MONTROSE has long been famed as a shipping port for grain.
Well situated on the coast of Angus, one of the best corn-growing counties
of Scotland, it has a wider sweep of country around from which to draw
supplies, and favoured by the converging lines of railway, it has now
greater facilities than ever it had before. There is perhaps no better wheat
land in England than the low parts of Maryton and Old Montrose, and
Borrowfield in the immediate neighbourhood; and all along, and up from the
coast road northwards, there is strong corn land. Nothing can surpass Angus
oats and barley; so, taking into account the quality of the grain and the
ready access for shipment or transit by rail,, the com merchants of Montrose
must always carry on a very extensive business. One of them shipped upwards
of 20,000 quarters of oats last year, which was nearly four times as much as
were exported altogether ten years ago.
FLOUR MILLS
There are two Flour Mills in Montrose, the oldest close upon
the Backsands, carried on by Mr. William Adams, and the other near the
terminus of the railway, of which the partners are Messrs Mackenzie and
Reid, who are about to make an addition to it. These two mills grind upwards
of 20,000 qrs. of wheat between them in the year.
STARCH MANUFACTORIES
There are two Starch Works in Montrose, the oldest
established by D. Milne & Co., in 1798, and now carried on in Bridge Street
by Mr. George Milne, of the third generation, At the above date there were
only other two starch works in Scotland, one at Musselburgh and the other at
Renfrew. The other is in the Seagate, under the firm of the Montrose Starch
Co., formerly carried on by Mr. John Muckart, who converted some old houses
there into suitable premises, and thereby much improved the character of the
locality. The starch manufactured in Montrose is of very fine quality, and
is well known and highy esteemed all over the kingdom. At one time all the
flour required for starch was ground by a hand-mill.
POTATO TRADE
The year 1847 was a calamitous year on account of the general
failure of the potato crop of 1846 in Scotland, whereby the herring trade
was also much affected, for about that time a quantity of herring was sent
to Sunderland which could not be sold at any price for want of potatoes, and
they were sent back to Montrose. Parcels of potatoes imported that year were
considered a great rarity, and some sold as high as £14 a ton. If the
importer had planted them, instead of selling any, he would have realized a
fortune, for the prices kept well up the next and following years. When they
began to recover from the disease, Mr. George Hall began at first in a small
way to supply families in town from his farm of Glenskenno, and afterwards
to ship them to the London market, in which trade he succeeded a few years
so well as to build the large potato store at the Dock, and purchase the
estate of Park-connon. The trade continued to be prosperous for a number of
years, and the farmers got very high prices—some of them paying their rents
from that crop alone; but they were the only gainers in the end, for it is
difficult to command the London market, at which prices fluctuate so much,
and without some fixed arrangement with farmers about land, the trade could
not be extensively carried on. From all that can be learned, no one that
ever attempted the trade on a large scale made any thing of it. Caleb
Anderson, at the commencement of his prosperous career, did well with
it; but he only freighted his ships with potatoes instead of ballast, and
entered no farther into it. Potatoes are a perishable cargo too, and are so
long on their way by sea, that when they come to a falling market, and are
also deteriorated in quality, the sacrifice in price must be ruinous. The
farmers are now shipping potatoes on their own account, as the prices are
low here. The farmers in Forfarshire were much indebted to Mr. Hall. |