The gang-system, which during the last years has steadily increased,111 clearly does not exist for the sake of the gang-master. it exists for the enrichment of the large farmers,112 and indirectly of the landlords.113 For the farmer there is no more ingenious method of keeping his labourers well below the normal level, and yet of always having an extra hand ready for extra work, of extracting the greatest possible amount of labour with the least possible amount of money114 and of making adult male labour "redundant." From the exposition already made, it will be understood why, on the one hand, a greater or less lack of employment for the agricultural labourer is admitted, while on the other, the gang-system is at the same time declared "necessary" on account of the want of adult male labour and its migration to the towns.115 The cleanly weeded land, and the uncleanly human weeds, of Lincolnshire, are pole and counterpole of capitalistic production.116


F. Ireland

In concluding this section, we must travel for a moment to Ireland. First, the main facts of the case.

The population of Ireland had, in 1841, reached 8,222,664; in 1851, it had dwindled to 6,623,985; in 1861, to 5,850,309; in 1866, to 5 1/2 millions, nearly to its level in 1801. The diminution began with the famine year, 1846, so that Ireland, in less than twenty years, lost more than 5/16 ths of its people.117 Its total emigration from May, 1851, to July, 1865, numbered 1,591,487: the emigration during the years 1861- 1865 was more than half-a-million. The number of inhabited houses fell, from 1851-1861, by 52,990. From 1851-1861, the number of holdings of 15 to 30 acres increased 61,000, that of holdings over 30 acres, 109,000, whilst the total number of all farms fell 120,000, a fall, therefore, solely due to the suppression of farms under 15 acres — i.e., to their centralisation.

 

Table A
LIVE-STOCK
YearHorsesCattleSheepPigs
Total
Number
DecreaseTotal
Number
DecreaseIncreaseTotal
Number
DecreaseIncreaseTotal
Number
DecreaseIncrease
1860 619,811 — 3,606,374 — — 3,542,080 — — 1,271,072 — — 
1861 614,232 5,579 3,471,688 134,686 — 3,556,050 — 13,970 1,102,042 169,030 — 
1862 602,894 11,338 3,254,890 216,798 — 3,456,132 99,918 — 1,154,324 — 52,282 
1863 579,978 22,916 3,144,231 110,659 — 3,308,204 147,982 — 1,067,458 86,866 — 
1864 562,158 17,820 3,262,294 — 118,063 3,366,941 — 58,737 1,058,480 8,978 — 
1865 547,867 14,291 3,493,414 — 231,120 3,688,742 — 321,801 1,299,893 — 241,413 

The decrease of the population was naturally accompanied by a decrease in the mass of products. For our purpose, it suffices to consider the 5 years from 1861-1865 during which over half-a-million emigrated, and the absolute number of people sank by more than 1 of a million. From the above table it results: —

 

HorsesCattleSheepPigs
Absolute Decrease Absolute Decrease Absolute Increase Absolute Increase 
71,944 112,960 146,662 28,8211 
118

Let us now turn to agriculture, which yields the means of subsistence for cattle and for men. In the following table is calculated the decrease or increase for each separate year, as compared with its immediate predecessor. The Cereal Crops include wheat, oats, barley, rye, beans, and peas; the Green Crops, potatoes, turnips, marigolds, beet-root, cabbages, carrots, parsnips, vetches. &c.

 

Table B
INCREASE OR DECREASE IN THE AREA UNDER CROPS AND GRASS IN ACREAGE
YearCereal
Crop
Green
Crop
Grass and
Clover
FlaxTotal
Cultivated
Land
Decrease
(Acres) 
Decrease
(Acres) 
Increase
(Acres) 
Decrease
(Acres) 
Increase
(Acres) 
Decrease
(Acres) 
Increase
(Acres) 
Decrease
(Acres) 
Increase
(Acres) 
1861 15,701 36,974 — 47,969 — — 19,271 81,373 — 
1862 72,734 74,785 — — 6,623 — 2,055 138,841 — 
1863 144,719 19,358 — — 7,724 — 63,922 92,431 — 
1864 122,437 2,317 — — 47,486 — 87,761 — 10,493 
1865 72,450 — 25,241 — 68,970 50,159 — 28,398 — 
1861-65 428,041 108,193 — — 82,834 — 122,8501 330,350 — 

In the year 1865, 127,470 additional acres came under the heading "grass land," chiefly because the area under the heading of "bog and waste unoccupied," decreased by 101,543 acres. If we compare 1865 with 1864, there is a decrease in cereals of 246,667 qrs., of which 48,999 were wheat, 160,605


  By PanEris using Melati.

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