The Little General and the Rousay Crofters
Crisis and Conflict on an Orkney Estate
The brutal clearances which changed the face of much of rural Scotland in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries are most often associated with the Highlands. However, one of the most dramatic conflicts between tenant and landowner took place on the small Orcadian island of Rousay.
When members of the Royal Commission tasked with assessing the conditions of tenant crofters arrived there, the island's owner, General William Frederick Traill-Burroughs, threatened to evict any islander who gave evidence. As tension mounted, a gunboat arrived to keep the peace, and it was only the belated passing of the Crofters Act of 1886 and a special Act of Parliament directed specifically against the general that saved the islands.
This is the dramatic story of these events. At the end of it, Burroughs, once lauded as a national hero who had seen military action in Crimea and India, emerges as a much more complex and human figure that history has previously painted him.
William P. L. Thomson was the author of a number of books on Scottish history. He was Rector of Kirkwall Grammar School, in Orkney, from 1971 to 1991, previously having been Principal Teacher of History and Geography at the Anderson High School, Shetland. He died in 2016.
9780857906915.jpg
Versandkostenfreie Lieferung! (eBook-Download)
Vorbestellerartikel: Dieser Artikel erscheint am 1. Januar 2030
- Artikel-Nr.: SW9780857906915110164
- Artikelnummer SW9780857906915110164
-
Autor
William P.L. Thompson
- Verlag Origin
- Seitenzahl 224
- Veröffentlichung 01.01.2030
- Barrierefreiheit
- ISBN 9780857906915