IN the Edinburgh Evening
Courant of 19th February 1831, the following notice of the death of Mr
Robert Brown appeared:—
“We regret to announce
the death of Mr Robert Brown, late farmer in Markle, and well known to
the world as author of a Treatise on Rural
Affairs. He died at Drylawhill, East Lothian, on the 14th inst.,
after a few hours' illness, at an advanced period of life. Mr Brown was
born in the village of East Linton, and in youth was intended for a
different profession, but the bent of his genius soon led him to
agricultural pursuits, which he long followed with singular success. He
was a contemporary and intimate acquaintance of the late George Rennie,
Esq. of Phantassie, and to both individuals modern agriculture is
greatly indebted. While Mr Brown followed close on Mr Rennie in the
field, the energies of his mind were directed more particularly to the
literary department of agriculture, and his Treatise on Rural Affairs
contains imperishable evidence of the admirable system followed by the
two friends, and of the vigour of the writer’s mind. Mr Rennie’s
operations had to be viewed personally before they could be appreciated,
and they in a great measure perished with himself. His sphere of
usefulness was thus necessarily limited, although the great post-road to
London, passing through Phantassie, afforded thousands an opportunity of
being instructed. Mr Brown’s labours were widely disseminated through
the instrumentality of the press, and generations yet unborn may, in the
uttermost parts of the earth, derive instruction from his luminous
pages. Thus Mr Rennie in the field and Mr Brown in the closet, by this
division of labour (if we may so express ourselves), accomplished much
for agriculture, and it is chiefly to their exertions that the husbandry
of Scotland owes its fame and perfection. Mr Brown shone not merely as a
writer or practical agriculturist, but as conductor of the Edinburgh
Fanners' Magazine for fourteen or fifteen years. From the time of its
commencement he discussed freely in its pages almost every subject of
public interest, and was perhaps fonder of Scottish law and politics
than even rural affairs. Mr Brown was endowed with a most retentive
memory and a truly energetic mind, and up to the day of his death he
felt a warm interest in the welfare of the public. Within these few days
he wrote in the newspapers in favour of investing the tenantry with the
elective franchise, and against the present law of hypothec.
“It has often been a
matter of regret with some agriculturists of East Lothian that they do
not possess prints of Mr Rennie and Mr Brown. It is perhaps impossible
now to obtain such, but they might still testify their admiration and
respect of these eminent individuals by erecting a pillar, with a
suitable inscription, in the market-place of Haddington.”
Mr Brown was buried in
the churchyard of Preston-kirk. A tombstone stands over his grave with
the following inscription:—“To the memory of Robert Brown, Esq., late
farmer at Markle. Distinguished by superior talents, which he diligently
cultivated; possessed of extensive knowledge, which he brought to bear
with happy effect on the various subjects of which he treated; he
engaged chiefly in rural affairs, and rose to eminence not less by his
numerous and useful writings on husbandry, than by his skill and success
as a practical agriculturist. An affectionate husband, a kind father, an
exemplary Christian, he was always forward to assist those less
successful than himself. He died 14th February 1831, aged 74.” The above
notice at the time of his death shows that Mr Brown was no ordinary man.
The fine farm of Markle, which he long tenanted, under his energetic and
judicious management became widely known as one of the best cultivated
in East Lothian. His name stands in the front rank of British
agriculturists. As before related, Mr Brown was associated, in 1793,
with Mr Rennie of Phantassie, and Mr John Shirreff of Captainhead, in
the Agricultural Survey of the West Riding of Yorkshire. The report of
the survey was published in 1795, and a second and enlarged edition of
it in 1799, by direction of the Board of Agriculture and Internal
Improvement. The literary part of it devolved on Mr Brown, a task which
he performed with great ability.
It is a large volume of
over 400 pages, with an appendix, and is full of most important
information on agricultural subjects. The Farmers' Magazine was started
in January 1800, and was published quarterly by the great house of
Archibald Constable & Co., of Edinburgh. It was called on its
title-page, “A Periodical Work exclusively devoted to Agriculture and
Rural Affairs,” with the motto :—
Ye generous Britons,
venerate the plough,
And o’er your hills and long-withdrawing vales
Let autumn spread her treasures to the sun.
