How an Island Lost Its People How an Island Lost Its People

How an Island Lost Its People

Improvement, Clearance and Resettlement on Lismore 1830–1914

    • $16.99
    • $16.99

Publisher Description

In 1830, the little Hebridean island of Lismore was one of the granaries of the West Highlands, with every possible scrap of land producing bere barley or oats. The population had reached its peak of 1500, but by 1910, numbers had dwindled to 400 and were still falling. The agricultural economy had been almost completely transformed to support sheep and cattle, with ploughland replaced by the now familiar green grassy landscape.

With reference to documentary sources, including Poor Law reports, the report of the Napier Commission into the condition crofters in the Highlands and Islands, as well as local documents and letters, this book documents a century of emigration, migration and clearance and paints an intimate portrait of the island community during a period of profound change. At the same time, it also celebrates the achievements of the many tenants who grasped the opportunities involved in agricultural improvement.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2023
6 April
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
210
Pages
PUBLISHER
Origin
SELLER
Faber and Faber
SIZE
7.2
MB

More Books by Robert Hay

Lismore Lismore
2009
Landsman Hay Landsman Hay
2010