IN the churchyard of
Prestonkirk there stands a tombstone at the grave of a famous East
Lothian agriculturist, with the following inscription on it:—“To the
memory of George Rennie, Esquire of Phantassie, died 10th October 1828,
aged 79. In this county, so celebrated for its fertile soil and the
perfection of its cultivation, Mr Rennie was acknowledged by his
contemporaries to be the most skilful and successful agriculturist. Nor
was the reputation he so justly merited confined to his native land. He
corresponded with, and was visited not only by the leading
agriculturists of England and Ireland, but many noblemen and gentlemen
from France, Russia, Germany, Poland, Hungary, and other European
states, seeking information to improve their domains, were hospitably
received by him, and instructed in his theories and practice. He
performed zealously and impartially the duties of a magistrate, and was
ever ready to advise or assist those who sought relief from difficulties
or misfortune. Deeply lamented by his wife, family, friends, and
dependents, his memory will long be cherished and respected.”
It is understood that
this memorial was written by his old friend and intimate acquaintance,
Mr Brown of Markle, and a truer one was seldom or never penned.
The Rennie family had
long been established in East Lothian, and distinguished as energetic
farmers. Mr Rennie’s father was tenant in part of Phantassie, and died
in 1767, when George, who was his eldest son, was yet a young man. The
youngest son, John, the celebrated engineer, was born in 1761. His
history is well and ably written by our eminent townsman, Dr Samuel
Smiles. Phantassie at that time belonged to the Countess of Aberdeen,
and was divided into several farms. Mr Peter Forrest, afterwards of
Northrigg, farmed Guriy Bank, on the south-east side of the post-road,
with the mill, which was entirely carried away by the great flood ill
the Tyne on 4th October 1775. His house, stackyard, and steading were in
the middle of Linton. Upper and Under Barebones, with the Quarry Park,
&c., was another farm. At that time broom, whins, and scraggy bushes
grew on the sides of the post-road up Pencraig, and few of the fields
were then enclosed. The Countess of Aberdeen sold the whole estate and
superiorities at Linton, &c., to Mr George Rennie somewhere about 1785,
and he then took the whole of it into his own hands and farmed it. It is
interesting to note that Phantassie has ever since continued to be
farmed by the proprietor of it, well on now for one hundred years.
Phantassie, situated in
one of the finest parts of East Lothian, and possessing fertile land,
soon became celebrated under Mr Rennie's judicious and energetic
management as one of the crack farms of East Lothian for producing
abundant crops of the finest quality of grain, which was kept up during
all his lifetime, and down to the present time by his successors.
Turnips, first introduced into the county by Cockburn of Ormiston, and
his tenant Alexander Wight, were extensively grown by Mr Rennie’s father
in 1750 and after, but it was reserved to Mr George Rennie to make
turnips a special crop on his farm. Very large quantities were grown,
sown in drills, and were eaten off the ground by sheep, or consumed by
cattle in courts; abundance of manure was thus provided on the farm for
succeeding crops. In travelling along the post-road, on the top of the
mail and other coaches, strangers from England and other places were
struck on seeing the immense and beautiful grain stacks in Phantassie
barn-yard, symmetrically built, closely thatched with well-drawn straw;
tightly “raiped” down, so as to stand the blast of all storms, and with
an ornamental “peerie” on the apex, they showed that they were put up
under the direction of a master-hand, and were indeed the “Glory of
Phantassie.” The wheat-stacks were said to have thrashed out 40 or 50
quarters of the “finest of the wheat,” which, in those days of war, sold
at prices from 80s. to 90s. per quarter and upwards, and yielded large
sums of money.
Windmills for thrashing
were the fashion long ago on large farms in East Lothian, as well as in
other districts. At Phantassie there was, for many years, a tall, large,
and powerful one, which remained in operation until steam-power
superseded it. It must have been a beautiful sight to see the large mill
at full work, in a rattling windy day, with its widespread and powerful
arms, going at a swinging rate, guided by the “watie,” driving the
strong machinery inside, which had been made by the famous Andrew Meikle
(of whom more by and by), and lots of grain coming down the spouts to
the delight of master and servants.
