IT has been mentioned
that Tyree passed from the possession of the Macdonalds, Lords of
the Isles, into the hands of the Macleans of Duart in order that a
bride of the Maclean chief might keep her linen press well plenished.
The growing of flax continued in the islands up to the middle of the
nineteenth century, and, according to the Agricultural Survey (1811)
was encouraged by a government grant of £1 for every acre which
could be shown to produce 15 stones of clean lint, an average crop
being from 30 to 32 stones per acre. The loose sandy soil of the
south and east part of the island was excellently adapted for the
purpose, and the sown grasses which are a common succession crop
after flax, would flourish admirably in Tyree, so that spinning,
dressing, and weaving the linen, mainly, it is said, for home use,
occupied a great deal of time among the women.
A few looms are left
in the island, mainly used for weaving blankets and a strong striped
cloth which is quite a speciality in Tyree; and which is worn by all
the women, except those who, through some unfortunate circumstance
of having been in relation with the mainland, have come to prefer
shoddy material and aniline dyes.
One would naturally
expect that in such a situation Tyree would be a great centre of the
fishing industry. Here is the opinion of an inhabitant upon this
point.
“The fishers are
mostly always poor. The fishermen of Tyree have many hardships to
brave. They have only small boats for the fishing, and they have a
long distance to go to the fishing ground, about twelve or thirteen
miles from land, and the coast is very rough and much exposed to the
Atlantic. Ling and cod are the fish they mostly try, but sometimes
they fish the lobster, which they can get much nearer land. The
whole of them suffer much through the want of a harbour. Very often
they themselves have to draw the boats up away from the beach,
especially in rough weather. The trawlers too hinder very much the
success of the fishing. Sometimes they come across the nets that the
fishermen have set, and they break the nets and take away the fish.
A fisherman’s life is altogether a hard and dangerous one.”
Technically of
course, the steam-trawlers which sweep the bottom of the sea are not
allowed to come within three miles of land, but in Tyree there is no
one, owing to the absence of a harbour, or harbour arrangements and
officials, to enforce the law which is here, as elsewhere, often
evaded under cover of the night, and, moreover, the best spawning
bank for the Tyree fishery is beyond the three mile limit.
The New Statistical
Account of 1845 points out that even then, out of ninety-four
fishing skiffs possessed in the island only ten were regularly
employed, that owing to the absence of shelter, the herring, though
often in sight, never came within reach, that the whales, once a
source of profit, had given up coming, and that all boats had to be
hauled up for at least four months in the year.
There is now very
little arable land in Tyree ; so little of the land, and that of so
inferior a quality, is in the hands of the crofters, the six large
farms all being in the possession of strangers, that the natives
import almost all their food-stuffs, and one accepts the
companionship of sacks of flour and oatmeal as an inevitable feature
of the journey to the island. Until lately the only profitable
home-industry, now alas ! dying out, has been the making of kelp,
and the drying of tangles (of which more presently), and for this
the possession of a horse and cart was an almost necessary
condition. For this reason, and because the soil of Tyree is good
for rearing young stock, horse-breeding has become the most
important commerce of the island. In the New Statistical Account
(1843) we read:
“A prodigious number
of small ponies, distinguished for their symmetry and high mettle,
were formerly reared in this island, and were grazed during summer
on the plain of reef which was then used as a common. These are now
totally extirpated. More than thirty years ago the inhabitants were
prevailed upon, I believe with much reluctance, and by the
interference of authority, to part with them as an unprofitable
stock quite unfit for agricultural labour, and a strong kind was
introduced in their stead.”
There is a local
tradition that the particular breed of horses was, like certain
traits of physiognomy observable among the people, a consequence of
the Spanish Armada.
The raising of horses
has, however, revived as a local trade. It is said, that a few years
ago, a horse bred by a crofter and sold by him to a local farmer for
£30, fell into the hands of an export, was trained for racing
purposes, and finally, as an old mare, was sold for £600. It is
needless to say that after that the dealers came in shoals, and
sometimes good prices are paid still, but not to the crofters, who
cannot afford to get their beasts into proper condition, and have to
sell them while still very young to the alien farmers : who in this,
as in everything else, have an advantage over the people whose
ancestors not only fought for their island home, but by infinite
labour brought it to its present state of fertility. A considerable
part of the population has no land at all, and thus the cottars, in
the absence of any trade, or fishing, can only live by contriving to
maintain a horse, or cow, or a sheep or two for sale (naturally they
do not aspire to milk for their children or meat for themselves), by
doing work for the crofters or small farmers, who allow them a
little grazing in return. These small fanners are practically the
only employers of labour in the island, as the owners of large farms
breed stock for sale, and give no employment except to a very few
shepherds or herds ; one of these farmers indeed visits the island
but about once a year, the late Duke had not been to Tyree for
seventeen years, and the present one has also for long been an
entire stranger.
On the occasion of
our latest visit to the island (1901), we found that the quaint
house which is shown in the frontispiece had disappeared, the old
man was dead, and the old woman was most comfortably established in
an exceedingly unpicturesque, very new, but really convenient
cottage, with two stories and a felt roof, modern grates and wooden
floorings. We had made friends with her eight years before, on the
occasion represented by the picture, a copy of which was given to
the old couple to send to their sailor son, then long absent from
them abroad. Her gratitude for so small a service was almost
oriental in its mode of expression, and we have been friends ever
since. When the sailor son came home, his first care and pride was
to better the housing of his aged parents, and when the dear old
mother, very feeble and much shaken by sorrow* was left alone with
no one to help her, it was difficult to arrange for her care and
comfort. I suggested that with the savings of his seafaring life, he
should manage to stay with her to the end, and cultivate a bit of
land sufficient for their maintenance. The landlord gets from two to
throe pounds an acre for this waste of sand, which only an
incredible amount of feeding can make productive for tillage of any
kind. But no, the scrap of ground on which the four walls rested,
probably about 30 by 15 feet, was every inch they could obtain, for
the cottar has no enclosure whatever, and the crofter, if he get a
few feet of front garden or back yard, pays for it as land, and not
as the necessary accompaniment of a house, as elsewhere.
There is no range of
hills in Tyree, but three hills at the west end of the island and
two at the east, though of no great height, relieve the monotony of
the landscape. The island, as has been said, is indeed, more than
flat, for a part of it is absolutely below sea-level. One had heard
stories of the sea from two sides meeting in the middle of the
island, and one trustworthy inhabitant told us that he had often
lain flat upon the Reef (this low tract of country) at night, and
had lifted up his face to see the moonlight strike the waves above
the level of his head. We never tried the experiment ourselves, as
it is very easy to get into considerable difficulties on the Reef,
home of mallard, teal, and coot, even in broad daylight; and we were
once more than four hours wandering over and over a small tract of
bog, unable to extricate ourselves, till help came from a shepherd
who had seen us from the hill, and who, from his higher level, could
signal to us how to reach a place of security.
There are no frogs,
toads, or snakes ; the hare, introduced within recent years, is the
only quadruped, with the exception of the rat, which, since timber
has been imported, has become somewhat troublesome.
Something has already
been said of the wild birds, which in a country not only treeless
but almost without cover of any kind, even heather being very
scarce, are extraordinarily varied and numerous. Their perching
places are of course the loose walls or the galvanized wire used for
boundaries, and their entire fearlessness is a delightful tribute to
the humanity of the islanders. The Hebrides are throughout a
paradise of larks, which seem to sing almost all day and night in
the clear summer twilights. We have heard them in full song at
half-past ten at night, and again at three o’clock in the morning.
