THERE is nothing but
a common name to associate the two islands of North and South Uist.
They are separated by the island of Benbecula; they are under
different proprietors: the one is Presbyterian, the other Roman
Catholic; the one has certain connexions with the life of the outer
world: it is, so to speak, the seat of government for the Long
Island; the other is as separate from all that is human, kindly,
genial, as if it were a suburb of the North Pole.
There is, thank
Heaven, but one South Uist in the world, though in poverty, misery,
and neglect, the island of Barra, sixteen miles south, runs it very
close. Barra, however, thanks to its harbour and its fishing, is in
touch with the outside world, whereas (save for a few tourists
deluded by the tradition of past glory of trout-fishing—for the best
lochs are withheld from the public —who for a few months in the year
pay passing visits to Loch Boisdale on the east coast) South Uist is
surely the most forsaken spot on God’s earth. In spite of some
concessions of land, wrenched, on behalf of the people, by the tardy
action of the Crofters’ Commission, the greater part of the island
[The island of South Uist, including Benbecula and Eriskay, which,
geographically, belong to it, is thirty-eight mites in length, and
from two to nine miles in breadth. It contains some 137 square
miles, of which, according to Campbell’s survey, 40,000 acres are
adapted for cultivation.] is under sheep-farms, a “farm” here
signifying a tract of country once bright with happy homesteads, now
laid bare and desolate. Heaps of grey stone scattered all over the
island are all that remain of hundreds of once thriving cottages ;
narrow strips of greener grass or more tender heather are all that
is left to represent waving cornfields and plots of fertile ground
handed on from generation to generation of home-loving
agriculturists. The more hardy and vigorous of the race which once
flourished here are now scattered over the face of the earth; the
old, the weak, the spiritless, for the most part, have alone
remained, and their children, whitefaced, anaemic, depressed, driven
to the edge of the sea as one after another the scraps of land
redeemed by their perilous industry were taken from them, are still
fighting hand-to-hand with Nature, almost worn out with a hopeless
struggle. They are the only Highlanders I ever met who were curt in
manner, almost inhospitable, discourteous; but one soon learns to
forgive what, after all, is but the result of long years of life “on
the defensive.”
Nature herself has
been but a hard step-mother to the people of Uist. MacCulloch, the
correspondent of Sir Walter Scott, wrote of it: “The sea is all
islands, and the land all lakes; that which is not rock is sand, and
that which is not mud is bog, and that which is not bog is lake, and
that which is not lake is sea! ”
It is all true
enough, but even Nature, “red in tooth and claw,” might be, has
been,. propitiated. Even in South Uist there was a time when life
was tolerable, “before chiefs divorced themselves from their
retainers, before sheep became the golden image to be worshipped,
before the lust for gold took the place of love for the people.”
[Preface by Alexander Mackenzie to his edition of Stewart of Garth’s
Sketches of the Highlanders.]
The last of the old
chiefs of South Uist, Macdonald of Clan Ranald, driven desperate by
family losses, by debts which had been accumulating ever since the
disasters of the ’45, hopeless of alleviating the distresses of his
people, an unwilling party to the cruelties of the trustees and
factor, parted with his estate of South Uist in 1841, to Colonel
Gordon of Cluny.
The next chapter in
the history of the island may perhaps be told more fitly in the
business-like report of a contemporary Canadian newspaper. It would
be difficult for any fellow-countryman to assume language
sufficiently unimpassioned to be convincing to the judicial reader
of history. The following is from the Quebec Times, of the year
1851, the year in which all civilized countries were ringing with
the horrors of slavery as painted by the author of Uncle Toms Cabin,
slavery which tore fellow-creatures from their homes, divided
families, exported them beyond seas, but, at least, gave them the
means of living, and bread in return for labour.
“Many of our readers
may not be aware that there lives such a person as Colonel Gordon,
proprietor of large estates in South Uist and Barra, in the
Highlands of Scotland. It appears that his tenants on the
above-mentioned estates were on the verge of starvation, and had
probably become an eyesore to the gallant Colonel! He decided on
shipping them to America. What they were to do there, was a question
he never put to his conscience. Once landed in Canada he had no
further concern about them. Up to last week some 1,100 souls from
his estates had landed in Quebec and begged their way to Upper
Canada2; when in the summer season, having
only a daily morsel of food to procure, they probably escaped the
extreme misery which seems to be the lot of those who followed them.