Mr Rennie’s farm-servants
and stewards were always accounted the best in the country for skill and
intelligence in their work. Many young men bred at Phantassie obtained
excellent and trustworthy situations in England and abroad. The names of
John Brock and John Monfries, long farm-stewards in Mr Rennie’s time,
and after, will be long remembered as first-rate managers and worthy
men.
Mr Rennie was a most
successful feeder of cattle; the splendid animals he exhibited for
prizes at the Highland Society and East Lothian shows, were, in his day,
never excelled in size, weight, or quality, and were purchased at big
prices by the leading butchers. The Linton Distillery was established by
Mr Rennie and other partners, and for many years was the principal one
in the county. West Bams and Haddington distilleries were offshoots from
Linton. Latterly it was carried on extensively by George Dunlop & Co.,
but was taken down many years ago. It is perhaps interesting to note
that at one time there were nine distilleries going in East Lothian. For
many years past there had been none, but at present there is one going
at Kinchie.
Mr Rennie, soon after
getting possession of Phantassie, erected kilns, and commenced to bum
limestone, which was found on the south side of the farm. The effect of
heavy doses of lime soon showed themselves in producing heavy crops on
the fertile soil. In 1806, Linton orchard was formed and planted. Lying
on the south bank of the estate, and reaching down to the Tyne, with a
fine warm aspect, it is a beautiful object to look at when the
fruit-trees and strawberry beds are in full bloom. Mr Rennie's first
tenant was John Gibb, an old name in Linton. Linton orchard still
maintains its high character for raising fine fruits, and strawberries
in particular.
Linton had always a Baron
Bailie, appointed by the lord of the manor, to preserve peace in the
village. Robert Ballantyne, baker at the Brigend, long held the office,
having been appointed by Mr Rennie. He was known till the day of his
death as the “Bailie.” His quaint, homely, agreeable manners, and
curious remarks made him a favourite among a wide circle of friends. He
was long known as a character in the Linton district. Linton, from its
central position in the county, had, from an early date, a weekly
established “Port” every Monday morning during the harvest season, for
hiring shearers and fixing the wages. Very large numbers of workers,
mostly Irish, assembled to be hired, and sometimes it was no easy
business for farmers and these to come to terms. Frequent riots and
disturbances took place; and when Linton whisky began to operate,
fighting took place, farmers had their coats torn off their backs, and
were knocked down. Mr Rennie’s authority as a Justice of the Peace,
aided by Bailie Ballantyne, was often set at defiance. On one occasion
Ralph Plain, the constable of the place, got his big red nose nearly cut
off with a hook; and very often the ringleaders had to be bound hand and
foot and sent up to Haddington jail in carts. For some seasons twelve
dragoons were sent early every Monday morning from Piershill to keep the
shearers in order. The wages fixed at Linton Port ruled the rest of the
county for the week. Reaping machines have now superseded Linton Port,
shearers, and hooks.
A writer in the Edinburgh
Courant in 1831, thus expresses himself:—“Mr Rennie confined his
attention chiefly to operative agriculture, and his fine estate bore
ample marks of the skill with which his plans were laid, and the
accuracy with which they were executed.” Phantassie was often visited by
agriculturists of mark from home and abroad to inspect Mr Rennie’s
improved mode of farming. They always went away pleased and delighted
after viewing in his fields the perfection of farming, whether in the
grain and turnip crop, or in the rich feeding quality of the grass land,
grazed by large flocks of sheep and herds of cattle. Their minds were
enlarged, and deeply impressed with the fact that at Phantassie the
utmost capabilities of the soil in raising crops were fully developed.
Mr Rennie’s urbanity and hospitality to strangers and visitors were well
known and acknowledged. He was also well known in Haddington market, and
at the Justice of Peace and other county courts (which he regularly
attended) he took a prominent part in the business which came before
them. Tall, handsome, and of a very gentlemanly appearance, he was a
fine specimen of a country gentleman. Kind and affable to all his
friends and acquaintances, servants, and dependents, he was universally
esteemed. A fine example of the kindness of Mr Rennie’s heart has been
handed down. When the brave and gallant 42d Regiment came home from
Waterloo, where its ranks had been sadly thinned, after being quartered
some time in England, it was ordered to march to Edinburgh Castle in
1816. In marching past Phantassie, sadly knocked up with their former
privations and long march from England, Mr Rennie got the regiment to
stop, and kindly entertained the officers and men with refreshments,
which generous action was much thought of at the time, and the more so
as this was almost the only instance of kindness and respect the brave
men had received during their long march. Mr Rennie having become widely
known as one of the most celebrated agriculturists of the day, was much
sought after by Agricultural Societies for advice, and was much employed
in Surveys, &c.
