh at the decreased prices of 1802 and 1803. is
recorded that a large and influential proprietor and farmer in East
Lothian wrote to Mr Addington (afterwards Lord Sidmouth), Prime Minister
of Great Britain from 1801 to 1804, complaining of the unremunerative
price of wheat (their staple commodity) in Haddington Market, and he
ended his epistle in the following words:—“What do you now really think,
Mr Addington, when wheat is now only fifty-nine at Haddington?” What a
contrast there is in the price of wheat now, compared with olden times. |