These undertakings may, indeed, be regarded in the light of a
workingacademy; from which eight hundred men have
annually gone
forth improved
workmen. They have either returned to their native
districts with the
advantage of having used the most perfect sort
of tools and utensils (which alone cannot be estimated at less than
ten per cent. on any sort of labour), or they have been usefully
distributed through the other parts of the country. Since these
roads were made
accessible, wheelwrights and cartwrights have been
established, the
plough has been introduced, and improved tools and
utensils are generally used. The
plough was not previously
employed; in the
interior and
mountainous parts they used crooked
sticks, with iron on them, drawn or pushed along. The moral habits
of the great masses of the
working classes are changed; they see
that they may depend on their own exertions for support: this goes
on
silently, and is scarcely perceived until
apparent by the
results. I consider these
improvements among the greatest
blessings ever conferred on any country. About two hundred thousand
pounds has been granted in fifteen years. It has been the means of
advancing the country at least a century."
The progress made in the Lowland districts of Scotland since the
same period has been no less
remarkable. If the state of the
country, as we have above described it from
authentic documents,
be compared with what it is now, it will be found that there are few
countries which have
accomplished so much within so short a period.
It is usual to cite the United States as furnishing the most
extraordinaryinstance of social progress in modem times. But
America has had the
advantage of importing its
civilization for the
most part ready made,
whereas that of Scotland has been entirely
her own
creation. By nature America is rich, and of boundless
extent;
whereas Scotland is by nature poor, the greater part of her
limited area consisting of
sterile heath and mountain. Little more
than a century ago Scotland was
considerably in the rear of Ireland.
It was a country almost without
agriculture, without mines, without
fisheries, without
shipping, without money, without roads.
The people were ill-fed, half
barbarous, and
habitually indolent.
The colliers and salters were
veritable slaves, and were subject to
be sold together with the estates to which they belonged.
What do we find now? Praedial
slavery completely abolished;
heritable jurisdictions at an end; the face of the country entirely
changed; its
agriculture acknowledged to be the first in the world;
its mines and fisheries
productive in the highest degree; its
banking a model of
efficiency and public
usefulness; its roads
equal to the best roads in England or in Europe. The people are
active and
energetic, alike in education, in trade, in manufactures,
in
construction, in
invention. Watt's
invention of the steam
engine, and Symington's
invention of the steam-boat, proved a
source of
wealth and power, not only to their own country, but to
the world at large; while Telford, by his roads, bound England and
Scotland, before separated,
firmly into one, and rendered the union
a source of
wealth and strength to both.
At the same time, active and powerful minds were occupied in
extending the
domain of knowledge,--Adam Smith in Political
Economy, Reid and Dugald Stewart in Moral Philosophy, and Black and
Robison in Physical Science. And thus Scotland, instead of being
one of the idlest and most
backward countries in Europe, has,
within the
compass of little more than a
lifetime, issued in one of
the most active,
contented, and prosperous,--exercising an
amountof influence upon the
literature, science, political
economy, and
industry of modern times, out of all
proportion to the natural
resources of its soil or the
amount of its population.
If we look for the causes of this
extraordinary social progress,
we shall probably find the
principal to consist in the fact that
Scotland, though
originally poor as a country, was rich in Parish
schools, founded under the provisions of an Act passed by the
Scottish Parliament in the year 1696. It was there ordained
"that there be a school settled and established, and a schoolmaster
appointed, in every
parish not already provided, by advice of the
heritors and
minister of the
parish." Common day-schools were
accordingly provided and maintained throughout the country for the
education of children of all ranks and conditions. The consequence
was, that in the course of a few generations, these schools,
workingsteadily upon the minds of the young, all of whom passed
under the hands of the teachers, educated the population into a
state of
intelligence and aptitude greatly in advance of their
material
well-being; and it is in this circumstance, we apprehend,
that the
explanation is to be found of the rapid start forward
which the whole country took, dating more particularly from the
year 1745. Agriculture was naturally the first branch of industry
to
exhibit signs of
decidedimprovement; to be
speedily followed by
like advances in trade,
commerce, and manufactures. Indeed, from
that time the country never looked back, but her progress went on
at a
constantly accelerated rate, issuing in results as marvellous
as they have probably been unprecedented.
Footnotes for Chapter VIII.
*[1] Romilly's Autobiography,' ii. 22.
*[2] Statistical Account of Scotland,' iii. 185.
*[3] The cas-chrom was a rude
combination of a lever for the
removal of rocks, a spade to cut the earth, and a foot-
plough to
turn it. We annex an
illustration of this curious and now obsolete
instrument. It weighed about eighteen pounds. In
working it, the"
upper part of the handle, to which the left hand was
applied,
reached the workman's shoulder, and being
slightly elevated, the
point, shod with iron, was pushed into the ground horizontally; the
soil being turned over by inclining the handle to the
furrow side,
at the same time making the heel act as a fulcrum to raise the
point of the
instrument. In turning up
unbroken ground, it was
first employed with the heel uppermost, with pushing strokes to cut
the
breadth of the sward to be turned over; after which, it was
used horizontally as above described. We are
indebted to a
Parliamentary Blue Book for the following
representation of this
interesting relic of ancient
agriculture. It is given in the
appendix to the 'Ninth Report of the Commissioners for Highland
Roads and Bridges,' ordered by the House of Commons to be printed,
19th April, 1821.
*[4] Anderson's 'Guide to the Highlands and Islands of Scotland,'
3rd ed. p.48.
*[5] He was accompanied on this tour by Colonel Dirom, with whom he
returned to his house at Mount Annan, in Dumfries. Telford says of
him: "The Colonel seems to have roused the county of Dumfries from
the lethargy in which it has slumbered for centuries. The map of
the county, the mineralogical
survey, the new roads, the
opening of
lime works, the
competition of
ploughing, the improving harbours,
the building of
bridges, are works which bespeak the exertions of
no common man."--Letter to Mr. Andrew. Little, dated Shrewsbury,
30th November, 1801.
*[6] Ordered to be printed 5th of April, 1803.
*[7] 'Memorials of his Time," by Henry Cockburn, pp. 341-3.
*[8] 'Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Sir John Sinclair, Barb,'
vol. i., p. 339.
*[9] Extract of a letter from a gentleman residing in Sunderland,
quoted in 'Life of Telford,' p. 465.
*[10] Letter to Mr. Andrew Little, Langholm, dated Salop, 18th
February, 1803.
*[11] The names of Celtic places are highly descriptive.
Thus Craig-Ellachie
literally means, the rock of
separation; Badenoch,
bushy or woody; Cairngorm, the blue cairn; Lochinet, the lake of nests;
Balknockan, the town of knolls; Dalnasealg, the
hunting dale;
Alt'n dater, the burn of the horn-blower; and so on.
*[12] Sir Thomas Dick Lauder has
vividly described the destructive
character of the Spey-side inundations in his capital book on the
'Morayshire Floods.'
*[13] 'Report of the Commissioners on Highland Roads and Bridges.'
Appendix to 'Life of Telford,' p. 400.
CHAPTER IX.
TELFORD'S SCOTCH HARBOURS.
No sooner were the Highland roads and
bridges in full progress,
than attention was directed to the
improvement of the harbours