Oh! is there not some
patriot in whose power
That best, that God-like luxury is placed
Of blessing thousands—thousands yet unborn—
Through late posterity? Some large of soul
To cheer dejected industry? To give
A double harvest to the pining swain?
And teach the lab’ring hand the sweets of toil!
Yes, there are such!—Thomsons Seasons.
The above lines seem very
applicable to the late Sir John Sinclair, Bart, of Ulbster, who did much
in his day to advance the science of agriculture in Great Britain. In
the latter end of the last century, the Government of the country,
entertaining wise and correct opinions as to the necessity of improving
the land of the kingdom, and thereby increasing the primary source of
the nation’s wealth, instituted a Board of Agriculture and Internal
Improvement.
Under its auspices,
surveys of different parts of the country were undertaken, with the view
of communicating agricultural knowledge and of stimulating improvements.
The ablest agriculturists of the day were selected to undertake such
surveys, and to draw up and publish their observations for the national
benefit. East Lothian may still feel proud of the fact that three of its
most eminent farmers—viz., Mr George Rennie of Phantassie, Mr Robert
Brown of Markle, and Mr John Shirreff of Captainhead, were selected and
authorised by the Board, in 1793, to make an agricultural survey of the
extensive district of the West Riding of Yorkshire, and to report their
observations for the consideration of the Board. Mr Rennie, with his two
associates, spent over five weeks in the West Riding, and used all the
means placed in their power to gain an intimate knowledge of the
different modes in which husbandry was carried on there, as well as the
general and local impediments to its improvement. The result of the
labours of Mr Rennie and his friends is printed in an interesting
volume, compiled from their journal by Mr Brown, and published under the
authority of the Board in 1799, with the title
General View of the Agriculture of the West Riding of Yorkshire. The
West Riding is divided into nine wapentakes, one hundred and
seventy-five parishes, and 28 market towns. In 1793, as stated in a
Government return, there were in it of waste land 200,000 acres capable
of being converted into pasture or cultivation; 140,272 acres incapable
of being improved except by planting; 6500 acres detached moors or
waste—total, 405,272 acres. Mr Rennie and his two associates had
therefore plenty of work on their hands in surveying the moor and waste
land alone. According to a map which is attached to the volume, the
route extended from Ripon and Borough Bridge on the north to Sheffield
on the south, and from Settle on the west to Selby on the east. They
visited thirty-nine towns, and furnished statistical agricultural
information for sixty-four parishes. They were kindly received and
hospitably entertained by most of the large landed proprietors, among
whom were the Duke of Devonshire, Lord Thanet, Earl Fitzwilliam, Lord
Hawke, Duke of Leeds, Earl of Harewood, &c, to most of whom they had
letters of introduction from Sir John Sinclair. They received much
information from the large proprietors or their agents relative to the
covenants and agreements by which their land was held, and found in
almost every case that tenants had no leases, but held their tenures
from year to year, and were removable on six months’ notice.
Mr Rennie and Mr Brown
thus express themselves in the report about the want of leases:—“The
primary error of the Yorkshire husbandry consists in not giving the
tenant a security of possession for a reasonable time; and the second
and no less important error arises from the restrictions imposed during
the time he occupies his farm, which prevent him from changing his
management or adapting his crops to the nature of the soil he possesses.
Agriculture is a living science which is progressively improving,
consequently what may be esteemed a good course of cropping at one time
may, from experience and observation, be afterwards found defective and
erroneous. To us it would seem as incongruous to tie a man’s legs
together and then tell him to run, as to suppose that improvements are
to be made by a farmer without the security of a lease. The great charm
which sets industry everywhere in motion is the acquisition of property
and the security of it when acquired. When tenants hold by a precarious
tenure, and are removable at the will of the proprietor, or after a
short period, then undoubtedly their labour will be spiritless and
languid, as they have no inducement to enter upon improvements when they
have no certainty of enjoying the immediate benefit.”