The lapwing is even more numerous and even more assertive. To be
attended for miles by, say fifty lapwings, each possessed of the
opinion that your one object in life is to discover the whereabouts
of his nest, and each protesting, with the vigour of a ’vert that it
is somewhere else, becomes a really troublesome feature in the month
of June. The cuckoo calls from the whin hedge which is the pride of
the district of Moss; the swift circles overhead, partridges make
merry in the sand-knolls at Haugh; the landrail and sandpiper and
stone-chat are everywhere ; the teal, the coot, moorhen, grebe and
mallard may be seen about the lochs, and in the winter come the
robin and the wren, and the thrush ; but these leave before the
nesting-season, as do other winter visitants, herons, wild geese,
wild swans, the scoter, golden plover, the snipe (for the most
part), and the godwit.
The cliffs of
Kenevara present an extraordinary spectacle in the breeding-season.
Wandering over the hill, one becomes aware of a sound only to be
compared to a Wagner chorus, the Valkyrie, perhaps, performed on a
thousand stringed instruments, and ever growing louder and louder.
Suddenly the hill is cleft by a narrow ravine, and two absolutely
perpendicular cliffs confronting each other, are separated by an
inlet of the sea, but a few feet wide, where, on a sunny day, the
seals bask on the sheltered rocks below. At the head of the gully is
a deep cave entered only with considerable difficulty, and where
hundreds of blue doves have their home in the rocks. The cliffs
themselves from crown to base are white with hundreds of young
seabirds sitting, as it seems, in tight-packed rows on incredibly
narrow ledges, and all screaming for food, while the old birds fly
in and out in snowy clouds, bringing choice morsels for their
exacting broods. At first one’s sense seems almost dulled by the
weird and monotonous orchestra, the sounds rising and falling as the
creatures pause to devour their food, and varied only by occasional
shrieks of expectation as the parents come in sight. Then by degrees
one gains sufficient detachment to be able to take in the wonderful
outline and colouring of the strange picture, the brilliant blue of
a sky and sea which roll away and away without interruption to a Now
World—the deep grey of the towering cliffs, the irregular gloaming
rows of white sea-birds, stationary in mass but in detail ever
moving, ever stretching forth impatient golden beaks, and straining
on long rows of tenacious golden feet. Above and beneath and about
thorn, great hanging beds of pink sea-thrift, brilliant bluebells,
pink and yellow vetch, crimson clover, and geranium, waving ferns
and grasses, brilliant and prolific as such things are, only in
places absolutely inaccessible except to the kindly hand of Nature.
And then, from time to time, comes the swooping of strong wings
overhead, the sudden descent of the great mother-birds—gull or
kittiwake or guillemot. Away, under an overhanging crag, is the nest
of the much-feared hoodie-crow, and there too, a pair of ravens have
lived beyond the memory of man, every year driving their young
family away from the island. Down below, our guide pointed to a
ledge, sacred, it is said, year by year, to tho cormorants. At
certain times other birds make their way to this sheltered spot,
wild geese, swans, scoters, great northern divers, falcons, or the
goosander and seamew. No one is such a lover of home as the
Highlander.
The old instinct of
devotion to the Chief, of defence of his territory and theirs, of
love for the Clan, survives in other forms to this day; in the
absence of that spirit of detraction so common in what is called
“the higher civilization,” in mutual kindness and loyalty, perhaps,
above all, in a pride in their native islands which is something
more than Nature-worship. The following description of the
bird-haunted cliffs of Kenevara is quoted from an essay written by a
pupil in one of the schools of the district, a boy who probably from
his earliest years has known and loved the scene of which he writes,
and living in a world limited to the narrow bounds of his native
island, has never dreamed of rivalry nor learned indifference to the
familiar. The passage, and indeed the entire exercise from which it
is taken, is a curious contrast (as are some hundred others in my
possession) to what the average English boy would write in
describing, let us say, the Black Gang Chine in the Isle of Wight,
or the Devil’s Dyke at Brighton. Even when writing a foreign
language, as of course English is to the Gaelic-speaking Highlander,
the fashion of speech is always Celtic, almost like Hebrew in its
tendency to metaphor and mysticism.