It soon had a large
circulation, and existed until 1825, comprising twenty-six good-sized
volumes. Mr Brown was appointed editor and conductor, which office he
held for over fourteen years. In a long and able introduction, printed
in the first number, Mr Brown traces agriculture from its earliest
times. He announced the plan on which the magazine was intended to be
carried on in the following straightforward and pithy paragraph: —“The
present state of British agriculture, and the known eminence of many who
practise it as a profession, is such as might justly draw upon the
individuals who now address the public the imputation of arrogance were
they to presume to improve the system by any superior knowledge or
abilities of their own. They think it necessary in the outset to say
that it is not upon their own knowledge and experience they rely for
carrying on the work, but upon the communications of respectable and
intelligent farmers who have made agriculture their particular study,
and who, in place of amusing the public with opinions, are able to bring
forward facts, which, under the sanction of experience, can be
immediately adopted in practice.”
Mr Brown, as editor,
could not put up with the theoretical doctrines and opinions of
land-doctors and landlord’s agents, who have in East Lothian and other
Scotch counties done much ill in their day to the interests of
tenant-farmers. A great number of agriculturists from all parts were
contributors to the magazine. Among his East Lothian friends were Mr
Rennie of Phantassie, under the signature Arator;
Mr John Shirreff of
Captainhead; Mr Robert Hope of Fenton; Baron Hepburn of Smeaton; Mr
Robert Somerville, surgeon, Haddington; Mr Andrew Howden of Lawhead, &c.
He wrote very many articles himself on interesting subjects, and largely
reviewed treatises on agriculture, the com-laws, currency, poor-laws,
political economy, &c. Most of his articles are signed “N.,” and
latterly Verus.
In a short time the
success of the Farmers' Magazine was so great, owing to his energetic
and talented management, that the publishers presented him with a
massive silver cup as a token of their esteem for him, with the
following inscription:—“From the Proprietors of the Farmers' Magazine to
Robert Brown, Esquire, 1802.
Weel speed the plough o’er
Scotia's plains,
The source of plenty, health, and gains,
Lang smile in peace her cultured charms,
Her farmers, and her thriving farms.”
The cup is now in
possession of his grandson, Robert Brown Ritchie, Esq.
It was not until the end
of the last century that agriculture began fully to be viewed as a
science, and the old “jog trot” way of farming, which had so long
prevailed, gave way to a more improved system. Sir John Sinclair, Bart.,
of Ulbster, with a comprehensive mind, planned and perfected the
Statistical Account of Scotland. The reports of the rural economy of the
whole kingdom were at that time also completed. The establishment of the
Highland Society of Scotland was mainly due to him, aided by other
patriotic noblemen and gentlemen. The Farmers' Magazine was started
under his auspices, and was very much encouraged and promoted by him. It
proved very successful, and afforded an opportunity to agriculturists of
stating their views and experiments in working the soil to the best
advantage. As before noticed, Brown was editor and conductor of the
Farmers' Magazine for a long period. We select some of his articles from
which to take extracts—a comparative view of East Lothian husbandry at
two periods, viz., in 1778 and 1810, from which it will be found that Mr
Brown’s intelligence and knowledge of agricultural matters stand out
very conspicuously. His remarks are extremely interesting. He says—“It
is proposed in this paper to give a comparative view of the rural and
political economy of East Lothian at two periods, viz., in 1778, when
the author entered upon business, and 1810, the date of this article. In
other words, it is proposed to describe the several branches of East
Lothian husbandry at these two periods, and to point out the amendments
or improvements which have taken place in the intervening years.