“On their arrival
here they voluntarily made and signed the following statement: ‘We,
the undersigned passengers (per Admiral from Stornoway in the
Highlands of Scotland), do solemnly depose to the following facts:
That Colonel Gordon is proprietor of estates in South Uist and Barra;
that among many hundreds of tenants and cottars whom he has sent
this season from his estates to Canada, he gave directions to his
factor, Mr. Fleming, of Cluny Castle, Aberdeenshire, to ship on
board of the above-named vessel a number of nearly 450 of said
tenants and cottars from the estate in Barra; that accordingly a
great majority of these people, among whom were the undersigned,
proceeded voluntarily to embark on board the Admiral at Loch
Boisdale, on or about the 11th of August, 1851; but that several of
the people who were intended to be shipped for this port, Quebec,
refused to proceed on board, and, in fact, absconded from their
homes, to avoid the embarkation. Whereupon Mr. Fleming gave orders
to a policeman, who was accompanied by the ground officer of the
estate in Barra, and some constables, to pursue the people who had
run away among the mountains, which they did, and succeeded in
capturing about twenty from the mountains and islands in the
neighbourhood, but only came with the officers on an attempt being
made to handcuff them; and that some who ran away were not brought
back, in consequence of which four families at least have been
divided, some having come in the ships to Quebec, while other
members of the same families are left in the Highlands.
“The undersigned
further declare, that those voluntarily embarked did so under
promises to the effect, that Colonel Gordon would defray their
passage to Quebec; that the Government Emigration Agent there would
send the whole party free to Upper Canada, where, on arrival, the
Government Agents would give them work, and furthermore grant them
land on certain conditions.
“The undersigned
finally declare that they are now landed in Quebec so destitute,
that if immediate relief be not afforded them, and continued until
they are settled in employment, the whole will be liable to perish
with want.
“(Signed) Hector
Lamont
“and seventy others.’
“ . . . Words cannot
depict the atrocity of the deed. For cruelty less savage, the
dealers of the South have been held up to the execration of the
world.
“And if as men the
sufferings of these, our fellow-creatures, find sympathy in our
hearts, as Canadians their wrongs concern us more dearly. The 1,500
souls whom Colonel Gordon has sent to Quebec this season have all
been supported for the past week at least, and conveyed to Upper
Canada at the expense of the colony, and on their arrival in Toronto
and Hamilton, the greater number have been dependent on the charity
of the benevolent for a morsel of bread. Four hundred are in the
river at present and will arrive in a day or two, making a total of
nearly 2,000 of Colonel Gordon’s tenants and cottars whom the
province will have to support. The winter is at hand, work is
becoming scarce in Upper Canada. Where are these people to find
food?”
Thousands more were
evicted from their homes in Lewis, the property of Sir William
Matheson, and from Tyree, the property of the Duke of Argyll; and
those who remained were driven, for the most part, to little patches
of bog or moor, the most barren of the whole district, while the
country, fertile from centuries of the labour of their forefathers,
was laid waste to make room for sheep.
No sooner had they,
by industry and frugality, redeemed these, than the landlords,
seeing profit in acquiring what had before been valueless, drove
them on to barren strips of sea-coast whore from the sea alone could
they hope for sustenance.
“To accelerate the
departure of the doomed natives the heath pasture was set fire to
and burnt. The act deprived the cattle of their only
subsistence—heather and young grass—during the spring months prior
to the May term. The animals by this means were starved, lost, or
sold for a mere trifle. The growing crops belonging to the tenants
under notice of eviction were invaded by the incomers’ cattle, owing
to the destruction of the fences by fire, for which they got no
redress. The houses occupied by tho natives had all been erected by
themselves or their ancestors—not by the landlord—and were
consequently their own property ; but that fact excited no scruples
in the minds of the despoilers, for while the able-bodied men were
engaged at a distance, the houses were pulled down over the heads of
the old people, the women, children, and infirm, and set on fire!
The people were thus left exposed to the mercy of the elements, many
dying from alarm, fatigue, and cold. The barns, kilns, and mills
[for storing, drying, and grinding corn] were also burnt, except
what the factor was likely to require. What escaped fire was
confiscated.”
The excuse for these
brutalities was, of course, that the Islands were overcrowded, that
the people were too thick on the land, that the land could not
produce enough to support the population, that for some years past
there had been a small voluntary emigration which had had excellent
results, and that therefore it was, in all respects, for the best
interests of the people that these clearances should be made. To
dwell upon the last point is, of course, superfluous. The man who
emigrates voluntarily has, it may be presumed, arranged not only for
his future abroad but for the disposal of his possessions at home;
moreover, to put it moderately, Britain is, theoretically, a free
country.
On the other points
we may venture to offer a few remarks because the question, though
more pressing in the Gordon property than elsewhere (unless on that
of the Duke of Argyll), is one prominent in every part of the Outer
Hebrides.
There is an immense
amount of specialist literature upon this subject, and it would be
out of place here to attempt to do more than indicate the nature of
the problem with which the Crofters’ Commission and the Congested
Districts Board are, however late in the day, not ineffectively
grappling.
The question is now
one of evidence; it has been taken out of the domain of sentiment,
prejudice, opinion; and, on the whole, perhaps it is not too
optimistic to say that, after nearly twenty years of inquiry on the
one hand, and of incredibly patient waiting on the other, something
in the direction of justice is beginning to be done. The problem—is
it not stated in piles of folio Blue-books, 1883 et seq? And where
in all the nation's history can one find Bluebooks so readable;
Blue-books that are literature— even poetry, written in great
measure by the people themselves, in their own quaint English: the
story of their own sorrows and sufferings, their hopes and fears,
their love of home, their loyalty, their infinite courtesy, their
kindness to each other, their gratitude, their readiness to forgive.
It is worth while, in
this connexion, to quote from the evidence given before the
Crofters’ Commission of 1883 by the Rev. Donald Mackintosh, for
twenty-two years priest in different parts of Lady Cathcart’s
estates.
“When I came to the
country, the clearances in 1851, and the emigration, forced in some
cases with circumstances of shocking inhumanity, were fresh in the
memory of old and young. In the evidence given by the crofters’
delegates before the Royal Commission . . . there was nothing
regarding the doings in 1851 and the previous years that I did not
hear long ago in every part of the parish from the Sound of Barra to
the North Ford. To say, as has been said, that they only repeated
the lesson taught them by agitators, means saying that they learned
the lesson long years before agitators or a Royal Commission to
inquire into their grievances were dreamt of. They did not
exaggerate. Indeed, in describing things that happened in those
times, to exaggerate would not be easy.”
Under no
circumstances could South Uist, or even the slightly more fertile
neighbouring island of Benbecula, be in a condition of prosperity
from agriculture alone, though in the old days of the
kelp-manufacture, as we learn from the Old Statistical Account,
1,100 tons were manufactured in years of average dryness and absence
of extremes of weather; and even after the discovery of the Le Blanc
method, and the consequent reduction of wages to as low as £2 per
ton, this was, in good seasons a very fair remuneration. And the
people were not without other resources. There was considerable
trade in eggs, for the excellent harbours made some small
exportation possible. “The egg trade is carried on by young
able-bodied men, who go about the country with baskets, buying up
all the eggs they can get at threepence per dozen. These are shipped
off for Glasgow and Greenock from Loch Roisdale, Loch Eynort, and
the Sound of Eriskay, in open boats of from seventeen to twenty feet
keel, in return for wrhich the dealers bring home goods such as
dye-stuffs, tobacco, cotton goods, crockery, and some other articles
of convenience ” (Old Statistical Account).
In the Report of the
Crofters Commission of 1883, (p. 5), we read:
“The conception
formed by the people of the condition of their forefathers 100 years
ago, derived from tradition and from the fugitive writings of the
present time, appears to present the following picture:
“A large extent of
arable and pasture land held by prosperous tenants in townships,
paying a moderate rent to the proprietor; a sufficiency of grain
grown, ground, and consumed in the country, in some places with an
overplus available for exportation; cattle in numbers adequate to
afford milk in abundance, and young stock for sale; horses for the
various purposes of rural labour; sheep which yielded wool for
home-spun and home-woven clothing of a substantial quality, and an
occasional supply of animal food; fish of all kinds freely taken
from the river and the sea. The population, thus happily provided
with the simple necessaries of rustic life, are represented as
contented with their lot, deeply attached to their homes, but ready
to devote their lives to the service of the Crown and the defence of
their country.”
The fisheries of
South Uist, though a valuable addition to the resources of the
islanders, do not seem to have been profitable for commercial
purposes, in spite of the excellence of the Loch Roisdale harbour
which is so safe and so capacious as to have long been the resort of
shipping from the Baltic in tempestuous weather. There are, indeed,
some five or six good harbours on the coast of South Uist.
From the Old
Statistical Account we learn that Bois-dale—one of the Clanranalds
settled in the south end of the island—was then “the only person who
carried on the fisheries with any success, excepting some
adventurers from Peterhead, who come to the coast here in March and
return in July generally pretty successful.” Their catch seems to
have been principally of ling, cod, skate, and turbot.
Herring-fishing here* as elsewhere, at that period was unprofitable
on account of the severe tax upon salt.
We hear, moreover,
from Campbells Survey, of the successful growth of hemp and flax
(often referred to in local traditions), of “ excellent grass, and
garden stuffs of good quality and sufficient plenty.”
And if the past, here
as elsewhere, has gained “a glory from its being far,” it is only
fair to say that the Commissioners certainly extracted little or no
evidence in disproof of such conception.