“The bellowing ocean,
dragging adown the beach the eternally rattling pebbles, and leaving
inland and far up the shore the stranded produce of the everlasting
sea-clad rocks, retreats back to its nethermost murmuring caverns.
What a wonderful sight!
“Should you stand on
the top of the cliffs and shout out at the pitch of your voice, lo!
with mournful sound like the voice of a vast congregation solemnly
answers the sea, mingling its thundering roar with your feeble voice
that is instantly drowned thereby. Some of the caves go in far
beneath the cliffs, and though you cannot see their inner recesses
you can hear the continuous murmur. The wild sea-birds scream
through the dark colonnades and steep corridors, breaking the
death-like seal of the silence, and giving tongue to the sea-defying
rocks. The multitudinous echoes of these birds awake and die in the
distance over the watery floor, and beneath the reverberant tops of
the hillock. Few are the sights more glorious to behold than this
hill on a summer afternoon, resting in silence under the bluest of
heavens, when twinkling vapour arises, and sky, water and cliffs
seem all to smile joyfully under the illuminating rays of the sun.”
There is something in
the happy choice of epithets, even when, as in the case of the
“watery floor,” which is Milton’s, it may not be wholly original,
which compels the recollection that Tyree is the scene of much of
the story of Ossian, and that the writer of this schoolboy exercise
is thinking in the language of Ossian, a language impossible to
translate and which is moreover an ill preparation for writing in a
foreign tongue. In the above description, for example, the only word
which jars is that of “ hillock,” as applied to the steep and
frowning, though not really lofty cliffs of Kenevara. But no doubt
the word in the lad’s mind was one wholly suitable, for whereas, in
English, we have none more dignified to apply to an elevation not
quite a hill and certainly not a mountain, the choice which the
Gaelic supplies to describe the infinite variety which the Highlands
furnish, is at least worthy of the country of their origin; rising
as they do in varying degrees from montich, sliabh, aspach, gleann,
coire, to the loftier cuse, meall, mam, bruach, leittir, ardoch or
beinn. From such a choice, which could probably be largely extended
by a Gaelic scholar, it must surely be far more possible than in the
humbler English to select one which can convey a shade of meaning
with something like accuracy.
One who is familiar
with Ossian—let Dr. Johnson say what he will—cannot fail to b©
constantly struck with th© extraordinary choice of epithets
furnished by the Gaelic language, and even the simplest of their
songs, the most ordinary bit of folk-lore, is to this day recited
with an almost equal delicacy and perception. It is a subject which
one might illustrate at great length if space permitted, but here,
at all events, I content myself with a single example.
A native of Tyree
once recited to us the description of the horses of Cuchullin, the
strongest man of the Fingalian tribes. It was an occasion I can
never forget. We were wandering slowly among the long bent grass
which clothes the low lying ground that slopes down to the Atlantic.
We had just left the hill of Kenevara where, putting our ear to the
ground, we were told to listen to the music of the lament endlessly
sung in the cave below, where “the yellowhaired Dearmaid of women,”
so beautiful that every woman loved him, remained blamelessly with
Graine, the wife of his uncle Fionn, but was unjustly slain and
buried near by with his two dogs. Graine was the daughter of
Cuchullin8 (according to our legend), and she was beautiful as he
was strong.
The sun was setting
over the wide west, and as we listened to the poem one was, as so
often happens, seized with the sensation of the solidarity of human
history and human thought. The old Greek story of Apollo driving his
chariot across the western plain seemed very near, as the sky became
a glory of gold and crimson, and we could almost fancy we hoard the
prancing of the steeds of Cuchullin, where down below on the firm
white sand the fires of the kelp gatherers were beginning to twinkle
as the sun went down.
“What do we see in
that chariot?”
We see in that
chariot the horses white-bellied, white-haired, small-eared,
taper-sided, neat-hoofed, great, majestic, with their bridles
pliant, slender, shining like a precious stone, or the sparkling of
red fire ; like the movement of a wounded fawn, like the sound of
the hard blasts of winter, they approach in that chariot.