“At the union of the two
kingdoms East Lothian was generally divided into small farms, few of
them exceeding 150 acres in extent, and these, except on the coast side,
were again subsided into two parts, namely, infield and outfield. To the
portion called infield, the whole dung gathered upon the premises was
constantly applied, while the outfield received no manure but what was
dropped by the bestial thereupon depastured. According to this system a
great part of every farm was scarcely worthy of cultivation. In some
farms one half of the land might be regularly cultivated according to
the fashion of the day, but in others not above one-third came under
that description. The infield land was constantly kept in tillage, while
the outfield was left to run wild. Horses, milch cows, and a few young
cattle and sheep were depastured and herded during the day, and brought
home at night, there being generally no fences. The animals had to be
very industrious in seeking their food, from the scantiness and bad
quality of the herbage.
“The merit of introducing
summer fallow into East Lothian is due to John Walker, then tenant of
Beanston, about the time of the Union. His neighbours ridiculed his
idea, and thought he was not in his right mind, but his strong crops of
fallow wheat soon made them follow his example. After summer fallow was
introduced, a plough with four horses was incapable of executing one
half of the work which can now be done in 1810 by two horses. When
clover was introduced being sown after fallow, the supper of thistles,
gathered out of the growing infield crop for the horses, was laid aside
and clover substituted, a matter of much importance to the working
stock. Before the introduction of fallow, three white crops were taken
in succession. Broadcast peas was accounted a green crop, but drilled
beans and turnips were almost unknown.”
Mr Brown noticed Lord
Belhaven’s treatise on agriculture, written soon after the Union, which
did much good at the time. He urged in favour of “fauch,” or fallow,
which he had seen practised in England, and gives long directions for
working it according to the English system. Mr Brown condemns his system
as unworthy of consideration by the most imperfected husbandman. Lord
Belhaven, speaking of East Lothian, says—“The soil of East Lothian,
generally taken, is accounted the best of any county or shire in
Scotland; and although it pays too dear a rent, yet it is as capable to
be improved beyond what it is at present, as any in Scotland. The poor
farmers, that they may pay their dear rent, who are ordinarily
industrious enough, work hard, but without any method or project,
whereby both they and their grounds suffer, and so consequently the
landlord.” Mr Brown, in the first chapter of his paper, explains leases,
&c., rotation of crops, management of grass land, rent, &c., implements,
and farm buildings, most of which items were republished in his work on
Rural Affairs in 1811.
In 1778, the first year
of the “Comparative Views" he says a considerable part of the land was
held under old leases. Some paid rent in grain, others partly in grain
and money; some wholly in money, with the additional thirlage to mills,
and a certain number of kane fowls and carriages. Grain rents were paid
in bulk ; hence landlords, such as Mr Nisbet of Dirleton and others, had
always a large quantity of grain laid up in their granaries or granges.
Covenants as to cropping were generally loosely worded, and in
indefinite terms, and at the end of a lease disputes often arose between
landlord and tenant. At this time, Mr Brown says, “proprietors
entertained a deep-rooted antipathy against the culture of wheat. If the
tenant sowed a few bolls more than usual, no matter how highly the land
was prepared, he was sure of being introduced to the Judge Ordinary, who
seldom in such cases "displayed much mercy to the tenant.”
A well-known case of this
kind is given at length, and reported by Mr Brown in the Farmers'
Magazine, vol. vii. p. 471 (1806)—The Earl of Wemyss against Mr Peter
Forrest, his tenant in the farm of Northrigg, for sowing too much wheat
in the autumn of 1805; as noticed in page 310. Mr Forrest gained the
case before the Sheriff of Haddington, but being carried by Lord Wemyss
to the Court of Session, it was decerned against him with damages and
expenses. Such arbitrary proceedings by landlords at the present time
would appear very strange.
“About this time,” Mr
Brown continues, “on account of the frequent and troublesome disputes
which arose between waygoing tenants and proprietors at the end of a
lease, and which were brought into the Sheriff Court, a most judicious
regulation respecting dung made from the straw of the penult crop was
framed by William Law of Elvingston, Sheriff-Depute of the county,
whereby a material deficiency in most of leases was corrected in a way
that gained general approbation.
