Weaver and Miners At Airdrie
from Chambers Edinburgh Journal 1850
We had
lately occasion to spend some time in the populous weaving and
mining district of Airdrie in the west of Scotland. Nothing
struck us more than the great longevity of many of the original
inhabitants of the place, who in their old years have been
subjected to all the privation consequent on low wages for the
last twenty years. One of these we found to be above ninety
years of age, and several others had reached the age of seventy
or eighty. Some of these old men are paupers, and depend on the
small pittance allowed them by the parish, amounting to about
4s. a month, and the casual charity of the people of the place.
On the other hand, it is exceedingly rare to meet with a hale
old man belonging to any other class - old men among the mining
population are exceedingly rare.
The privations to which the handloom weavers have been subjected
have been the means of making the most of their young men turn
their attention to the more lucrative occupation of mining, so
that the marriage of a weaver is rather a rare occurrence. The
miners, however, are under no restraint in this respect, and the
number of children belonging to them is sufficiently numerous to
excite surprise, as well as forebodings of want and misery.
Among the handloom weavers, those who have families appeared to
have suffered least from the pressure of the times. Their sons
and daughters being generally put to the loom at the age of
eight or nine years, become in a short time able to make as much
as 1s. per day; and this, added to their fathers' income,
creates a kind of competence we do not meet with in families
differently situated. It doubtless requires the greatest
frugality to make 'the two ends meet.' Meal and milk and Scotch
broth are the chief fare. It is no uncommon thing for the wife
of a weaver to follow the same occupation as himself,
particularly when there are few or no children in the case. His
condition is also often much ameliorated by the employment of
apprentices, who are frequently obtained from the charity
workhouses of Edinburgh or Glasgow. These it is his duty to
feed, clothe, and educate by sending to a night school; though,
we must add, this latter part of his duty is often sadly
neglected. With all these means, the married weaver is often a
respectable, well-dressed, church-going individual: the blanched
and sunk cheek, however, generally tells a tale of privation and
suffering which has been endured with a patience altogether
unexampled.
The weavers are by no means satisfied that they receive justice
from their employers. Prices, they maintain, are kept
unnecessarily low. They seem to forget that this is the result
of excessive competition. But there is another ground of
complaint which we have often heard made by them—namely, that
when work is scarce, and it becomes a favour to obtain a web
from a warehouse, there is a continually expressed
dissatisfaction at the quality of the workmanship, and stoppages
made, which would not be submitted to in better times. It is to
be hoped that this censure, if just, can only apply to a few.
The old mining body has been wonderfully changed in its
composition, in consequence of the introduction of labourers and
weavers into the pits and mines during the period of their many
strikes. Their wages, from the same cause, are reduced from 5s.
to 2s. 6d. or 3s. per day. The continual agitation the body kept
up when they enjoyed high wages, and their often not working
more than half time, in order that the stock of minerals at the
pit's mouth might not be too much augmented, led to a resolution
on the part of the masters to withstand the claims constantly
being made for enlarged wages; and the effect has been so far
ruinous to the miner, that his wages are not much more than
one-half of what they used to be, and his monopoly of employment
destroyed. Under these circumstances, he perseveringly vents his
discontent; but unavailingly. When the question is considered in
a moral point of view, it is doubtful whether the miners are not
better with a moderate than a high wage, the latter in all
instances having led them into extravagant ideas of their own
importance and into unreasonable demands. Considering, however,
the nature of his work, its unhealthy character, and the danger
to which the miner is exposed as to loss of life and limb, it is
unjust to deny him the means of a comfortable subsistence, and
of saving something against old age. It seems to be a general
opinion that he should be able to make 3s. 6d. a day, even at
the present low market prices of food and clothing. What in many
parts prevents them doing so is, that the able-bodied man is not
allowed to dig a greater quantity of coal or stone than the old
and the infirm, and when a day is lost, the loss cannot be
repaired by extra toil on the ensuing day or days. Combination
has been the bane of the mining body, and in parts of the
country where it does not exist, the workman is invariably in
better circumstances.