On the contrary, we
find among the statements of the witnesses, passages such as the
following from Father Campbell, for a great number of years priest
in South Uist :
“I remember that
there was a great deal of barley - grain exported from this island,
but now, since these unfortunate changes, almost every sort of
prosperity has declined. The late proprietors always kept a store of
meal in the country, and allowed no one to suffer the pangs of
hunger.
They received payment
for the meal in kelp. Now kelp-manufacture is discontinued, and the
usual supply of meal is stopped, which sinks the people deeper and
deeper in the debt of the merchants.”
Or again, this is
taken from the evidence of Mr. Alexander Carmichael, formerly
resident for seventeen years in the island, in true sympathy with
the people, and in his capacity of exciseman constantly going about
among them, hearing their talk, and entering into their lives :
“In various
localities and on various occasions I made minute inquiries of old
people as to the detailed farm stock and domestic substance of their
fathers. The people then had more land and of better quality, they
had more horses, sheep and cattle; they had more crops and of better
quality, they had better nourishing food, and they had better bed
and body clothing. They had also more constructive ingenuity in arts
and manufactures, and they had more mental and physical stamina, and
more refinement of manners.”
To the unprejudiced
observer it is, I think, abundantly clear that the enforced
emigration was merely an excuse to get the people off the land at
any price, so as to get the highest price possible from tenants,
independent alike of kelp-making and sea-fishing.
The irony of this
position taken up by the landlords is, that so long as kelp-making
was profitable even the voluntary migration of any of the population
was looked upon as an injury to the proprietors. Dr. Johnson has
many remarks on this subject, and always from the point of view
that, of course, the emigration of the people is a great misfortuue,
but the proprietors have only themselves to thank for it; they
should have made it better worth the tenants’ while to stay at home!
“ That the immediate motives of their desertion must be imputed to
their landlords may be reasonably concluded, because some lairds of
more prudence and less rapacity have kept their vassals
undiminished. From Raasay [Macleod’s Island] only one man had been
seduced, and at Col [Maclean’s Island] there was no wish to go away.
. . . Some method to stop this epidemic desire of wandering, which
spreads its contagion from valley to valley, deserves to be sought
with great diligence. In more fruitful countries, the removal of one
only makes room for the succession of another; but in the Hebrides,
the loss of an inhabitant leaves a lasting vacuity; for nobody born
in any other part of the world will choose this country for his
residence; and an island once depopulated will remain a desert as
long as the present facility of travel gives every one, who is
discontented and unsettled, the choice of his abode.”
Dr. Johnson had
obviously not contemplated the possibility of the existence of a
class of proprietors who preferred that their island should be
depopulated in order that it might “remain a desert.”
Little more than
fifty years later, in an article in The Witness, then under the
editorship of Hugh Miller, (The Depopulation System in the
Highlands), referring to the island of Tyree we find, in contrast,
the following paragraph:
“And it is a
melancholy reflection that the year 1849 has added its long list to
the roll of Highland ejectments. While the law is banishing its tens
for terms of seven or fourteen years, as the penalty of deep-dyed
crimes, irresponsible and infatuated power is banishing its
thousands for life, for no crime whatever. This year brings forward,
as leader in the work of expatriation, the Duke of Argyll.”
As has been well said
by the Rev. John Macphail, a most deeply respected Free Church
Minister, for many years upon Lady Cathcart’s property, “I have
never seen that emigration gave more room to people, though it did
to sheep. The tendency has been to add more families to places
already overcrowded.”
A Roman Catholic
priest, also a witness before the Crofters’ Commission, and long
resident on this property, further enforces this point:
“Owing to the removal
of small tenants to make room for large farms or tacks, townships
became over-crowded, and the extent of land originally estimated to
support one family was made to be depended on by two or more
families. . . . There can be no doubt that the land, from constant
tillage, does not yield anything like what it once did. The returns,
even in favourable years, are very low, only two or three returns
instead of eight or nine. . . . The work is hurriedly done to enable
the men to get away to the south to earn money there. Then the
taking away of hill-pasture from those who formerly had it has
greatly added to the discomfort of the people. It has deprived them
of the means of furnishing themselves with clothing for day and
night.1 This is a very painful feature in the condition of the
people with which our going among them comes into constant contact.
This has also deprived them of an important part of food. When they
had sheep they used animal food—i.e. meat, once common among them
but now exceedingly rare. And it has deprived them of the use of
ponies in cultivation and in carrying burdens. The poor women have,
in consequence of this loss, to do much of the work that ponies did
formerly, such as carrying the peats and sea-weed and harrowing the
fields.
“Emigration is
proposed as a remedy, and it must come to this if there be no other;
far better for the people anywhere than starving on our own shores.
No one can wish to see their present state perpetuated. But though
this remedy might ultimately be beneficial to them and their
offspring, I look upon it as an injurious proposal for our country.
For it deprives the country of a God-fearing, loyal people, who
supply our industries with so much valuable bone and sinew, our
fishing fleets with able men, our Naval Reserve with competent
hands, aud innumerable families with valuable servants. ...”
It is interesting to
observe that the very same remedies suggested now by the Report of
the Crofters Commission, were suggested half a century earlier by
many of the writers in the New Statistical Account (1847).
“The only way to
render tho people comfortable and industrious, would be to grant
each tenant a larger proportion of lands than what he presently
possesses, as he could manage that with the same number of hands,
the same number of horses which he requires for the small lot, and
to grant the tenants a more permanent holding of their lands by
leases of nine or ten years, with stipulation for improvements and
other regulations.”
It would not be fair,
however, not to point out that the alien farmer question had begun
before the importation of the alien landlord. The threatening decay
1 Burt, in his well-known “ Letters,” observed such changes as long
of the kelp industry, the disasters of the ’45, the consequent
increase in prices, the increasing tendency of landlords, also
incidentally a consequence of the ’45, to migrate with their
families to the south,1 all these things and others, led to the
letting to outsiders of those farms which formerly had been the
portion of younger sons of the Chief or of members of the clan whom
he desired to propitiate or delighted to honour.
“I must here
observe,” says Buchanan, in 1793, “that there is a great difference
between the mild treatment which is shown to sub-tenants and even
scallags by the old lessees descended of ancient and honourable
families, and the outrageous rapacity of those necessitous
strangers, who, having obtained leases from absent proprietors,
treat the natives as if they were a conquered and an inferior race
of mortals.”
It is probably to
this new race of alien tacksmen that Anderson refers (1785) 4 when
he tells us that as long ago as 1791. He was probably not
sufficiently aware of the real state of things to know much of the
distribution of blame, and inclines to lay everything at the doors
of the ambition of the gentry in the islands to compete with those
elsewhere in the elegancies of life, and of the consequent necessity
of exacting higher rents. Thus the ancient adherents of their
families are displaced. These, having been accustomed to a life of
devotion, simplicity, and frugality, and being bred to endure
hunger, fatigue, and hardship, while following their cattle over the
mountains, or navigating the stormy seas that surround their
islands, form the best resource of the state, when difficulties such
as the inhabitants of a happier region are strangers to, must be
encountered for its service.
“Certain exactions by
the tacksmen they sell stores to their tenants in necessitous times
at fifty per cent, profit, “so that the destitution of the people is
truly deplorable.” One has, however, to remember that tho only means
of transport was in open boats, that oven when *they reached tho
mainland, unless they accomplished the long and dangerous journey to
Glasgow, they were still far from any centre of commerce, that the
stores would often be months on their hands before they were needed,
and that credit must be long and payments precarious.
Whatever the alien
tacksmen might be, there was always the Chief to appeal to, ready to
help those of his own name and blood, those by whom his fathers had
gained and kept the lands which he was beginning to feel were
slipping away from him, and even at this very time we find Buchanan
constantly speaking of the kindness to their tenants of the
Mackenzies in the Lews, of the Macdonalds in South Uist, and of
Macleod in Bemera. It should be mentioned that Seaforth, perceiving
to what species of injustice the sub-tenants were liable, allowed
from the sub-tenants were so far recognised by custom that there is
a Gaelic rhyme enumerating them:
“Seven days forced labour in Spring,
Seven days forced labour in Autumn,
A lamb at Lammas,
A wether at Hallow-tide.
“There was formerly a
barbarous law in Uist by which, if a woman lost her husband, she
forfeited one of their two horses to the tacksman. There are some
lines about the Each Urmnn, the forfeited horse, made by a man who
married a widow who had been thus mulcted:
“Who was conflicted with the law of
widows,
'Whom fate robs of their tiller (husbandman),
A deed not easy to bear would be done to them,
The ursann horse would be taken from them.
“The fat sheep sent
at Hallow-mass was called the caora chdraidh, and a fat fowl
required at intervals was called the cearc fearinn. The days of
exacted labour were known as the caraisde; one day a year was also
exacted for road mending.”
The new school of
proprietors and their advocates have tried to insist upon the
serf-like conditions of life, and the oppression of the rule of the
Chiefs in the old days, but even as far back as Martin (1703) wre
read :
“If a tenant [in
Barra] chance to lose his milk cows by the severity of the season,
or any other misfortune, in this case Mackneil of Barra supplies him
with the like number that he lost,” and “when any of these tenants
are so far advanced in years that they are incapable to till the
ground, Mackneil takes such old men into his own family and
maintains them all their life after.”
