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| Scotland's
Legacy of Landlordism |
| [Reprinted from Land
& Liberty, November-December, 1967] |
"IS SCOTLAND'S feudal system holding up industrial progress? asks
the Daily Record, Glasgow, in an article "The Kingdom on
the Dole," October 10. Behind the question are some revealing facts
concerning the power of landlordism in Scotland, which has remained
virtually unchanged for centuries.
In the twin towns of Buckhaven and Methil, an area where unemployment
is four times the national average, and where over two thousand men have
lost their jobs following a pit disaster, attempts to open up employment
opportunities have been frustrated by private land ownership.
The main land owner in the Kingdom of Fife is the Wemyss family, headed
by Captain Michael Wemyss, the local 79-year old "laird."
Thousands of acres in the county are owned by Wemyss Estates, including
practically all Buckhaven and Methil's 1,382 acres.
"For centuries the Wemyss family has dominated the land holding in
nearly the whole of East Fife," said Mr. William Michie, Scottish
Nationalist and town councillor, to the Daily Record. "This
century, through the sheer movement of democracy, everyone believed that
the feudal land system would die a natural death. Instead we find the
Wemyss control of land as tight as ever."
The Wemyss line and its estates stretches back to feudal times and the
family fortunes have been founded largely on coal, the seams having been
worked for nearly six centuries. Even now, after nationalisation of the
mines, the Wemyss estates enjoy the profits from a private railway line
which carries nationalised coal from the pits. Says the Daily Record:
"Before 1947 not only did the estate provide the jobs through its
pits but it could say 'yea' or 'nay' to housing and other social
projects affecting miners and their families because of its land
interests. After nationalisation it lost the coalfield, but it has
continued to keep a grip on land development and use. That is still the
crux of the issue. At the same time, the Wemyss interests have continued
to make money from coal - due to ownership of the private railway line."
The National Coal Board refuses to state the contract terms it has with
the private railway company. "We are under no obligation to give
details of a commercial matter," said their spokesman. Figures of
from 6d. to Is. 6d. a ton have been frequently mentioned by long-time
miners.
The town council has experienced considerable difficulty in trying to
meet Captain Wemyss and in negotiating for the acquisition of land
needed for local development. He has declined to permit the building of
a sewage works on his land at Cairney Hill, and erected a 200 foot
chimney stack in the path of a new road designed to by-past the town
centre, thus defeating the purpose of the road, which since the 1930s
has had a half-mile gap in the middle of it. The council wanted land
outright for homes, but was told it could only have it on feu (perpetual
ground rent). Certain corner sites were kept back for future commercial
development.
The town council lost when it planned a tidal swimming pool on the
beach, only to discover that Wemyss interests owned the beach. "Shortly
after the last war," says the Record, "the council
used compulsory powers to acquire land near Byron Street in the middle
of the town. They were immediately legally halted by a court interdict
from Wemyss Mineral Concessions Ltd. - a Wemyss interest they had"
forgotten about!
"The Wemyss grip on the town is still emphasised by the
considerable sum paid by the town council to Wemyss Estates as feu duly
in respect of the majority of 3,500 council houses. At the same time the
vast bulk of the town's 3,000 private house occupiers also pay feus to
the laird, while his Wemyss Development Company Ltd. owns rented
property in the burgh.
"Only this year, Wemyss Estates sent a letter to the town
informing them that they proposed to take back 363 square yards from a
site at Aberhill, on lease to the town as a play area, so that it could
be leased separately as a petrol station."
An American firm with plans for a factory to produce steel pressure
vessels negotiated for thirty acres of land, but unsuccessfully. Wemyss
Estates were not prepared to part with their land on conditions
acceptable to the firm. The Record quotes Provost Robert Gough: "A
feudal type system is an anachronism to present day living. A town such
as Buckhaven should never be placed in a situation whereby its
townspeople are dependent for their social living and their livelihood,
even their education, on the goodwill of a land owner and companies
which belong to him. As a socialist and as a Christian I have always
believed that God gave the land to the people, and that it should be
used by the people in their best interests." Of course, one does
not have to be a socialist to believe that "God gave the land to
the people." Nor has the demand for equal rights to land anything
to do with socialism. The immensity of the problem facing this area in
Fife, and other areas in Great Britain, underlines the impotence and
triviality of the Government's Land Commission and makes nonsense of
Prime Minister Harold Wilson's electioneering promises of the new
society. Even if industry, trade, education and scientific advance were
to be streamlined (a forlorn hope under present policies), the land
system would still remain centuries behind the times to dog every step
of real progress.
Can there be any doubt at all that if Captain Wemyss had to pay
land-value taxes on his land holdings, whether used or not, it would
completely change the situation in Fife and elsewhere where the need for
land and the need for it at low prices dominates every problem of land
use?
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