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Occupations information for Greenlaw and places above it in the hierarchy

Greenlaw

Robert Gibson's history of Greenlaw (see the History section) gives lots of information about old occupations at Greenlaw, particularly in Chapter XXIV - "Former Industries and Occupations". Some of the industries he writes about, all vanished by the start of the twentieth century, include:

  • Handloom weaving - upwards of 60 weavers working at its peak
  • Grinding mills e.g. corn, oats, barley. (He writes there were formerly 5 grinding mills in the parish, at Halyburton, Lambden, Slegden, Greenlaw Castle, and Greenlaw town mill)
  • Cabinetmaking e.g. the firm of John & Thomas Ledgertwood
  • Coopers - made wooden bowies (for holding milk), bickers (for holding porridge or broth), luggies (small bickers with handles), ladles, kits (smaller tubs) etc.
  • Egglers - wandered the country collecting eggs from farmers etc.
  • Horn-spoon makers - confined to families of the Gordons and Youngs
  • Barnmen - those who "thrashed out the corn with the flail"
  • various associated trades such as dyers, pockmen, maltsters etc.

Berwickshire

Grace A. Elliot's article on "Forgotten Industries of Berwickshire" was published in the transactions of the Berwickshire Naturalists' Club, Volume 51 (part 1 - 1977) pp.1-12.

Farm Servants and Labour in Lowland Scotland 1770-1914 edited by T.M. Devine (published in 1984 by John Donald Publishers Ltd of Edinburgh) includes a chapter by Michael Robson entitled "The Border Farm Worker". This appears on pages 71-96 of the book.

A short article on "The Weavers of the Borderland" appeared in the 1935 Hawick Archaeological Society Transactions, on page 15. Beginning "There is scarcely a trace of the old handloom weavers that were prominent in every Border district before the advent of the modern loom swept them aside" the article continues to briefly mention weavers in Selkirk, Kelso, Darnick, and Coldingham.

Scotland

  • A useful guide is D.R.Torrance's Scottish Trades, Professions, Vital Documents & Directories, published by the Scottish Association of Family History Societies.
  • For information on sailors in the past, see the Merchant Marine section.
  • Three useful work-related publications. The first is a general study of work in Scotland since 1800. The other two are specific works about farm servants in Lowland Scotland.
    • Industrial Nation: Work, Culture and Society in Scotland, 1800-Present by W.W.Knox, published by Edinburgh University Press in 1999.
    • Farm Servants and Labour in Lowland Scotland 1770-1914, edited by T.M.Devine, published by John Donald Publishers Ltd. in 1984.
    • Herds and Hinds: Farm Labour in Lowland Scotland, 1900-1939 by Richard Anthony, published by Tuckwell Press Ltd. in 1997.
  • The National Library of Scotland Scottish Book Trade index lists the names, trades and addresses of people involved in printing in Scotland up to 1850, and is fully searchable.

UK and Ireland