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Hadleigh Farmers Club
was established in December 1939 “to promote the cause of agriculture by the
discussion of subjects, and disseminating of information relative to its
practice”.
Its formation must be
seen against the background of agricultural development of the time.
Only a year before, the Royal Agricultural Society was established to try
and rescue British farming from the agricultural depression bedeviling the early
decades of the 19th Century. General
adverse climatic conditions had led to the abandonment of heavy soil, rot had
led to the killing of many sheep and, more relevant to Suffolk, blight had taken
a heavy toll on the crops – this was “The Hungry Forties” made worse by
the Corn Laws which kept the price of wheat high so that the poor could not
afford to buy bread. The very poor in the Hadleigh area in 1837 were getting half
a ton of flour per week in “Out Relief” i.e. people not in the workhouse. A Board of
Agriculture survey at the beginning of the 1800s showed that even the effective
rotation of crops had been ignored and that grain yields were low.
There was much unemployment and unrest among the labouring class. Hope stemmed from
developments in agricultural science. Work
on artificial manures was gaining momentum and making an impact on farming
methods. Hadleigh Farmers Club was
particularly fortunate to have the Rev Professor John Henslow who was keen to
help. Professor Henslow was the
most eminent botanist in the land and Charles Darwin’s mentor.
He was made rector of Hitcham in 1837 - a Crown appointment.
Henslow was well versed in the scientific treatment of soils and the Club
made him an Honorary Member on the 20th November 1840.
They held meetings every month alternately in the White Lion and White
Horse Inns, and immediately had a lot of support. The first
Secretary was William Grimwade and the first minute book is now in the Suffolk
Records Office at Buy St Edmunds. One
report reads: “Professor Henslow then introduced his second lecture on
Elementary subjects essential to Vegetation - Oxygen, Hydrogen and Nitrogen –
elucidating his remarks by many interesting experiments, both amusing and
instructive and which, if the absent members had heard and witnessed, could
hardly have failed to produce a better attendance at succeeding meetings”. Other subjects
discussed included the best kind of sheep for breeding and the best for grazing
in this neighbourhood, the best manner of preparing the land so as to ensure a
plant; ploughs and ploughing, diseases of wheat generally and the modes of
preparing the seed. Mr Grimwade and other
members of his family served the Club as Secretaries continually for over a
hundred years and the Rowley family have now been Presidents for more than 100
years. The Hadleigh Farmers Club held shows and gave prizes to encourage and promote good farming. The first Hadleigh Show was in 1840 and is now one of the few surviving small town Agricultural Shows in the nation.
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