How different was
Cockburn of Ormiston’s practice to the above. The different subjects
treated of in the survey are too numerous to be all noticed in detail,
but they include in eighteen chapters—farm offices, cottages, farm
implements, stocking, sheep, cattle, and horses, enclosure of land,
nature of soils, rent, reclaiming of waste lands, embankments on river
sides, tithes, poor-rates, condition of farm-servants, &c., in the
treatment of all of which subjects Mr Rennie and his friends display
great ability. Their remarks are well worth a careful and attentive
perusal. Mr Rennie took great interest, and was an enthusiast in having
farm implements made in the best manner. His implements at Phantassie
were all of the best construction, and made under his direction, being
fully convinced that workmen of any kind can never do their work well
with inefficient tools. When in the West Riding they found the Rotherham
plough in general use, and drawn by four horses in a line, with two
drivers. Mr Rennie and his friends were unanimous in condemning this
plough, and mode of working it. They enter fully into their objections
against it, and describe the use of it as truly absurd.
The following practice,
as narrated in the survey, seems a very strange one, and will perhaps
amuse the hinds of East Lothian and elsewhere:—“There is a practice
which prevails over a considerable part of this district of giving the
ploughmen drink, both forenoon and afternoon, be the work what it will,
which is a ridiculous custom, and ought to be abolished without loss of
time. What can be more absurd than to see a ploughman stopping his
horses half an hour on a cold winter day to drink ale? We suspect the
practice is so deep rooted that it will not be easily removed without a
compensation. This ought to be done at once, as being an encouragement
to idleness; and from wasting much time, a great obstruction to
improvements.”
Mr Rennie having acquired
a well-merited celebrity for his knowledge in agricultural matters, was
often consulted by the officials of Government, especially on the
long-vexed questions of the Corn Laws and Agricultural Distress. He was
frequently called on to give evidence, with other skilful farmers from
East Lothian, before Committees of the House of Commons, and it is well
known that his evidence had great weight with the members, when
alterations for or against the agriculturists of the country were to be
determined on. In the course of the survey in the West Riding, Mr Rennie
found some of the thrashing-mills which were patented by Andrew Meikle
in 1788, which were wrought by two horses, and performed the light work
they had to do in an efficient way. Andrew Meikle’s grand invention,
which Mr Rennie warmly encouraged and patronised, will now be noticed.
It is hardly necessary at
the present day to state that the primitive way of separating grain from
the straw was by treading it out by oxen, who were kept in constant
motion until the business was done. Machines were next invented, in
different styles of planks or beams stuck over with flints or hard pegs
to rub the ears between them; others to bruise out the grain by sledges
or trail carts. Old authors have included the flail in this description.
Dryden speaks of “The sled, the tumbrill, hurdles, and the flail.” At
what time the flail took the place of the old primitive methods is not
known with certainty, but until 1787 thrashing by the flail was the only
method known to British agriculturists —if we except the ancient custom
of “bittling” sheaves and singles on a hard floor or a door-step—a
custom as old as the time of Ruth, and practised yet by industrious
cottars, hinds' wives, old town's folks and their bairns, to produce
from their “eident” gatherings from the stubble-fields a small “pock” of
flour to help their winter provender.
The great importance of a
thrashing-mill as part of the working gear of a farm can be imagined
from the fact that in a large and fertile farm like Phantassie several
thrashers, or taskers, were constantly employed thrashing out the crop
with the flail from after harvesttime to Lammas following, and that too
.in a very tedious and inefficient way. Almost no taskers are now to be
found in the country. Several attempts before 1787 had been made both in
England and Scotland to construct machines to perform the work of
separating corn from the straw, but they all proved useless and
ineffective for the purpose. One made by Sir Francis Kinloch, Bart., of
Gilmerton, copied from one he had seen at Frogden in Northumberland, was
so badly constructed that it broke to pieces when tried.
It was reserved to Andrew
Meikle, civil engineer and mill-wright at Houston Mill, Prestonkirk, to
invent and bring to perfection, in 1785, after many experiments and much
thought, a machine furnished with beaters and scutchers, rakes, shakers,
and fanners, all driven by the same machinery. The different processes
of thrashing, shaking, and winnowing were performed at once, and the
grain prepared for the market. By Mr Meikle’s grand invention a new era
in agricultural management began, and a fresh stimulus was given to
farming improvements in raising increased quantities of grain. Houston
Mill being on the estate of Phantassie, Mr Rennie took much interest in
the invention, and during the making and perfecting of it, regularly
attended the workshop to watch its progress, and encouraged Mr Meikle in
his oft-repeated trials and experiments. His youngest brother
John—afterwards the celebrated engineer—was at that time in Mr Meikle’s
employment as an apprentice.