Moreover, as Burt
reminds us (Letter 19, 1730), the alien is for the crofter what the
nouveaax riches are to-the peasantry of the village, whose squire
they displace.
“This power of the
Chiefs is not supported by interest, as they are landlords, but as
lineally descended from the old patriarchs, or fathers of the
families, for they hold the same authority when they have lost their
estates, as may appear from several, and particularly one, who
commands in his clan, though at the same time they maintain him,
having nothing left of his own.”
As has already been
seen, Tyree was the first (1674) to pass from the old Chiefs: from
the Macleans to the Campbells of Argyll, aliens in blood and faith,
though that story belongs to another chapter of history altogether;
other proprietors, the Macneills in Barra, the Macdonalds in South
and North Uist, the Macleods in Harris, the Mackenzies in Lewis, at
least parted with their property by honourable purchase, however
distressing the loss of the lands of their ancestors might be, and
in some cases undoubtedly was.
The Reformation,
which had caused so much bloodshed and heart-burnings elsewhere, had
passed by the remote and peaceful Hebrides, and in most cases the
old religion remained untouched till the introduction of
Presbyterianism by the followers of the new proprietors.
In Tyree, we learn,
Ferchard Frazer, though himself a cadet of the Lovat family, who
have maintained the old faith, was the first minister, and his son
John, well known to antiquarians in another connexion, who succeeded
him in 1680, is said by his biographer (1707) to have converted
twenty-four families in Coll.
It was not till some
fifty thousand Highlanders had been cleared from their native glens,
and, in some of the islands, till hundreds more were perishing from
want of proper shelter, food, clothing, and sanitation, that in
August, 1882, Mr. D. H. Macfarlane, M.P., moved for a Royal
Commission to inquire into the condition of the Highland crofters.
The facts were so flagrant that, with none of the delay usual on
such occasions, within six months the Commission was at work, and in
1883 their Report was before the public.
Mr. Macfarlane, to
whom fell the privilege of bringing about such an inquiry, remarks:
“Everybody knows that
it was a Commission composed almost entirely of landlords, that the
crofters had no direct representative upon it, and yet, so
irresistible was the evidence of wrong and the need of remedy, that
it has made proposals almost revolutionary.
That its report is
favourable to the people may be accepted as proved when it is stated
that it has incurred, the bitter animosity of the Duke of Argyll.
Notwithstanding the studied caution of its language, the Report
discloses a state of misery, of wrong-doing, and of patient
long-suffering, without parallel in the history of this country. As
great oppression may have been inflicted upon the Irish, but it was
not endured without bursts of wild, criminal resistance.”
A parliamentary
commission is not, as a rule, overcharged with sentiment or
philanthropy; a group of landlords compelled to sit in inquiry into
the conduct of their own order, investigating conditions in which
their own privileges are at stake, were hardly likely to overvalue
the merits of the accuser in such a trial; but one cannot but feel
that their appraisement of his value as part of the stock of our
national hive is expressed in handsome terms:
“The crofting and
cottar population of the Highlands and islands, small though it be,
is a nursery of good workers and good citizens for the whole empire.
In this respect the stock is exceptionally valuable. By sound
physical constitution, native intelligence, and good moral training,
it is particularly fitted to recruit the people of our industrial
centres who, without such help from wholesome sources in rural
districts, would degenerate under the influences of bad lodging,
unhealthy occupations, and enervating habits. It cannot be
indifferent to the whole nation, constituted as the nation now is,
to possess within its borders a people, hardy, skilful, intelligent,
and prolific, as an ever-flowing fountain of renovating life.
“It would be
difficult to replace them by another race of equal ability and
worth.”
It reads rather like
a recommendation to go on breeding Highland cattle, and in
consideration of its obvious adaptation to its environment, not to
allow the whole stock to be exported ; but one cannot quarrel with
the terms of an appreciation, which is perhaps the more convincing
that its manner is essentially business-like.
The problem finally
brought before the Crofters’ Commissioners appears to amount to
this:
The evidence having
tended to show that, more especially in relation to certain
districts, the native population is not in possession of sufficient
land to provide them with food for themselves and their stock, is
the difficulty to be met with more land or less population? They
have expressed themselves very definitely as to the necessity of
redistribution of land, and the Congested Districts Board, the
practical outcome of the Commission, has already taken steps to
carry out their recommendations—in some cases; notably those of Sir
Arthur Orde in North Uist and Macleod of Macleod in Skye, with the
ready collaboration of the proprietor; in others, in spite of the
proprietor. In the island of Barra, after what the Blue-books
politely call “prolonged negotiation,” that is to say, something as
like a riot as the peace-loving Highlander knows how to produce, the
people, by the timely action of the Congested Districts Board, have
been put in possession of 3,000 acres of land, largely subtracted
from that of a single farmer, who, as appeared in the Commission,
was renting over one-third of the entire island.
In regard to the
other phase of the problem, the utility of emigration, the evidence
and the judgement upon the evidence has largely tended to show that,
as Mr. Fraser Macintosh, himself a Highland landlord, expressed it:
“. . . No necessity
for State interference as regards emigration has been established,
except in the case of the Lews and some of the minor islands of the
Hebrides. Re-occupation by and redistribution among crofters and
cottars of much land now used as large farms will be beneficial to
the State, to the owner, and to the occupier.”
Some of the members
of the Commission, without going so far as Mr. Fraser Macintosh,
were of opinion that emigration would be useful under certain
conditions :
“Emigration offers
few difficulties to the young and able-bodied, but it is obvious
that it can be no benefit to a country to lose its workers alone,
and that it is only by the removal of entire families that any
serviceable relief from congestion will be experienced.”
Surely the condition
of some of our villages in rural England is sufficient protest
against the subtraction of the able-bodied, a protest which the
horrible consequences of our war in South Africa emphasize still
further. At the time of the Commission it was pointed out that the
Highlands and islands were contributing 4,431 men to the Naval
Reserve, an organization which, as will be pointed out in the
chapter on Lewis, is well worthy of special consideration in the
Highlands. It is long now since, commenting on the emigration then
beginning, before the resuscitation of the kelp-industry, Sir Walter
Scott wrote :
“If the hour of need
should come, and it may not be far distant, the pibroch may sound
through the deserted region, but the summons will remain
unanswered.”
The problems with
which the Government has to deal, prominent everywhere, are so much
a part of the very existence of South Uist that it would be vain to
attempt any account of the island without first describing its
conditions of life. To quote once more from the Report:
“The history of the
economical transformations which a great portion of the Highlands
and islands has, during the past century, undergone, does not repose
on the loose and legendary tales that pass from mouth to mouth; it
rests on the solid basis of contemporary records, and, if these were
wanting, it is written in indelible characters on the surface of the
soil.”
One might well go
further: it is written on the faces, on the manners, on the very
lives of the people. If anything on God’s earth could be beyond hope
it would seem to be the island of South Uist, for the people
themselves seem hopeless. They have largely lost the frankness, the
ease of manner so commonly characteristic of the Islands ; those who
know them best allege that they have even acquired some of the
cunning, the graspingness so often characteristic of those crushed
in body and soul.
I well remember the
remark of one, whose life was sacrificed to the needs of these
suffering people, upon looking at a spray of the blue forget-me-not
which, mixed with the golden iris, makes a belt of June glory round
every one of the hundred lochs of his watery parish, “Fancy any one
wanting to remember this place that got a chance to forget it! ” It
was of South Uist that, when I had suggested a tidal wave as the
only solution of its problems, Mr. Stanford quaintly remarked, “It
would be more economical to turn it into hypopliosphatea.” He too
well knew and realised the stagnant hopelessness of the island
poverty.
The very existence of
the island of South Uist is itself a tragedy which shames our
civilization. Nowhere in our proud Empire is there a spot more
desolate, grim, hopelessly poverty-stricken. It is a wilderness of
rock and of standing water on which, in the summer, golden lichen
and spreading water-lilies mock the ghastly secrets of starvation
and disease that they conceal. The water is constantly utterly unfit
for drinking purposes. There is not a tree on the island, and one
wonders how the miserable cattle and sheep contrive to live on the
scant grey herbage. The land of the poor is not enclosed; and to
preserve the tiny crops from the hungry wandering cows and horses
they have to be continually watched, and as half an acre of bore may
be distributed over five acres of bog and rock, the waste of human
labour is considerable. The potatoes often rot in the wet ground,
and I have seen the grain and hay lying out as late as October from
the impossibility of getting it dried.
Excellent and
abundant fresh-water trout there is, but that is not for the poor;
nor the rabbits, nor the game, and even the sea-wrack, formerly a
means of living, is now hardly worth the getting. Nevertheless, when
the “tangle” comes on the beach—provided the factor gives them leave
to get it at all, which by no means necessarily follows—men, women
and children crowd down with earliest daylight, and work on by
moonlight or starlight, with the hideous intensity of starvation.
