High Farming
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High Farming 1850 Ð- 1875
Introduction
When the Corn Laws were repealed in 1846 British farmers feared the worst. They were afraid that cheap foreign corn would flood into Britain and prices would collapse. The
Corn Laws had been passed in 1815 to protect British farmers from this threat.
However, the period 1850-1875 was one of prosperity and rich harvests. These were the golden years of Ðhigh farming.
Farmers did not find Britain swamped by cheap imported grain. In Europe the population was rising and foreign farmers found ready markets at home. Wars in many parts of Europe disrupted trade. Corn growing was just beginning in Canada, the USA and Australia. For the time being, transport and shipping costs were too high for them to undercut British farmers. In Britain, the huge home market in towns and cities continued to grow. Some wage improvements in these years brought an increased demand for bread, meat, vegetables, milk and dairy products. Farmers who could supply the new towns and cities easily did very well.
Farmers invested money in agricultural improvements in order to make their farms more productive. Some of these were ideas which had been first suggested in the 18th century, but could only now be taken up. Bakewells ideas on selective breeding, for example, became widespread. There were many new ideas.
New Ideas: Feedstuffs
Animal feedstuffs, made from linseed, rapeseed and cotton seed, were also being produced. Firms such as Thornleys of Hull and Pauls of Ipswich specialised in this.
Over ÐЈ5 million worth of artificial feed was being sold per year by the 1870s. Up to the
1850s most farmers used mixed farming. They needed animal dung as manure, and needed to grow grain to feed the animals. With artificial fertilisers and feedstuffs farmers could now specialise in livestock or cereals. They used their land in which ever way was best. As a result, wheat yields rose from about 22 bushels per acre in the 1820s to about 35 bushels per acre in the 1850s.
New Ideas: Fertilisers
The German scientist, Justus van Liebig, and Sir Humphrey Davy had shown that nitrates and phosphates made the soil fertile. At first this was done by adding crushed bones. Van Liebig accused British merchants of raiding the battlefields of Europe in the search for bones! Cattle bones were imported from Russia and South America, crushed, and put on the soil as powder. 120,000 tons of bone-powder were being used annually by the 1860s. There was a growing trade in guano, a natural fertiliser of bird droppings from South America. Coprolite Ð- the dung and bones of prehistoric animals Ð- was also mined in parts of East Anglia at this time. In 1843 Bennet and Lawes invented a method of making super-phosphate fertiliser by treating bones with sulphuric acid. This was easier to use than bone powder. Farmers were spending nearly ÐЈ8 million per year on fertilisers in the 1870s, compared to only ÐЈ100,000 earlier
New Ideas: Drainage
Many farmers invested money in better drainage. Hand made drainage pipes were expensive Ð- about 50 shillings (ÐЈ2.50) per 100. By the 1850s machine made pipes could