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Arbroath in 1838 Zoom in Sir John Sinclair Zoom in |
Clearances - Changing Ways | |||||||||||||||
Highland landowners had shared the land with their clansfolk – now they were introducing new farming ideas to make more money for themselves. Factors or managers were employed to oversee the farm work and tacksmen were no longer needed. It was not long before the proprietors of the great estates understood that the way to realise much larger amounts of cash from their lands was to get rid of their people. The photograph on the left shows the statue of Sir John Sinclair of Ulbster in Thurso. Sinclair, born in Thurso in 1754, became first president of the Board of Agriculture and founded the British Wool Society. On his estates Sinclair initiated many changes in agricultural methods, such as field enclosure, crop rotation and - the one that had the greatest effect on the Highlands - the introduction of the Cheviot sheep in his Langwell estate in Caithness in 1792.Afterwards, people called 1792 Bliadhna nan Caorach - The Year of the Sheep. The Cheviot’s large size, its hardiness and tolerance of Highland conditions, and its production of great quantities of high-quality wool and meat meant that volume sheep-farming suddenly became immensely more profitable. Also, sheep were not a liability to the landlord. Unlike people they were not dependent upon crops and did not seek the support of the laird when crops failed The death-knell was sounded for the traditional way of life for tens of thousands of people across the Highlands and Islands At Langwell, Sinclair
evicted 80 families to create a sheep farm. Many of those cleared were
placed in the clifftop village of Badbea. |