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Working Conditions on the Land. Aims :. Examine the reasons why the working and living conditions of agricultural workers were poor in the nineteenth century (1800s). Accommodation. Accommodation for farmers was very basic.
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Working Conditions on the Land
Aims: • Examine the reasons why the working and living conditions of agricultural workers were poor in the nineteenth century (1800s).
Accommodation • Accommodation for farmers was very basic. • Only locally available material could be used in their construction e.g. stone, clay or turf. • Most houses only had one room.
Shielings • Shielings were small buildings located up on the hills away from the main community. • In the summer months the cattle would be moved up the hill to the higher pastures for better grazing. • It was generally the women and children of the community who would spend the Summer at the Shieling. The men would stay behind and tend to the fields.
The remnants of a Shieling in Scotland. • Note that it was built beside a burn to give the inhabitants access to water.
Blackhouses • By the 1800s many Highlanders lived in Blackhouses. • These houses had a thatched roof and were made from locally available materials. • A fire was continually lit in the blackhouse although there was no chimney to allow the smoke out. • Animals shared this accommodation and were kept in byre area at one end of the house.
A Blackhouse A Blackhouse had a double wall with turf in between. The roof was a wooden frame that was then overlapped with heather and then thatch. An old fishing net of twine would be attached to large stones to secure the roof.
Other Highland Housing • Farmers with large areas of land lived in two storey homes with slate roofs • Wealthier landowners had huge dwellings (homes), often like smaller versions of castles with several rooms and servants.