The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

New book highlights Scots famine winter

● Civil insurrecti­on and starvation after potato blight

- BY NEIL DRYSDALE

Amid the worst hunger many would ever know, children and old people died in their hundreds.

Angry mobs filled the streets of countless communitie­s, demanding food for their families as famine strangled the life from them.

Yet these incidents didn’t happen in some far-flung part of the world, but across Scotland in 1846-47 when the country’s potato crop was lost to blight, sparking prolonged civil unrest across the north and north-east.

The crisis has been explored in unpreceden­ted detail in Insurrecti­on: Scotland’s Famine Winter, a new book by Press and Journal columnist Jim Hunter, which will be launched at Waterstone­s in Inverness on October 10.

On islands such as Barra and South Uist relief efforts came too late to prevent starvation and death, with parents watching powerlessl­y as their children succumbed.

Further east, the public in towns and villages from Aberdeen to Wick and Thurso – by way of places such as Fraserburg­h, Macduff, Buckie, Portgordon, Garmouth, Hopeman, Burghead, Elgin, Inverness, Avoch, Cromarty, Dingwall and Invergordo­n – rose up in protest at the cost of the oatmeal, which replaced potatoes as people’s basic foodstuff.

Mr Hunter said: “The Irish famine, when more than a million people died, was such an awful cataclysm that it understand­ably overshadow­s what happened in Scotland.

“But in our crofting areas in the west Highlands and islands, where families were every bit as dependent as the Irish on potatoes, the famine brought truly grim conditions for so many people.

“When writing about that time I wanted to steer away from coldly factual data on death and disease rates. My aim was to bring out the stories of what families endured, when children such as 14-yearold Catherine MacMillan died from hunger in Barra.”

Oatmeal’s soaring price was blamed on the export of grain by landlords, farmers and dealers cashing in on even higher prices elsewhere.

When the authoritie­s refused to stop such exports, on the grounds it would disrupt trade, thousands took the law into their own hands.

As a bitter winter gripped, and families feared a repeat of the famine which was ravaging Ireland, grain carts were seized, ships boarded, harbours blockaded, a jail was forced open and the military were confronted.

In Aberdeen, protesting crowds were joined by navvies who abandoned railway constructi­on work and marched into the city.

Moray’s sheriff and an accompanyi­ng force of special constables were forced to surrender their batons and their prisoners to hundreds of men and women who besieged them in Burghead.

A panicky dispatch from Inverness’s procurator fiscal, meanwhile, told of a “mob proceeding through the town” to “smash the windows” of traders. He said the authoritie­s were “helpless” to stop them.

Mr Hunter added: “Given the sheer scale of the protest movement that erupted, the many thousands of people involved and the intensity of the violence that broke out in places like Burghead, Invergordo­n and Wick, it’s surprising to me that this whole episode seems to have been forgotten about entirely.”

The army fired on one set of rioters and, as order was restored, punitive sentences were imposed on others. But the crowds also gained key concession­s.

Above all, they won cheaper food and demonstrat­ed that they would not be taken for granted when it came to defending their families.

Mr Hunter’s research into the archives from Wick to Edinburgh has uncovered the scale of the crisis which convulsed the north of Scotland for several months.

But, as he concluded: “Britain’s government (eventually) did as crofters and their MPs were demanding and enacted legislatio­n which provided families with the security which had so long been denied them.

“There would be no more clearances.”

Insurrecti­on: Scotland’s Famine Winter is published by Birlinn on October 10.

 ??  ?? HARD TIMES: Some of the impoverish­ed people of Inverness, who were among the victims of the potato famine
HARD TIMES: Some of the impoverish­ed people of Inverness, who were among the victims of the potato famine

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom