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12,477. Do you keep any account with women engaged in the curing?-No. These women are only employed by the day.
12,478. I believe that you are yourself a skilful boatman, and acquainted with the fis.h.i.+ng in all its details? Do you think it possible in Shetland to prosecute the [Page 309] winter fis.h.i.+ng to a greater extent than at present, if boats of a superior cla.s.s were introduced?-Not to any great extent. I have no doubt the fis.h.i.+ng will increase. It is increasing, and will increase, and the boats will be improved
12,479. I presume you would be glad to continue curing to as large an extent in winter as in summer, if you could get the fish delivered to you?-Yes. I think there are facilities all round Shetland for that and they could sell their fish any day. It is not for the want of a market that the men don't fish. The great barrier is the weather.
12,480. Would the weather be as great a barrier if the boats were of an improved cla.s.s?-The men could not have a better cla.s.s of boats than they have.
12,481. Would decked boats not enable them to fish all the winter?-No.
12,482. What is the difference in that respect between Shetland and the east coast of Scotland?-We have a heavier sea, and more uncertain weather here. Our present boats can go out in a lull, and some more quickly ash.o.r.e when the weather gets rough; but the heavier decked vessels could not do that. In order to fish with decked vessels, the men would require to remain at sea in good and bad weather.
12,483. Would that be impracticable here?-I think so. It would not pay.
12,484. Would that be from want of a market?-No; it would be because there was not enough good weather, and the men would not catch fish enough. Some of the welled smacks have gone out in winter, and gone up to Grimsby with their fish, and that has paid occasionally.
12,485. Are there vessels of that cla.s.s in use in Shetland?-Yes, several. Mr. Harrison had one up in December which succeeded very well, and there is one out from Scalloway just now at Faroe; but it is not considered that it will be extensively or generally continued, the fis.h.i.+ng is so precarious.
12,486. Are the men unwilling to engage in the winter fis.h.i.+ng in any of these modes?-I think it will be very difficult to get many men to go to it.
12,487. In other places the winter fis.h.i.+ng with decked vessels is practised all winter, is it not?-On the coast of England it is.
12,488. The men there go to the Dogger Bank mostly?-Yes.
12,489. Is there any reason why that sort of fis.h.i.+ng cannot be practised in Shetland?-There are many reasons why it cannot be done. There is the heavy sea, and the deep water, and the nature of the fis.h.i.+ng grounds.
12,490. Would long-line fis.h.i.+ng be impracticable on the banks of Shetland?-In winter it would. It could not be done in these vessels.
12,495. Is that owing to the nature of the ground, or for what reason?-It is owing to the depth of the water and the strong tides.
12,492. Has it ever been tried to set lines from these decked vessels?-In summer it has been tried, and it has generally failed.
It has always been discontinued.
12,493. I believe it is necessary to set lines with rowing vessels?- Yes; the fishermen consider that to be the safest way, after all.
12,494. But they do sail out their lines sometimes, do they not?- Yes; and that saves them the trouble of pulling.
12,495. Is it only recently that that practice has been introduced?- I think so. I have not heard of it until lately; but I believe it is now done in consequence of larger boats being used than were in use at one time.
12,496. What is the amount of the poor-rate in the parish of Sandsting?-It is 2s. 4d. on the landlord, and the same on the tenant.
12,497. Is not that rather above the average?-It is. In Walls it is 1s. 10d. Alexander Wallace is the inspector in Sandsting, and Mr.
Umphray is the chairman of the Board.
12,498. Does Wallace live in Sandsting?-Yes; on the Walls road.
12,499. How long has he been inspector?-I could not say. I think six or eight years, or more than that.
12,500. Where does he pay the paupers' allowances?-I think he used to go to the parish church at one time, but latterly, I believe, he has paid them at his own house.
12,501. Who is the inspector in Walls?-James Georgeson.
12,502. Does he also pay the paupers at his own house?-Yes, so far as I know.
12,503. Has there ever been a practice of paying them at Reawick?-There are a few, I think five or six, in that district whom our shopman has been in the habit of paying. Wallace sends their pay to him, as they live five or six miles from his (Wallace's) house.
12,504. Are these paupers always paid in cash?-Yes.
12,505. Are they paid in the shop?-I suppose so. There was some inquiry about that lately. I asked the man about it, and he said he invariably paid them in cash; but we put a stop to it, as the thing was not considered to be regular. It had just been done to save the inspector trouble, or to save the people from going so far for their money.