Mr Law, besides being a
sound lawyer, was also a good practical farmer; hence, after his coming
to the Bench, he soon discerned that the ancient customs respecting dung
at the conclusion of a lease were altogether inapplicable to modern
husbandry. By the old law or practice of Scotland, all dung made from
the penult crop, before the end of the bear seed, belonged to the
outgoing tenant, who might apply it to the current crop if he chose. Mr
Law discerned that a Continuance of these practices would be highly
pernicious to modern husbandry, and that there was no way of remedying
the evil but by paying the outgoing tenant for the whole dung
manufactured from the penult crops. Hence the regulation already noticed
was framed—a regulation satisfactory to both parties.”
As to the size of farms
in East Lothian in 1778, Mr Brown remarks that there were only ten in
the district consisting of more than three hundred acres. The usual size
might be two hundred acres or thereby, and these were laboured by two or
three ploughs, according to the nature of the soil. Four horses were
generally yoked in each plough. Before 1810 the average size of farms
was considerably increased. He estimates the number of farmers in the
district as one-fourth less than in 1778, and argues that such is a sign
of the flourishing condition of the farmers in the district, under an
improved system of agriculture. Farms are therefore increasing in extent
Many of them now exceed five hundred acres in size, and are worked by
eight or ten ploughs. Upon such farms improved husbandry in all its
branches can be successfully exercised—a circumstance which rarely
occurs when farms are of small size, however well they may be
cultivated. | Mr Brown continues his article on the “Comparative View of
East Lothian Husbandry” in discussing- the I political economy of the
district as it affects tenants.
He takes up the rent of
land, and says that in 1778 I there was not much rented under thirty
shillings per Scotch acre, and little even so high, as that sum had only
been given, a few years before, for some farms of rich land on the coast
side, chiefly belonging to Mr Nisbet of Dirleton. It is probable that
three-fourths of the district, we mean the arable part of it, was not
rented higher than fifteen shillings per acre, and that twenty shillings
per acre had long been reckoned a fair rent for arable farms that were
not possessed of some particular and local advantages. It was a saying
of the late Mr Anderson of Castleton, a distinguished farmer of the old
school, that no land should pay twenty shillings per acre unless it was
capable of carrying good wheat after summer without manure. The first
rise of any magnitude took place at the setting of Mr Nisbet’s estate in
1771, though, from after circumstances, that rise turned out less than
was at first anticipated. The rents were formerly payable in grain, and
calculating the value of that grain, according to the fiars of the
preceding twenty-one years, a considerable rise of rent appeared,
though, as the value of grain gradually advanced afterwards, the rise
was more nominal than real.
Mr Brown states the fact,
that from 1778 to 1810, rents had been tripled in consequence of the
numerous improvements in rural art within that period, whereby the same
farm is now capable of furnishing a far greater quantity of disposable
produce than in former times. The first serious rise of land rent
occurred in 1798, when wheat rose to a very high price, and the rise was
gradually advanced until 1801, when peace was concluded with France,
after which it remained stationary until the new corn law was passed.
That law occasioned prices to advance, because it was admitted that
Great Britain did not produce a sufficient quantity of grain to support
its inhabitants, and importation could never take place until the
average of prices exceeded the rate fixed by that law. Land was then
taken far above the rents which any fair calculation from the Corn Laws
would warrant. The consequence was that many farmers could not meet
their engagements, and much agricultural depression ensued.
Mr Brown takes notice of
the public burdens affecting tenants in 1778. They were inconsiderable,
being statute labour on the parish roads, the old window tax, one half
of the poor-rates, which were hardly known at that time, when the old
Scotch independent spirit prompted poor folks in general to disdain
parish aid. Very different, however, Mr Brown adds, is the situation of
the tenantry in 1810—the extent of direct public burdens being nearly
ten per cent., or two shillings in the pound, upon the rent they have
agreed to pay to their landlords. Taking the whole taxes together, it
may be affirmed that the tenants pay twenty per cent, more direct taxes
than they did in 1778. Query, what will be the amount of taxes and
assessments paid by tenants of the present time—1882?
