If the impression is that commoners were still to be found in large numbers by the beginning of the 19th century there was also an impression that there were a large number of people who used the wastes and commonable lands but who were not, in legal terms, commoners. It […]
Estimated reading time: 31 minutes
“ Cecil Graham: What is a cynic? Lord Darlington: A man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing. Cecil Graham: And a sentimentalist, my dear Darlington, is a man who sees an absurd value in everything and doesn’t know the market price of a single thing.” […]
Estimated reading time: 13 minutes
The subject of agricultural improvement in the 18th and 19th centuries is a vast area and is dealt with in a separate post and John Martin’s own experiments in improvement are discussed here. In the brave new inclosed world the farmer in severalty could grow new crops, plough, sow and […]
Estimated reading time: 21 minutes
Land is the source of all material wealth. From it we get everything that we use or value, whether it be food, clothing, fuel, shelter, metal, or precious stones. We live on the land and from the land, and to the land our bodies or our ashes are committed when […]
Estimated reading time: 37 minutes
Reading the Landscape Several books have been written about the appearance of the English Countryside, the most famous of which is W G Hoskins ‘Making of the English Countryside’. Other favourites are the History of the English Countryside by Oliver Rackham and Richard Muir’s 1981 ‘Shell Guide to Reading the […]
Estimated reading time: 13 minutes
The young Arthur Martin The making of a Victorian Gentleman Arthur Martin Esq., JP, Sheriff, Deputy Lord Lieutenant of Dorset. Arthur Martin, Lord of the Manor at Rampisham. The way of all flesh In 1818 John Martin became the Steward at Rampisham and for at least the next 48 years […]
Estimated reading time: 46 minutes
The Tithe Commutation Act had been drafted with two incommensurable clauses in it concerning the provision of a map. Clause 35 allowed the apportioners, to base their apportionment on “any admeasurement, plan, or valuation previously made of the lands…..the accuracy of which they shall be satisfied”.[1] Such plans were not […]
Estimated reading time: 39 minutes
“When the parish became a prison it was the poor-law settlement system which made it so; when the parish became a vast almshouse it was an ill-advised relaxation of the poor-law principles which pauperised the labourer and bankrupted the small farmer.”[1] Contents In the 1640’s John Lilburne , a member […]
Estimated reading time: 31 minutes
Smallpox -it sounds innocuous enough, particularly when the great pox was syphilis, but historically, depending upon which population it affected it killed between a third and a quarter of its victims. Today we know it to be an infection but in the 17th century even this simple fact was not […]
Estimated reading time: 20 minutes
The process of implementing the Tithe Commutation Act was vested in three Tithe Commissioners based in London. The Chairman was William Blamire, whose simple description was ‘Cumberland farmer’. Born in 1790 he was educated at Westminster School, Christchurch Oxford and was friends with the Vicar of Dalston – William Paley, […]
Estimated reading time: 22 minutes