Second Shetland Truck System Report - LightNovelsOnl.com
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8876. How long ago?-Last year I had none but the horse.
8877. Do you sell one or two beasts every year?-No; some years I sell none at all, and some years only one.
8878. Where do you sell your eggs?-Just anywhere that we can get the best price for them.
8879. Do you sell them generally to Messrs. Hay?-No; sometimes not.
8880. Is there anybody else in Fetlar who buys eggs?-Yes; Mr.
William Tulloch buys some.
8881. Has he a small shop?-It is not a great deal of a shop that he has. He deals in cottons and such as that, and he buys eggs. I get 6d. a dozen for them sometimes, and sometimes perhaps 7d.
8882. Did you sell most of your eggs last year to Mr. Tulloch or to Mr. Garrioch?-I could not say. I don't deal much in that way myself.
8883. You leave that to your wife?-Yes.
8884. Do you always get your supplies from Hay Co.?-Yes. I never deal with Tulloch or Brown, and there is no other shop in the island that is worth going into.
8885. But are there any other shops at all except Tulloch's and Brown's?-I daresay some woman would sell some things sometimes, but they would not be of any account.
8886. Do you know where Tulloch and Brown, and that woman you speak of, get the goods they sell don't know.
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8887. Do you generally get a good quality of stuff from Hay & Co., at a fair price?-Yes; they are very fair prices.
8888. Have you ever got goods at Lerwick?-Yes.
8889. Do you find the goods supplied at Hay & Co.'s shop in Fetlar to be as good and as cheap its those you get in Lerwick?- Yes; I have no reason to complain about that.
8890. What was the price of meal that you have been buying lately?-It is much the same as we get it at in Lerwick; sometimes it little higher and sometimes a little cheaper. I think last season it was generally about 20s. per boll for oatmeal; but I don't remember about that particularly.
8891. Do you have to keep up your own houses and your own fences?-Yes; the house I am living in was built when I came to it, and it is the same yet; we have to keep it in good order.
8892. The landlord does not do that for you?-I don't know; but the last time something was done to the house it was put down to Lord Zetland's account.
8893. Are most of the tenants on Lord Zetland's property in Fetlar fis.h.i.+ng for Messrs. Hay?-I suppose most of them do.
8894. Do they generally understand that they are under any obligation to fish for them?-I don't think so; but it would make very little difference fis.h.i.+ng for any other body, when we would get the same price from them.
8895. You don't think of curing your own fish, then?-No.
8896. Where do the Fetlar people sell their hosiery?-Generally in Lerwick; they go down there with it. My family do not knit much, because they have no wool, unless they get some to buy.
8897. What is paid for wool?-Sometimes it is 2s. per lb. for fine wool, sometimes 1s. 6d., and so on.
8898. Do you get that from your neighbours?-There are not many neighbours near us who have any sheep.
8899. Where do you buy it, then?-Sometimes we go to Lerwick and buy it, and sometimes in Yell.
8900. Is there no shop in Fetlar where you can buy it?-No.
8901. Where do you buy it in Lerwick?-I don't know; I do not buy it myself. They buy it just at any place where they can get it best.
8902. To whom do you pay your rent?-To Hay & Co.
8903. Is it deducted from your account when you settle?-Yes.
8904. Have you ever tried the winter fis.h.i.+ng?-No; they don't do much in that with us. They might catch some in winter, but not many. They have generally a long way to go to seek them, and it requires particularly good weather to go out with the little boats.
8905. Have you not large enough boats for the winter fis.h.i.+ng?- No.
8906. Do you think you could do anything if you had large decked boats?-I don't know; they have never tried them there. They might do something with them, but I don't think they would pay very well.
8907. Have your rents been raised lately?-No; they were raised a little about eight or nine years ago.
8908. Was there any different arrangement made at that time about the fis.h.i.+ng?-No.
8909. Have you ever known any man in Fetlar who had to pay liberty money for freedom to sell his fish to another than the tacksman or factor?-No.
8910. And no man in your time has been put out of his ground for fis.h.i.+ng to another?-No; I never heard of anything of the kind in Fetlar, either on Lord Zetland's or Lady Nicholson's ground.
Mid Yell, January 17, 1872, WILLIAM STEWART, examined.
8911. You are a tenant and fisherman at Seafield, Mid Yell?- Yes. Kirkabister is the town I live in.
8912. Who is your landlord?-Mrs. Budge.
8913. To whom do you sell your fish now?-I have sold them this year to Mr. Thomas Williamson.
8914. Who did you sell them to last year?-To Mr. Laurence Williamson, Linkshouse.
8915. Why did you leave him?-Because Mr. Sievwright, Mrs.
Budge's factor, wished us to do it.
8916. Did you get a letter from him about the fis.h.i.+ng?-Yes.
8917. Have you got it?-Yes. [Produces the following letter]:
' 'WILLIAM, I now write, as I promised, to explain what I expect the Seafield tenants to do in regard to fis.h.i.+ng, that you may communicate the same to them. 'The business premises at Seafield cannot be allowed to remain vacant, and consequently unprofitable while it is clear they must do so unless the tenants fish to the tenant of these premises. The Seafield tenants, therefore, must fish to Mr. Thomas Williamson upon fair and reasonable terms, and I understand he is quite prepared to meet them on such terms. I believe he will, in every respect, do you justice; and so long as he does so, you have no reason to complain. But should it happen that he fails to treat you fairly and honourably (of which I have no fear), you can let me know, and matters will soon be put right. You and the tenants, however, must not act towards Mr. Williamson in a selfish or hard way either, for it is quite as possible for you to do so to him as it is for him to do so to you. Both he and you all must work together, heartily and agreeably; and if you do so, I have no fear, humanly speaking, that the result will be success to both.-I am, yours faithfully, W. SIEVWRIGHT.