It is not to be wondered at that men toiling in the bowels of
the earth should be comparatively ignorant of what occurs in the
upper world, and accordingly colliers are proverbial for their
ignorance. This by no means applies to the whole of the body,
many of which are as intelligent and enlightened men as are to
be met with among other trades. The cause of the ignorance
alluded to is partly, if not wholly, the early age at which
their boys are sent into the pit. A boy above ten years of age
is rarely to be seen in a school situated at a colliery. The
boys are taken into the pit at this early age, and made to
assist the elder ones in drawing. The father is entitled to 'put
out' a quarter more than his allotted task; thus, if he made 3s.
a day, he now earns 3s. 9d. At later periods the 'quarter man'
becomes a 'half man,' and a 'three-quarter man,' and finally a
whole man when he attains his seventeenth year. It is designed
that the boy should attend the evening school, but the
attendance is very irregular in general; and there he merely
learns to write and cipher, or read the merest elementary book.
It would be great injustice to say of the miners as a body that
they are given to drunkenness. A drinking-bout after the pay,
however, is only too frequent, and the use of tobacco is
general.
How much this class of men may be improved, the history of
Chapelhall, a village connected with Monkland Steel Works, will
show. It was eighteen years ago a mere hamlet, consisting of a
few newly-built houses and one old farm-house. It is now a
considerable village, with perhaps from 2000 to 3000
inhabitants, and consists of well-built and comfortable houses
of one and two storeys, the interiors of which are usually well
furnished. Nearly one-half of the village is the property of the
workmen, a number of whom are 'lairds' of several tenements.
These lairds are industrious men, to whom the proprietor of the
estate, John Roberton, Esq., Laehup, lent money as soon as they
were able to add a few pounds to it, to build a house suited to
the family of the borrowers. This money, obtained at 5 per cent
. interest, and payable with the feu duty, the feuar becomes
naturally anxious to pay up ; and often in a year or two he has
been able to do so by savings from his own earnings and that of
his family. When this has been done, another sum, adequate to
build another house, is at his command ; and thus on the same
feu there have been reared, in process of time, a number of
houses, from which the feuar derives a considerable yearly
income. The erection of a house consisting of one apartment,
containing a window and two beds, costs little more than L.30,
and a rental of L.3, or even L.3, 10s., is obtained for it. Many
of the houses, however, consist of a room and kitchen.
The plan of assessment for educational purposes at these works,
which are very extensive, deserves notice and imitation. Every
man and boy employed at the work is assessed twopence per week
for school fees, for which he can send one scholar, or attend
himself. For every additional scholar he is charged an
additional penny. The sum thus collected at the office is
divided among the various schoolmasters - of whom there are six,
besides assistants - according to the number of scholars
attending each. The sum collected from those who do not attend
school or send a child to it is equally divided among the six
teachers. The entire amount thus collected in one month is above
L.70, leaving about L.2 a week for each of the principal
teachers, and L.1 for his assistant. The effect of the system is
to draw out the children, who, were their parents not forced to
pay, would, in perhaps a majority of instances, be allowed to
remain at home.
The crowded state of the schools, some of which are attended by
from 150 to 200 scholars, will furnish some idea of the progress
of population. I have often asked myself what is to become of
the mass of beings brought into existence at these and the
similar works in the neighbourhood when the blackband ironstone
becomes exhausted, which it must do at no distant date? In
reply, the ironstone of Scotland is almost inexhaustible, and
while the Monkland coal lasts, the furnaces will blaze away and
the sound of industry be heard; but there seems little reason to
expect, as the population increases at these works, as increase
it must, that a demand for labour will also arise ; and what,
then, will become of the redundant population? Much misery ere
long must ensue: the girls must go to service to town, and the
boys find employment elsewhere, either in their native land, or
with their expatriated brethren in America, Australia, or Natal;
where, though years of toil may await them, with perseverance
and virtuous industry, competence, independence, and happiness
are sure to be ultimately obtained. [Chambers Edinburgh Journal
1850]