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Movement within Scotland

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Title: Movement within Scotland


1
Movement within Scotland
2
Introduction
  • Migration is the movement of people within a
    country.
  • In Scotland between 1830 and 1930 this internal
    migration saw a shift from the poorer rural areas
    to a life with more possibilities in the
    increasingly industrialised urban areas.
  • It is believed that this movement arose as these
    rural areas saw a great deal of deprivation and
    urban areas appeared to offer opportunities for
    employment in factories and industry.

3
Life in the Lowlands of Scotland
  • Rapid population growth in the Lowlands was a
    cause for concern as a result of the Industrial
    Revolution.
  • Concern existed at the time that, if the
    population continued to rise in vast numbers in
    areas with fewer farms, a severe famine would
    occur.
  • Farming methods were altered and additional
    labour was hired, thus moving some of the
    agricultural workers.
  • Consequently, agricultural land underwent a
    change. Land was divided into medium- and
    large-sized estates and then carved up into
    individual farms, employing up to six men a
    shift away from tenant farmers.
  • (During harvest time additional labourers were
    employed chiefly Irish immigrants.)
  • In conclusion, fewer labourers were required so
    people sought work in nearby towns, thus adding
    to the declining rural population.

4
Lowlands (continued)
  • After 1840, the population in the rural areas
    continued to decline at a rapid rate as a
    consequence of greater efficiency.
  • Farming saw a rise in labour-saving equipment
    such as the self-binding reaper and the potato
    digger.
  • Furthermore, wage levels in the industrial sector
    were far higher than in agriculture, often as
    high as 50 per cent more.
  • The allure of living in towns was also a feature
    of this increased urbanisation.
  • Between 1861 and 1891, rural employment in the
    Lowlands fell by around a third.
  • This pattern continued into the 20th century and
    by 1914 only 14 per cent of males were employed
    in agriculture.

5
A shift from the Highlands
  • Many historians have claimed that the movement
    away from the Highlands came as a result of
    industrialisation and the desire to gain one of
    the many opportunities and improve their
    standards of living.
  • Up-to-date research has revealed this is not a
    true reflection of events. This theory is
    applicable to the south-east Highlands. There was
    a great variety of shift patterns at this time.
    There was little movement from the islands and
    the north-west.

6
South and east Highlands
  • Decline in farm labour saw a shift towards
    fishing villages and towns.
  • This was insufficient to absorb the excess
    labour, and thus some were drawn to the urban
    areas in the Central Belt.
  • Some remained behind, almost destitute as a
    consequence of being poorly educated.

7
The north and the Islands
  • The north and the Islands depended on the land,
    namely the potato, as a means of survival.
  • A shift came in the 1850s when there was a
    temporary migration.
  • Statistics
  • It was estimated that in the 1850s a half to
    two-thirds of the income of the inhabitants of
    Skye came from agricultural work in the Lowlands.
  • In the 1870s, the herring industry drew in
    migrants with as many as 5000 men and women
    arriving in the fishing ports of Caithness and
    Aberdeenshire during the catching season.
  • By 1891 three out of four of the population
    depended directly or indirectly on fishing alone
    or on a combination of fishing and crofting.
  • This area managed to survive as a consequence of
    temporary migration bringing back money and
    provisions to the family and wider community.
  • After the First World War a irreversible trend
    began. These areas lost a quarter of their
    overall population. This could be to do with
    their role in the First World War, the lack of
    temporary labour required as well as a severe
    depression in the 1920s and 1930s.
  • These groups tended to settle in and around the
    major cities of Glasgow .
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