The houses of the
poor, especially of the cottars, are inconceivably wretched. They
are of undressed stone, piled together without mortar, and thatched
with turf. Often they have no chimney, sometimes no window ; the
floor is a bog, and a few boxes, with a plank supported by stones
for a seat, is all the furniture except the unwholesome shut-in
beds. Cleanliness is impossible, with soot coating the roof
overhead, wet mud for floor, and, except in the very rare fine days,
chickens, and perhaps a sick sheep or even a cow or horse, for
feliow-occupants.
To the old Boisdale
and Clanranald chiefs with all their faults the people were ready to
forgive much ; but the Highlander, at best conservative, exclusive,
distrustful of strangers, becomes, when oppressed, starving,
terror-stricken, unreasonable in prejudice, intolerant of change,
perverse it may be in refusing to do his part in establishing mutual
understanding.
Only those who have
sojourned among them, not in the cosy fishing-hotel at Loch
Boisdale.far away from the villages, but who have established
personal relations with the people in their own homes, can even
guess at the utter hopeless dreariness of their lives. The chronic
dyspepsia which accompanies the ever-present teapot, the wan anaemic
faces of women and children, the continual absence from the island
of all able-bodied men make the human element almost as depressing
as the flat, grey, glimmering, wet landscape.
One gleam of
brightness there is, a cottage hospital, built and maintained by the
Marchioness of Bute, on whom, needless to say, the island has no
claim whatever. There three devoted women are constantly fighting
such disease as comes of starvation, bad water, no drainage, and the
accidents inseparable from seafaring life in open boats on a
dangerous coast. The doctor, responsible for a district of over
thirty miles in length, with a dangerous ford and a treacherous
minch to cross and many a weary mile where there is no road to
travel, cannot, as a mere question of time and space, do anything
like justice to his work. His self-sacrifice and unceasing toil I
know well; they are qualities one takes for granted in South Uist.1
When an epidemic breaks out—influenza again and again, or the
virulent typhoid, which one can only expect under the conditions of
life at Dalibrog and other villages on the island—the people are
helpless and terror-stricken. They are so absolutely without means
of grappling with illness, of protection for the healthy, that they
are panic-stricken with an animallike savagery of self-defence. For
the sake of others, such cases cannot be taken into the hospital;
the Sisters can seldom leave their own work for distant nursing,
though at critical times they have accomplished even this.
The summer of 1898
was one of the worst they have ever endured. The potato crop had
failed the previous autumn, the fishing was exceptionally bad, and
an epidemic of even more than usual virulence had broken out. Only
one person was there to help, the young priest, the Rev. George Rigg.
He was in every sense of the word a gentleman, and a scholar,
educated at St. Sulpice, where he acquired something of the special
subtlety of French thought which fitted him for work very different
from that which lay in his path of duty. He had the fastidious
refinement of thought and habit which is often inseparable from
years of delicate health and over-work. Not himself of Highland
blood, his personal devotion had made him nevertheless perfectly at
home with his people, and often have they told me of the eloquence
of his preaching in their own Gaelic tongue.
I remember that on
first seeing him there I turned to his predecessor, himself broken
down from over-work and heroic self-sacrifice in the interests not
only spiritual but material of his flock, saying, “How I hope that
bright boy won’t be allowed to eat out his heart on this desolate
island! ” I little thought his deliverance would come in three
years.
This is the bare
story as written to me by that same faithful friend, a priest on a
neighbouring island, who encouraged his work in life and nursed him
like a brother 011 his death-bed :
“For three weeks he
devoted himself to a fever-stricken family where husband, wife and
children were all prostrate at once. No one ever called to see them
or nurse them but Father Rigg and the doctor who called and prepared
food for them several times. Not even the mother of the man nor the
sister of the wife ever entered the door. Father Rigg came daily and
nursed and fed them and spent the day with them to cheer them. He
had the most menial and loathsome work to do, and did it heroically.
He was struck down himself a week last Thursday, and died on the
following Friday, at 7.30. a.m., in the height of a violent typhoid
fever, after receiving the last Sacraments. . . . Father Rigg had
not the enthusiasm, or I should say the natural pleasure, that hard,
work often gives [owing greatly to extreme delicacy of health], but
worked out of a conscientious devotion to religion and duty. It was
trampling down his natural inclinations thoroughly to undertake
these three weeks of solitary and sickening work. He took pleasure
in subduing himself.”
And now
His place in all the pomp that fills
The glory of the summer hills
Is that his grave is green.
He lies among the
scattered and unenclosed graves of his flock on the “machair,” the
flat grass-grown expanse above the shore. A handsome Celtic cross
marks the spot, and as one comes upon it suddenly on the bare
expanse, one feels that here, far away from all the traditional
sanctities to which one is accustomed, one is —perhaps all the
more—on holy ground. He still lives in the hearts of his people, his
deeds are told in their stories, and his name, like those of the
heroes of their past, is preserved in song. |