What do we see in
that chariot?
We see in that
chariot the horses fleet, hardy, strong, powerful; as waves
impetuous, vigorous, exquisitely formed, able to tear the tangles of
the deep from their rock-fixed roots.
What do we see in
that chariot?
We see in that
chariot the horses rank-breaking, rank-levelling, exceeding strong,
mettlesome, nimble, prancing like an eagle’s talons seizing on an
animal’s head ; they are called the beautiful greys, the highly
prized stay of the chariot.
What do we see in
that chariot?
We see in that
chariot the horses white-faced, white-fetlocked, slender-limbed,
fine-maned, high-breasted, head-rearing, broad-chested, bearing a
silken flag; of little age, light of hair, little-eared,
great-spirited, highly fashioned, of wide nostrils, slender-bellied,
of form nice, delicate like foals, lively, frisking, prancing.” [It
must not be supposed that the above was written down from memory. I
found the poem long after in a collection of the local evidence for
the authenticity of Ossian by Dr. Blair, approved by David Hume
1703, and believe it to be practically the same.]
The Gaelic of Tyree
is said to be of exceptional purity, as well it may from the early
connexion of the island with Iona, the centre of learning and
scholarship, to an extent which the English reader does not always
realize. A hundred years before the foundation of the earliest
English University—at Oxford—monks sent out from this little islet
in the Hebrides had established the universities of Pavia and Paris,
had sent professors to Cologne and Louvain, had sent missionaries to
“the Middle Angles, Mercians, and East Saxons, whose chief city was
London, and instructed them in the liberal arts,” and had founded
some seventy monasteries in various parts of the continent. Little
wonder then that in Tyree, so closely associated with Iona from a
very early period, we should find a love and appreciation of
scholarship and a well of Gaelic undefiled.
A stranger taking a
casual walk almost anywhere in Tyree, but especially in the west and
north-west end of the island, might suppose that there had been an
epidemic among the big dogs or small calves, and that the owners had
been preparing for their respectful interment. Scattered all over
the island, mainly on dry ground within reach of the sea, are what
look like little graves, carefully lined with flat pebbles, but are
really kilns, destined to the burning of kelp.
Kelp is made from two
kinds of sea-weed, the species called fucus which grows within tidal
range and is cut from the rocks at low-water, and another variety,
the laminariaa, which is thrown up by the storms or other causes.
When the drift-weed is seen coming in, those who live near the shore
hoist a pole with a bundle of weed atop, and the cottars and poorer
crofters hasten down to the shore, and men, women and children are
occupied, whatever the weather, in removing the precious jetsam out
of the reach of the sea, often working till the incoming tide is
over the knees both of man and horse. It is then spread out on dry
rocks—any admixture of sand being detrimental—until it putrifies and
is then put into the kilns, each kiln holding about half a ton; a
little dried straw being placed at the bottom. It is then set
alight, and is allowed to burn for six or eight hours, being
carefully watched the whole time, as, when the critical moment
arrives, and the whole is reduced to a fused mass, it is carefully
raked, sprinkled with salt water, and broken up into convenient
pieces. At this stage it looks like grey slag with streaks of white,
blue, and brown, running through it. The kelp-rake is like a small
spade, with a handle about seven feet long. Often, late into the
summer night, one sees the fires of the kelp-burners twinkling along
the shore in scores. The labour and watching required is immense,
especially in collecting the drift-weed, which, for its present
purpose, the distillation of iodine, is three or four times more
valuable then the cut weed. The south-country people, and
self-interested proprietors, who talk about “the lazy Highlander”
fail to realize that their work, fishing, kelp-making, crofting, is
a war carried on at fearful odds with the elements, even in islands
like Tyree, where, thanks to a kindly factor, they are not liable to
be called off to the enforced estate labour which in certain
districts frequently becomes imperative, immediately that the coming
of the drift-weed is heard of. To produce one ton of kelp no less
than twenty to twenty-two tons of sea-weed are required, but such is
the industry of these thrifty folk that even when the kelp has been
as low as £2 10s. a ton, a single family has been known to earn from
£30 to £40 in a season. [The Duke of Argyll, in his pamphlet on
Farms and Crofts, states that in the season 1880-1 from two to three
thousand pounds’ worth of kelp and tangle were manufactured in
Tyree, representing 370 tons of kelp and 417 tons of tangle. It does
not appear what proportion of this sum reached the people.]