The state of the roads
was considered by Mr Brown. Before 1751, the whole roads of the district
were supported and repaired under the provision of the General Statute
Labour Act of Scotland, whereby every tenant was bound to work six days
with his horses and carts, and every householder to perform six days*
service towards the repair of the public roads. As this old Act was not
found to work well, a new Act of Parliament was passed in 1751 for
erecting turnpikes and levying tolls on the great post-road running
through the district, which led from Ravensheugh Burn on the west to
Dun-glass Dean on the east. Another amended Act for the county was,
however, passed in 1769. In 1778 the roads were gradually getting into
better condition, and in 1810 the great public roads may be viewed as
being in fair condition. The parish ones were, however, in a very
unsatisfactory state.
In 1778 the wages of a
hind or married farm-servant consisted of thirteen bolls of oats,
maintenance of a cow through the season, and so much ground free of rent
as could be sown with a peck of lint seed. The cows were kept on the
outfield land of the farm, and the quantity of butter produced could not
be great. Gleaning, or gathering, was permitted, which produced three to
four bolls of grain if the gatherers were “eident.” Land for potatoes,
without dung, was given first in 1780, and afterwards increased to about
one-tenth of a Scotch acre* with full dung allowed. A rise in the hinds’
gains took place in 1792, when twelve bolls of oats (or seventy-two
bushels), eighteen bushels of barley, eight bushels of peas, all of the
best quality that the farm produced, were given.
The fiars prices of farm
produce in 1778 were—Wheat, 18s. per boll of four bushels; barley, 14s.
per boll of six bushels; oats, 11s. 6d. per boll of six bushels; peas,
9s. per boll of four bushels. In 1810—Wheat, 47s. 6d. per boll of four
bushels; barley, 31s. 5d. per boll of six bushels; oats, 24s. 11d. per
boll of six bushels; peas, 26s. 11d. per boll of four bushels.
Mr Brown proceeds, in the
latter part of his article, to treat of farm implements, drainage,
enclosures, application of lime manure, and farm-buildings. In 1778 the
old Scotch plough, drawn by three or four horses, was in use in East
Lothian. James Small, an ingenious mechanic, who lived at Rosebank, in
Mid-Lothian, was the first improver of the plough. His make came to be
universally used in 1781 to 1782. When first introduced the mould-board
was made of wood, covered with sheet-iron. In a few years wooden heads
and mould-boards were laid aside and cast-metal ones substituted, to the
great benefit of the husbandman. Carts were made of a small size, with
wooden axles. Horse harness was of ten times more value in 1810 than it
was in 1778. Some few farmers had a roller of stone in 1778, and as
little land was rolled then, one used to serve the whole parish by
lending and borrowing. It used to be called the “Parish Roller.” Turnip
barrows were also in few hands. In 1778 there were perhaps not twenty
drilling-machines of all kinds in the county.
Drainage was very
imperfectly understood, and no encouragement was given to tenants by
landlords. Mr Brown urges the great importance of draining, and says “no
person is more deserving of reward or approbation than the man who
drains the greatest quantity of wet ground, and no improvement whatever
will reimburse the expense of it so speedily.” Drains in these times
were generally filled with stones or thorns, and deep gaw furrs and high
gathered rigs were in universal use. It was reserved for energetic
agriculturists at a much later period to introduce a more perfect system
of drainage by tiles and pipes. In 1778 not one half of the district was
enclosed, and even where enclosures had been made, they were rarely kept
in good condition. In 1810 the old fashion of allowing hedges to grow
until they were fit for yielding a crop, to be used either as firewood
or as a dead hedge, became almost obsolete.
The farm-buildings of
this district long ago were generally scrimply decent. They were formed
mostly into a square, the farmer’s house being on the south or north
side, the bams on the west side, the stables and byres on the east side,
and frequently the cottages of the farm-servants, which were small and
mean, were included in the square, a practice by no means either safe or
convenient. In 1778 the whole of the farm-offices and cottages were
covered with thatch, and in some instances with turf or divots. Betwixt
1778 and 1810 fully one half of the farm-houses were rebuilt, and Mr
Brown remarks that the great body of the proprietors, not very wisely,
throw the whole burden of carriages upon the farmer, which may amount in
ordinary cases to fourpence out of every shilling which is expended.
Some proprietors,
however, act differently, and though as eager to get as good rents as
their neighbours, prudently allow the farmer to pay his whole attention
to the culture of his land, without subjecting him to any part of the
expense of new buildings, whether in money or carriages.
In his concluding remarks
Mr Brown says—“We have thus examined the husbandry of East Lothian at
two periods—1778 and 1810—and the result is that very many considerable
improvements have taken place in the intervening years. Farms have
increased in size, and more eligible and judicious rotations of crops
are followed than in former times. Harvesting of corn is more
judiciously executed. The husbandry of beans and turnips is now
extensively attended to in every part of the district Management of
grass land is better understood, and in consequence more sheep and
cattle are kept and fed. It also appears that the value of land, rents,
public burdens, and farm labour have prodigiously increased, caused by
an increased quantity of produce arising from superior cultivation.
If Mr Brown had before
his death in 1831, written a comparative view of the agriculture of East
Lothian since 1810, he would no doubt have left a very interesting
account of the progress of the science between the periods and noted
many changes that had taken place. Mr Robert Scott Skirving lately wrote
some able and interesting articles which appeared in the Haddington
Courier; they may be said to be a continuation of Mr Brown’s Comparative
View. From the commencement of the Farmers Magazine in 1800 up to 1811,
when he ceased to be editor, Mr Brown contributed over one hundred
articles to its columns on all classes of subjects connected with
agriculture, such as the com-laws, rural economy, currency, poor-laws,
game-laws, &c. His Treatise on Agriculture
and Rural Affairs was published in two volumes in 1811, and
inscribed to Sir John Sinclair, Bart., of Ulbster, President of the
Board of Agriculture. A great part of the treatise was first published
in separate articles in the Farmers' Magazine from time to time, and
subsequently in the Edinburgh Encyclopcedia. The publication, enlarged,
improved, and re-written by Mr Brown, met with a very favourable
reception, being esteemed as the best treatise on agriculture which had
appeared. It is to the present day recognised as the standard work on
the subject.
Mr Brown was a man of
advanced liberal opinions. He long advocated the extension of the
elective franchise, but did not live to see the Reform Bill carried. He
wrote many letters in the journals of the day against the law of
Hypothec. He exposed the loss tenants sustained in their crops by the
ravages of game, and the iniquitous preservation of it by proprietors.
It was a favourite idea of Mr Brown’s that an agricultural museum in the
county town of East Lothian should be established, where collections of
seeds, models of farm implements, an agricultural library, specimens of
minerals, wood, stone, &c., could be made, such as are to be found in
other provincial towns in agricultural districts in Scotland. Such an
idea was once mooted in the Town Council of Haddington, after the
present Corn Exchange was built—at the back of which an eligible space
of ground can be found, at present occupied as a garden—but though the
idea was favourably entertained at the time, nothing came out of it
Busts and portraits of Mr Rennie, Mr Brown, and other distinguished East
Lothian farmers, which still can be procured, would have been fitting
subjects to have adorned its walls. Mr Brown’s talents as a
distinguished writer, and as the first agriculturist of his day, and
reformer of the science,, will be long kept in remembrance, and the
county of East Lothian may justly be proud of him.
James Miller, the poet
and historian, in some verses he published in 1837, thus truly eulogises
the efforts of the first improvers of East Lothian husbandry.
Among the first who led
our patriot band To spread their rural studies o’er the land,
Was learned Hepburn, with
law honours crowned, Colleague of Sinclair!—These associates found
Leisure to form the plan, extend the code,
That led the farmer on
Improvement’s road.
From dull obscurity’s ungenial shade,
Fletcher brought Meikle’s art their skill to aid;
While labour stretched his arms with cheerful smile
And blest the man that lightened all his toil.
Then Brown uprose, his pen with ardour glowed,
And taught what Rennie, in his practice showed;
While Brodie skilful—Howden, zealous now,
Bid us exulting cry, “God speed the Plough.” |