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14,819. When you were in Yell, were you bound to fish for any one?-No. There was no binding at all.
14,820. Where did you get your supplies?-From Mr. Sandison.
We always fished for him, and got our supplies from him. I was three years under Mr. Walker. During the first two years I paid my rent, but in the third year we had either to take his lease or go and I knew that I was not able to do it. He said to me that I would have to leave; but I did not know where to go, and I had a family to support. The last year I was on that property I came a little short of my rent, and I wanted him to wait for it until I came down to Lerwick; but he said he was not to wait any longer. He asked me what means I had to give him, and I said I had not much means at all. I said if he chose to take the crop he might do it, but that I would be left to starve afterwards. He took the crop at his own hand, and never put a value upon anything at all; but he told me that if I was not off the ground by such a time he would put me off.
He went away to the south at that time, and when Candlemas came round I got a room in Lerwick before he came back. He has done that to a great many more besides me.
14,821. Then you had to leave because you had not paid your rent?-He got the corn and potatoes for the rent.
14,822. But you did not give him money; and if you had paid your rent he would not have taken your crop?-No; but many a proprietor has to wait for month or a couple of months for that, and he sometimes does not get it even then.
14,823. Were you not fis.h.i.+ng for Mr. Sandison then?-Yes; but there was a very small fis.h.i.+ng that year.
14,824. Had Mr. Sandison paid your rent before?-No; I had paid it.
14,825. You had not been at the whale fis.h.i.+ng for several years before that?-No; but I have been for the last two years. I have gone to it since I have been living in Lerwick.
14,826. Whom do you s.h.i.+p with?-For the last two years I have gone out for Mr. Leask.
14,827. Did you require an outfit when you went two years ago?- Yes. I got it from Mr. Leask. It cost about 5.
14,828. What were your wages?-2, 5s.
14,829. Were you both at the sealing and whaling that year?-Yes; I went both voyages in the same s.h.i.+p.
14,830. Were you due a large account to Mr. Leask at the end of the year?-About 16 or 17.
14,831. Was that for supplies to your family?-Yes.
14,832. Had you any money to get for your voyage?-Yes. I had 12 to get in the first year.
14,833. Had you 28 of earnings for the year?-Yes, for the first and second payments.
14,834. Was that money paid to you at the Custom House?-Yes.
14,835. How much of it?-The whole of it; and then I went down and paid what I was due at the shop after I had been paid off at the Custom House.
14,836. Who went down from the Custom House with you?- There were a good many more than me going [Page 374] down,- men who had been settled with at the same time.
14,837. Did you all go down together to Mr. Leask's?-Yes.
14,838. Who settled with you there?-Mr. Robertson.
14,839. Did you go down with him?-No. One of Mr. Leask's men came up to the Custom House and paid us there, and when we came back Mr. Robertson settled with us at the shop. The person who settled with us at the Custom House was either Andrew Jamieson or John Jamieson, I don't remember which.
14,840. Did he not go down to the shop with you?-No.
14,841. Did he say anything to you about going down to the shop?-No.
14,842. Had you seen Mr. Robertson or any of Mr. Leask's people before you went up to the Custom House?-Yes, one of them told us we had to go there, and that he would be there to settle with us.
14,843. Did he tell you anything else?-He did not tell me anything.
14,844. Had he arranged with you before about meeting him at the Custom House for the settlement?-Yes, either the night before or that morning.
14,845. Had he sent for you to tell you about that?-No; we were waiting there for a settlement.
14,846. Did he tell you at that time how much your account was with Mr. Leask?-Yes.
14,847. And did he tell you that you would have to pay it when you got your money?-Yes.
14,848. Accordingly you did pay it when you got your money, as you had been told?-Yes.
14,849. Did you get an engagement from Mr. Leask in the following year?-Yes.
14,850. Had you an account with him in the same way then, and some money to get at the end of the season?-Yes.
14,851. Were you told in the same way that you would be settled with, and that you would have your account to pay to Mr. Leask after you got your money?-Yes.
14,852. Did you come down from the Custom House with Mr.
Jamieson then?-I did not.
14,853. You had been told before that you had to go down to the shop?-Yes.
14,854. And you did go down and pay your money?-Yes.
14,855. Had the rest of the men been told the same thing, that they were to come down and pay their accounts after receiving their money at the Custom House?-Yes, all the men who were in town that day.
14,856. Did you get any of your supplies anywhere else than at Mr.
Leask's?-No; not when I was in his employment.
14,857. Why not?-Because I thought I could get my things just as cheap from him as I could get them anywhere else; and another reason was, that if I was short of money I could go and ask him for a supply, or for a little money; whereas if I had gone to any of the small groceries in the town they would not have been able to give me that.
14,858. Where do you get your supplies in the winter time when you are at home?-We generally take couple of bolls of meal from Mr. Leask and pay for them, or get an advance of them if no trade is doing in the town, or if any of us are in bad health.
14,859. Do you sometimes get your supplies elsewhere in winter?-Generally if we have any money, we can buy them at the cheapest market. There is no particular place where we go to.
14,860. Do you sometimes find a cheaper market somewhere else?-No. Mr. Leask can give an article as cheap as anybody in Lerwick can do. There is a Mr. Fraser, a grocer in Lerwick, from whom we got some things in the dead of winter. We take them from him during the week, and pay him on Sat.u.r.day night for them.
14,861. Are his things as good and cheap as Mr. Leask's?-Just the same. He only charges us the currency.
14,862. Do you employ yourself at any trade during the winter?-I work at anything I have the chance of, when my health permits me. If I get the chance of discharging vessels, or doing a day's work, or anything of that kind, I take it; or sometimes we go to the fis.h.i.+ng in a small boat.
14,863. Do you always subscribe to the s.h.i.+pwrecked Mariners'
Fund when you go the whale fis.h.i.+ng?-Yes. I have been nineteen years in that Fund.
14,864. Did you ever get anything out of it?-I have got out of it twice. I was cast away in 1863 at Davis Straits, and I had 2, 15s.
to get then. I got it in cash from Mr. George Reid Tait. The second time was when I lost a small boat by a storm at sea.
14,865. Were you at the fis.h.i.+ng at the time?-No, the boat was secured, but the water came in and took her away. I applied to the agent, and he valued the boat, and sent the money to me.