The tangle gathering
is a somewhat analogous industry, but is carried on in winter, and
consists in collecting and drying the large shiny brown stalks
thrown up by th6 tide, especially after a storm. These are gathered
with a sort of narrow hay-fork, tossed ashore, and then collected in
carts and stacked in a dry place. These stacks are of oblong shape,
built to a certain height, and are paid for by the North British
Chemical Company, at a given price per foot of length. The grieve
who collects them, is provided with a long stick having an iron
spike at the end, with which he pierces the pile at intervals, to
ascertain that it contains no foreign matter, and that it is built
fairly and on a level rock. The refuse, when cut away from the
stalks, makes excellent manure for laying on the fields. A single
storm will sometimes throw up enough tangle to keep a whole village
occupied for two or three months.
Kelp is technically
“produced by the incineration of various kinds of sea-weed obtained
in great abundance on the west coasts of Ireland and Scotland, and
the coast of Brittany in France.”
The first chapter in
the history of kelp belongs to the time when it was burnt in order
to obtain carbonate of soda and other salts, also sulphate of potash
and potassium chloride. It was, according to The Old Statistical
Account, unknown to the Highlands till 1735, when it was but
imperfectly introduced by one Rory Macdonald, whom a gentleman in
this country (Hugh Macdonald, late tacksman of Balle Share, North
Uist) had invited over from Ireland for the purpose of making
experiments. In his first attempts he only reduced the seaweed to
ashes, on which account he was called Rhuary na luahigli, or Rory,
maker of ashes. Nicknames were then, as they still are, a great
feature of Highland humour. At first he sold it at a pound a ton,
but gradually it rose in value till some time after the breaking out
of the American War. The worthy minister who wrote this account,
does not seem to have known that the real enemy to this flourishing
Highland industry was Nicholas le Blanc. To the average layman
indeed, the name of Le Blanc conveys nothing whatever, yet it is not
too much to say that his existence has been as great a misfortune to
the Outer Hebrides as if he had been a modern landlord. Born in the
year 1753, he was educated in chemistry and surgery and became
private surgeon to the Duke of Orleans. For anything one knows to
the contrary, he led a blameless life till the year 1787, when, by
the offer of a reward of 2,400 livres, by the French Academy, he was
incited to an invention which may have been for the greatest good of
the greatest number, but which, happening just when it did, perhaps
put the coping-stone to the misfortunes of the unhappy population of
the Outer Hebrides. It led to the depreciation of the value of kelp,
the last hope of the old proprietors, already so sadly impoverished
by the '45, with all the train of disaster that followed.
The Encyclopaedia
Britannica tells us incidentally under the article Sodium, that Le
Blanc’s discovery was “perhaps the most valuable and fertile
chemical discovery of modern time,” though his name does not
otherwise appear in its pages. His discovery brought him little
personal good; had he been one of the crofters, of whom he was to be
incidentally the ruin, he could hardly have been more unfortunate.
For some technical reason, the prize was never awarded, but in 1790,
his patron, the Duke of Orleans, agreed to provide a capital of
200,000 francs for working out the process, and in the following
year the National Assembly granted him a patent for fifteen years,
and works were established at Saint Denis. In less than two years,
however, France herself came under the heel of new proprietors, the
Duke of Orleans was murdered, Le Blanc was evicted, receiving a mere
mockery of compensation (4,000 francs) and, broken in health and
spirits, hopeless and without resource, he perished by his own hand
in the workhouse.
The invention
survived, and so far as the manufacture of soda was concerned, kelp
was no longer needed, and it declined in value from twenty-two
pounds per ton at the beginning of the century, when 20,000 tons per
annum were produced in the Hebrides alone, to ten guineas in 1822.
The duty was then taken first off barilla, and then off salt, and
the price fell during the next ten years to two pounds. It was at
this time that General Macneill, the last of the old Chiefs of Barra,
sustained the severe losses that finally compelled the disastrous
sale of his island. He had attempted the manufacture of soap, and
according to some accounts, of glass, but the cheaper production of
soda was more and more generally adopted, kelp yielding at best only
four per cent., and often only two per cent., and being always for
that purpose a more costly source for the manufacturer.
It was about 1755
when one of the authors of the Old Statistical Account wrote of the
recent importation of barilla after the close of the American War:
“It is to be feared the manufacture will be given up entirely, to
the utter ruin of the inhabitants of the parish (North Uist), unless
Government, to encourage home-manufactures, may look upon the
commodities used in the place of it as objects of taxation.” Of
course Government did nothing of the kind; the problem of Free Trade
v. Fair Trade is an old, old story, and before very long the
products of kelp were made in Germany, at the Starsfurth salt-mines.
About the middle of
the present century the industry received a new impetus from the
great demand for iodine to be used in the preparation of
methyliodide, used in the making of aniline dyes, the crude magentas
and violets of 1857 or thereabouts. The presence of iodine in the
waste liquors of kelp, had been discovered as early as 1811, but
there had hitherto been no demand for it in any quantities. However,
for some time kelp was the only commercial source, and it seemed as
if prosperity might return to the islands. Before many years had
passed, however, another discovery again interfered, and iodine made
from Chili saltpetre appeared in the market. Fortunately, however,
in 1863 Mr. Edward Stanford came upon the scene, and practically
saved the situation. The rude methods in use by the Highlanders
tended to the volatisation of the iodine, and by establishing in
Tyree a distillery which secured the most careful utilization of all
the salts, and by the use of all the most approved methods, the
industry has been kept alive to this day, though, since his death in
1899, it has seemed as if once more kelp were likely to become a
drug, not in, but outside of the market, unless, that is, some cleus
ex machind should once more appear.
Note.—The name of
Edward Cortis Stanford (J.P., C.C., F.I.C., F.C.S., late President
of the Society of Chemical Industry and a member of the Committee of
the British Association for nearly thirty years) ought never to be
forgotten in the Western Highlands, not only on account of the
scientific skill which enabled him to be of such eminently practical
service to a cause which could never have survived without his help,
but also for the enthusiasm and love of humanity with which he
dedicated his rare knowledge to the service of a people little used
to receive kindness from the outside world.
At the early age of
twenty-six he received the Silver Medal of the Society of Arts for a
paper on the Economic Application of Sea-weed, which led to his
association, for thirty years, with the kelp industry of Ireland and
the Western Isles. In 1863 works were commenced in Tyree and North
Uist, and his improvements in kelp production were shortly after
brought into use in Norway. The collection of tangle provided winter
work for a great number of men, women, and even children. It was
stored, preserved and turned to an immense variety of uses besides
the central one of the manufacture of iodine. The works were lighted
by gas obtained by its distillation, the ammonia was used as manure,
the tar for the roof of the works and the residual charcoal was
found of extreme value for sanitary purposes in dealing with
domestic sewage. The value of sea-weed as food, in the form of dulse,
laver, or Iceland Moss, was put forward, a substance was
manufactured for sizing cloth, another for covering boilers, and for
preventing boiler-incrustation. Perhaps of these by-products none
has attracted more attention than that of Alginoid Iron, which is
described (Biographical Sketch by Professor G. G. Henderson) as “a
compound which has been found of marked therapeutic value.”
Readers may be
reminded that apart from his association with the kelp industry, Mr.
Stanford rendered signal service to therapeutics by the perfection
of a method for extracting Thyroglandin, the active principle of the
thyroid gland. |