12,506. Have you any knowledge as to how men are employed here for the Greenland fishery?-I am not engaged in that business myself, but I know pretty well how the thing goes on.
12,507. Are there any men from your district employed in that fishery?-There are a few who go to it from some little distance from where I live.
12,508. Do the men employed in that fis.h.i.+ng require a larger and more expensive outfit than those who are employed in other fis.h.i.+ngs or in other seafaring pursuits?-They require warmer clothing. I think that is the only difference.
12,509. Do you suppose that the first month's wages which a lad going to that fis.h.i.+ng gets is sufficient to provide him with the necessary outfit?-Certainly not, and I know that in consequence of that very few lads are now going to Greenland. They cannot be fitted out now as they used to be before the new Board of Trade regulations were issued.
12,510. Have you that knowledge from the statements of the lads in your neighbourhood?-Yes, I know it from the men and the lads who go to the fis.h.i.+ng. It is coming to be mostly men who are taken for these voyages.
12,511. Is that because the men have already got outfits?-Yes.
They could not take lads who are insufficiently clothed; while the men are better clothed, and are more able to stand the severity of the climate. That fis.h.i.+ng used to be a nursery for our young men, bringing them up to be able to take their position in the merchant service; but now it is not, and cannot be.
12,512. Do you think the result of the Board of Trade regulations has been to prevent agents in Lerwick from giving the young men credit for their outfits?-I think that must have been the result; and it has prevented so many young men from being employed as there used to be.
12,513. Have you known of any young men going to Greenland with insufficient outfits in consequence of that difficulty in getting credit?-I cannot say that I have known of any particular case; but I should suppose it was very likely to have happened.
12,514. Do you know that, in point of fact, young men engaging to go to Greenland cannot get any reasonable amount of credit from an agent in Lerwick?-Yes, I know that to be the fact; and I also know it to be the fact that there are very few young men now going there.
12,515. Can you tell me of any young man who has said to you that he would have gone to Greenland if he could have got an outfit?-No, I cannot.
12,516. Has that ever been said to you by any young man in Shetland?-I don't know that I ever put the question to any one.
12,517. Has anybody made such a statement to you without you having put the question?-No. I have asked some of the men how it was that there were so [Page 310] very few green hands now going to Greenland, and they said the young men and lads could not be fitted out now as they were before,-that they could only get one month's advance, and that if their wages were only 16s. or 20s. a month, that would only buy them a pair of boots, and they had nothing for clothing.
12,518. In what way did that question suggest itself to your mind?-I think it was from noticing the fact of so many young lads pressing in to go to Faroe. We found more lads wis.h.i.+ng employment at Faroe than we could find room for, and on making inquiry I found that that was the reason.
12,519. Why is it that the agents do not give the same credit as they gave before?-I think it must be in consequence of the Board of Trade regulations.
12,520. But these regulations do not interfere directly with the giving of credit; they only provide that the payment of wages shall take place in presence of the superintendent at the Custom House and shall be in cash?-I am aware of that.
12,521. The agent has, with an honest man, the same security for payment of his account that he had before, only the wages cannot be retained by him at settlement?-It must be from the fact that the wages cannot be retained, that the credit has been limited.
12,522. Do you think it would be an expedient thing that these young men should be allowed to incur an account for their outfit, and that the agent furnis.h.i.+ng that outfit should be in a position to retain the wages due at the end of the voyage?-I would not give an opinion upon that point. Perhaps it is better as it is.
12,523. Do you wish to make any remarks upon the Report by Mr. Hamilton to the Board of Trade, which was printed in the appendix to the previous report of the Commissioners?-I think that report is manifestly incorrect in what Mr. Hamilton says in regard to the Shetland system generally. He says, 'Almost every fisherman in the islands is in debt to some shopkeeper; and not only is the head of the family in debt, but frequently his wife also and other members of his family, down to children of twelve or fourteen years of age, for whom the shopkeeper opens separate accounts in his books.' I don't know where Mr. Hamilton could have got that information from.
12,524. Your own firm is an exception as regards the women, because you have no transactions with them?-It is surely not an exception. I think it must be the rule. I don't believe that such a system exists generally, as that of keeping separate accounts for a husband and wife.
12,525. But the younger members of the family may have separate accounts, and a few of them have separate accounts even in your business?-They have, if they are employed by us. A man may have five or six sons, every one fis.h.i.+ng and getting his own share and having his own account.