This article argues that farm service was an adaptable and sustainable system of hiring labour in areas of midland and southern England after 1850, having much in common with the model recently identified for northern England and Scotland. Analysing the CEBs from selected parishes in 7 counties in 1851, 1871 and 1891 we reveal an intricate pattern of farm service 'survival' both within and between counties. We then use a range of reports printed between the 1860s and 1920s to examine the national picture. The later regional persistence of farm service has implications for broader debates on the rural workforce and social relations
This new study looks at the ways in which the years surrounding the First World War shaped the lives...
Despite the growth of women's history and rural social history in the past thirty years, the work pe...
This article considers whether the migration of Scottish farmers to East Anglia constitutes evidence...
This article argues that farm service was an adaptable and sustainable system of hiring labour in ar...
A previous article in Rural History entitled ‘“Rustic and Rude”: Hiring Fairs and their Critics in E...
This thesis examines a previously neglected aspect of agrarian social and economic history: the work...
This thesis examines a previously neglected aspect of agrarian social and economic history: the work...
This book offers a new history of the farmworker in England from 1850 to the present day. It focuses...
This paper provides the first full-population analysis of changes in the entrepreneurial status of f...
It is the purpose of this work to discuss the rise and fall of trade Unionism among agricultural lab...
This article examines one of the most infamous forms of rural labour in nineteenth-century No rfolk:...
The study of rural history and social unrest in the English countryside has concentrated largely on ...
The movement of rural labour and the workings of the rural labour market have all too often been neg...
Finding a ‘solution’ for the seemingly intractable problem of unemployment in post-Napoleonic rural ...
Whilst the legislative history of British agricultural policy in the early twentieth century has rec...
This new study looks at the ways in which the years surrounding the First World War shaped the lives...
Despite the growth of women's history and rural social history in the past thirty years, the work pe...
This article considers whether the migration of Scottish farmers to East Anglia constitutes evidence...
This article argues that farm service was an adaptable and sustainable system of hiring labour in ar...
A previous article in Rural History entitled ‘“Rustic and Rude”: Hiring Fairs and their Critics in E...
This thesis examines a previously neglected aspect of agrarian social and economic history: the work...
This thesis examines a previously neglected aspect of agrarian social and economic history: the work...
This book offers a new history of the farmworker in England from 1850 to the present day. It focuses...
This paper provides the first full-population analysis of changes in the entrepreneurial status of f...
It is the purpose of this work to discuss the rise and fall of trade Unionism among agricultural lab...
This article examines one of the most infamous forms of rural labour in nineteenth-century No rfolk:...
The study of rural history and social unrest in the English countryside has concentrated largely on ...
The movement of rural labour and the workings of the rural labour market have all too often been neg...
Finding a ‘solution’ for the seemingly intractable problem of unemployment in post-Napoleonic rural ...
Whilst the legislative history of British agricultural policy in the early twentieth century has rec...
This new study looks at the ways in which the years surrounding the First World War shaped the lives...
Despite the growth of women's history and rural social history in the past thirty years, the work pe...
This article considers whether the migration of Scottish farmers to East Anglia constitutes evidence...