The first thrashing
machine Mr Meikle made was put up for Mr Stein, distiller and farmer at
Kilbeggie, near Clackmannan. It was fitted with two solid fluted
rollers, and they were the first that were ever used in Great Britain,
and no alteration or improvement was ever attempted to be made on them.
The mill was driven by water and was perfectly successful. The next
machine erected by Mr Meikle was for Mr Rennie at Phantassie, and was
worked by horses, being the first horse thrashing-mill ever erected. Mr
Rennie some years after substituted a powerful windmill in place of it.
In a few years Meikle’s thrashing-mills became well known and were
extensively used; but although he secured a patent for the invention for
ten years, with the aid of Mr Rennie and others, at considerable
expense, he did not reap the benefit he ought to have done from it,
considering that the public were more profited by it than by any other
agricultural implement produced at the time. His modesty in not fully
asserting the importance of his machine was much taken advantage of by
interlopers, who challenged and infringed his patent. Mr Rennie, in an
able letter published in the Farmers' Magazine in 1811, and extracted
from a pamphlet entitled “Reply to an address to the public, but more
particularly to the landed interest of Great Britain and Ireland, on the
subject of thrashing machines, by John Shirreff,” gives a clear and
minute history of Mr Meikle’s machine, and proves him to have been the
sole inventor, and completely demolishes the pretensions of Sir Francis
Kinloch and others. Mr Rennie says in his letter:—“Probably there is not
another person in existence that had so many opportunities of knowing
the several facts and circumstances connected with the invention as
myself, chiefly owing to the habits of intimacy which I had long
maintained with those concerned, particularly with Mr Meikle and his
family. During the time I attended school at Prestonkirk, I passed
through Mr Meikle’s workshop twice or thrice every day, and as his son
was my school-fellow, I went often with him and viewed the machines and
models of machines that were making, in which way I acquired some
mechanical knowledge, or at least a disposition to inquire into and
investigate such new inventions as afterwards came under my
consideration.”
Mr Meikle having reached
an advanced age, and not having received a recompense at all equal to
the merit and importance of his invention, which he was so deservedly
entitled to, a subscription of money was begun in 1810, to make the
worthy old man comfortable in his latter days, under the care of Mr
Rennie, Sir John Sinclair, Bart., Sir G. Stewart Mackenzie, and others.
The Highland Society headed the list with a subscription of £31, 10s.
Almost every proprietor and tenant-farmer in East-Lothian contributed,
as well as those of other twenty Scotch counties, and several in
England. £1428 was collected. Mr Meikle, however, did not long enjoy the
benefit of his friends’ contributions. He died on the 27th November
1811, and the money was handed to his son and daughter. The editor of
the Fanners’ Magazine paid a well-merited tribute to his memory, and
bore his testimony to his great engineering skill and his moral worth.
He was buried in the churchyard of Prestonkirk. His old and kind friend,
Mr Rennie, placed a tombstone over his grave, with the following
inscription on it:—“Beneath this stone are deposited the mortal remains
of the late Andrew Meikle, civil engineer at Houston Mill, who died in
the year 1811, aged 92 years. Descended from a race of ingenious
mechanics, to whom the country for ages had been greatly indebted, he
steadily followed the example of his ancestors, and by inventing and
bringing to perfection a machine for separating corn from the straw,
(constructed upon the principle of velocity, and furnished with fixed
beaters or scutchers), rendered to the agriculturists of Britain and of
other nations a more beneficial service than any hitherto recorded in
the annals of ancient or modem science.”
It is curious to state
that for a long period Meikle’s invention was looked on with a jealous
eye by the old-fashioned farmers and farm-labourers of that day. Their
apprehensions were that by the use of machinery a great number of men,
the taskers, would be put out of employment. Experience, however, proved
that they were wrong, for the working-classes were better paid and more
regularly employed after thrashing-mills came into use. |