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6242. Do you think it is better for you to do that than to allow him to have an account of his own?-He is not capable of keeping accounts yet. He has had no education for that.
6243. Had he no separate account in Mr. Adie's shop?-It was a mere trifle.
6244. Was he paid his balance?-Yes; it was paid at once in cash.
Mr. Adie paid it to me.
6245. Is that a usual way of doing with the beach boys?-I think every one who had cash to get got it at once, and the man who was careful would get his cash at once. If I had 50 to get from the fish-curer, I would get it handed to me at once. I say that from my own personal experience; and that is always so with careful men.
6246. Then you are a successful man, and I daresay you have a large balance at your bank account?-I have too large a family to have a large balance there. I require a great deal of money for my family.
6247. Have you ever gone to the Faroe fis.h.i.+ng?-I have only been a ling fisher.
Hillswick, Northmavine, January 11, 1872, HENRY WILLIAMSON, examined.
6248. What are you?-I am a fisherman at Stenness.
6249. Do you hold some land on Mrs. Cheyne's estate?-Stenness is the station where we fish; and the farms we hold under crop, and where we live, are near it, at Tangwick.
6250. Your land is on the Busta estate, and you pay your rent to Mr. Gifford?-Yes.
6251. Are you free to fish to anybody you like?-Yes.
6252. For whom do you generally fish?-I have fished for Mr.
Anderson for twenty-three years back.
6253. Do you get your goods at Mr. Anderson's shop at Hillswick?-Yes, for the most part, or anywhere else I choose.
6254. Is there any other shop in the neighbourhood where you get goods?-Yes, occasionally. There is a shop at Ollaberry; and there is a store of Mr. Adie's at Stenness, kept by a factor during the fis.h.i.+ng season.
6255. Are there also some small shops in the country?-Yes.
6256. Do you sometimes get goods from them?-Yes; if I require them, and if it is convenient for me.
6257. But most of your dealings are at Hillswick?-Yes, because it is near hand.
6258. Is it as handy a place for you as any?-Yes.
6259. Do you keep an account there?-Yes.
6260. Is it settled at the end of the year, when you settle for your fish?-Yes.
6261. Have you generally a balance to get at the end of the year in cash?-Yes, for the most part I have.
6262. How much?-It varies very much, according to the fis.h.i.+ng.
We had a good season this year, and consequently we had a good return.
6263. But sometimes you have a balance against you?-I have not had that for some time back. When the fis.h.i.+ng is good, of course a careful man will be able to save money.
6264. Is it five or six years since the balance was on the wrong side for you?-It is between twelve and twenty years since I was due anything; but I found no difference in the man I was serving, when I required money in advance then, than I do now when I have money of my own to get.
6265. Do you get cash in the fis.h.i.+ng season when you ask for it?- Yes; whenever I asked for it, even when I had to ask for it in advance, I got it.
6266. Are you quite satisfied with the goods you get at the shop?- I am quite satisfied both with the qualities I receive, and with what is charged for the goods I require.
6267. Would it do you any good to have the price of your fish fixed at the beginning of the year, so that you would know what you were to get for them?-I am convinced that it would be a great disadvantage to the fishermen at large in Shetland; and that was partly [Page 154] what brought me here, when I heard there was to be a meeting. I knew little about it until I came here, but I thought I was called upon to come and give you my views upon it truly. I think the present system in Shetland has done better for the fishermen than any new system would do which could be brought in; and I think I know about it, because I have been at the ling-fis.h.i.+ng for fifty-four years.
6268. Have you always had your price fixed according to the currency at the end of the year?-Yes. We only know our price some time before settling time, and I suppose we are paid according to the current price which rules in the south market.
6269. Do you think the price is always fairly enough fixed according to the sales which the fish-merchants have made?-I think so.
6270. Do other people not think so?-I don't know. I hear very little said about that; and as to that, I would not regard much what others said. I would have more regard to my own views.
6271. But have you heard complaints made about that?-I have no doubt I have heard them. It is a very common thing for us to hear people complaining.
6272. Is it the men who are bound to fish that are more apt to complain?-No doubt it is; but I am quite convinced, as I have already said, that any change in the system will not benefit the labouring men.
6273. Why?-Because I think they are fully as well served now as they could be. Those who are not able to pay at the time for what goods they require are dealt fairly with, and are never brought to a stand.
6274. Then you think it is an advantage for the fishermen, in a bad season, to be able to get an advance in order to carry them through until the following year?-I know it is, because, although I have never been one farthing in debt, yet there are many men with families who I know, if it had not been for the kindness of the merchant or his factor in giving them advances, would never have been able to carry through, because they had no means of their own, and their families did not support them.
6275. Are there many men you have known of that kind who have been carried through the season by the advances of the fish-merchant?-A great many in some seasons, but not at present. These have been fine years for Shetland.
6276. But some seasons ago, when the fis.h.i.+ngs and the crops were not so good, were there many such men?-About twenty years ago there were plenty of them.
6277. Were there many of them five years ago?-I don't know that there were so many of them then. There was a bad season a short time ago; but it is turned twenty years now since there were such bad times in Shetland, and the people were carried through then chiefly by the kindness of the merchants for whom they worked.
6278. They got advances on their accounts just in the same way as you would get your cash paid to you, if the merchant were due it to you?-Yes; and not only that, but I know that the curers often paid their rents for them in cash in advance, although I did not have much experience of that myself.
6279. Were these advances generally made in money, or in articles which the men wanted out of the shop?-Generally in goods.
6280. When a man wanted food or provisions, I suppose he would generally get them advanced to him out of the fish-merchant's shop?-Yes; or any place where it would be most convenient.
6281. But you say that in these bad years, when a man was behind, it was the fish-merchant who carried him through?-It was. They were carried through merely by the agency of the fish-curer.
6282. Did the fish-curer carry them through by giving them money with which to pay their rent?-No; the curers brought in sufficient meal to serve their purposes.
6283. And that meal was sold at the merchants' shops, and put to the account of the men?-Yes.
6284. Was that done with clothing too?-Yes, clothing, and whatever they required to get.
6285. But all that was done by these merchants in the confidence that the men would pay them, if they were able, by the next year's fis.h.i.+ng?-No doubt they were repaid in some cases, but in some cases the repayment was very slow. That depended altogether upon whether the times turned out favourable.
6286. Do you know any of the men who were helped through in that way?-I have no doubt I know them, but I have no interest to say much about them. I don't want to enter into that matter at all.
I am getting well advanced in life, and I don't want to speak about my neighbours' affairs.
6287. Were there many of your neighbours who were carried through in that sort of way?-There were a great many of them who required supplies.