From London to Land’s End

twenty years, and then to pay each 50 pounds a year to the queen–

that is to say, to the Crown.

To each of these families, whom I would now call farmers, it was

proposed to advance 200 pounds in ready money as a stock to set

them to work; to furnish them with cattle, horses, cows, hogs, &c.;

and to hire and pay labourers to inclose, clear, and cure the land,

which it would be supposed the first year would not be so much to

their advantage as afterwards, allowing them timber out of the

forest to build themselves houses and barns, sheds and offices, as

they should have occasion; also for carts, waggons, ploughs,

harrows, and the like necessary things: care to be taken that the

men and their families went to work forthwith according to the

design.

Thus twenty families would be immediately supplied and provided

for, for there would be no doubt but these families, with so much

land given them gratis, and so much money to work with, would live

very well; but what would this do for the support of the rest, who

were supposed to be, to every twenty farmers, forty or fifty

families of other people (some of one trade, some of another), with

women and children? To this it was answered that these twenty

farmers would, by the consequence of their own settlements, provide

for and employ such a proportion of others of their own people

that, by thus providing for twenty families in a place, the whole

number of Palatinates would have been provided for, had they been

twenty thousand more in number than they were, and that without

being any burden upon or injury to the people of England; on the

contrary, they would have been an advantage and an addition of

wealth and strength to the nation, and to the country in particular

where they should be thus seated. For example:-

As soon as the land was marked out, the farmers put in possession

of it, and the money given them, they should be obliged to go to

work, in order to their settlement. Suppose it, then, to be in the

spring of the year, when such work was most proper. First, all

hands would be required to fence and part off the land, and clear

it of the timber or bushes, or whatever else was upon it which

required to be removed. The first thing, therefore, which the

farmer would do would be to single out from the rest of their

number every one three servants–that is to say, two men and a

maid; less could not answer the preparations they would be obliged

to make, and yet work hard themselves also. By the help of these

they would, with good management, soon get so much of their land

cured, fenced-off, ploughed, and sowed as should yield them a

sufficiency of corn and kitchen stuff the very first year, both for

horse-meat, hog-meat, food for the family, and some to carry to

market, too, by which to bring in money to go farther on, as above.

At the first entrance they were to have the tents allowed them to

live in, which they then had from the Tower; but as soon as leisure

and conveniences admitted, every farmer was obliged to begin to

build him a farm-house, which he would do gradually, some and some,

as he could spare time from his other works, and money from his

little stock.

In order to furnish himself with carts, waggons, ploughs, harrows,

wheel-barrows, hurdles, and all such necessary utensils of

husbandry, there would be an absolute necessity of wheelwrights or

cartwrights, one at least to each division.

Thus, by the way, there would be employed three servants to each

farmer, that makes sixty persons.

Four families of wheelwrights, one to each division–which, suppose

five in a family, makes twenty persons. Suppose four head-

carpenters, with each three men; and as at first all would be

building together, they would to every house building have at least

one labourer. Four families of carpenters, five to each family,

and three servants, is thirty-two persons; one labourer to each

house building is twenty persons more.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *