MODERN BEVERLEY
Economy, 1835–1918
Nineteenth-century Beverley remained, essentially, a small market town, the
population growing, but slowly. Numbers in the municipal borough rose from
5,401 in 1801 to 8,915 in 1851 and 13,654 by 1911 (see Table 12). (fn. 1) Those figures
show a lower rate of growth than for the population of the United Kingdom as a
whole, which approximately doubled between 1801 and 1851, and doubled again
by 1914. It was very much lower than the rate of growth in nearby Hull, where
the population grew approximately twelve and a half times between 1801 and
1911. (fn. 2) There must, therefore, have been substantial emigration from Beverley
throughout the period, in the first place into Hull but also abroad, whether directly
or by stages. In 1906 the Beverley Emigration Society reported plans to send a
group of men to Canada yearly, and a party of 50 left the next month. (fn. 3) Fifty years
later the council sent official greetings to three Beverleys in the Commonwealth. (fn. 4)
|
| Table 12: Population of the borough and liberties of Beverley, 1831-1981 |
|
|
Municipal borough
|
Liberties
|
|
Municipal borough
|
Liberties
|
| 1831 |
7,432 |
831 |
1911 |
13,654 |
1,516 |
| 1841 |
7,574 |
1,097 |
1921 |
13,469 |
1,593 |
| 1851 |
8,915 |
1,143 |
1931 |
14,012 |
1,877 |
| 1861 |
9,654 |
1,214 |
|
| 1871 |
10,218 |
1,231 |
1951 |
15,504 |
3,610 |
| 1881 |
11,425 |
1,689 |
1961 |
16,031 |
3,641 |
| 1891 |
12,539 |
1,545 |
1971 |
17,132 |
5,239 |
| 1901 |
13,183 |
1,479 |
1981 |
16,214a
|
6,164 |
a The number of 'usual residents' in the four wards comprising the former borough.
Sources: V.C.H. Yorks. iii. 499; Census, 1911-81. For constituent settlements see
below, Outlying Townships. |
The general picture, therefore, is one of poverty and relative stagnation, as is
illustrated in the record of the local poor rates. A return of 1876 showed that the
cost of relief in the Beverley union, which included a ring of surrounding villages,
rose from 5s. 3d. a ratepayer in 1850 to 7s. 8d. in 1874. That happened during the
years of prosperity before the agricultural collapse of 1879. Comparable figures
for the Hull and Sculcoates unions had fallen since 1850, and in 1874 were 4s.
10d. and 3s. 10d. Paupers in the Beverley union in 1874 were 4.1 per cent of the
population, compared with 2.7 and 3.0 per cent in Hull and Sculcoates respectively. (fn. 5)
A taxation return of 1856-7 illustrates another aspect of the situation: the yield of
the income tax in Hull worked out at 15s. a head of the 1851 population compared
with 10s. 5d. in Beverley. A breakdown of the yield into the various tax schedules
shows that the main difference between the two places was in schedule D, levied
on salaries: in Beverley a total of £2,462, compared with about £42,000 in Hull, had been collected under that heading. (fn. 6) This suggests that an important feature
of the town's social structure was the lack of a comparatively secure and prosperous
salaried class of clerks or public officials which industrial development brought
into existence elsewhere.
Beverley remained isolated throughout the 19th century, except in relation to
Hull. There were long-established communications by road and water with Hull,
which lies only 8 miles to the south. In 1834, on the eve of the railway era, there
were seven daily coaches to Hull, compared with two to Scarborough and three to
York. (fn. 7) The railway linking Beverley with Hull and Bridlington was completed in
1846, only six years after the opening of the Hull and Selby line. The proposal to
build the line had been supported by the corporation in spite of the fact that, as
the owner of the beck, it stood to lose by competition from it. It was probably
significant of the stagnant state of the town that 20 years then passed before a
direct line from Beverley to the west was built. George Hudson had taken the
railway from York as far as Market Weighton in 1847: his business collapsed two
years later and the line was not continued to join the Hull to Bridlington line at
Beverley until 1865. (fn. 8)
Such was the setting for the town's 19th-century history. Beverley was dependent
for its livelihood on local agricultural business, on its position as an administrative
centre, and on its ability to gain a share of the industrial business of Hull. That
ability was to a considerable extent made possible by the town's possession of
Beverley beck and a waterfront along the river Hull. The trade of Hull, throughout
the 19th century, relied heavily upon inland navigation on the Ouse and Trent
waterway systems: thanks to the beck and the river Hull, Beverley was connected
to those systems.
The occupational structure of Beverley, as revealed in the 1851 census returns, (fn. 9)
shows a concentration in several groups which are particularly significant when
they are compared with those in the borough of Hull, (fn. 10) which had a population
nearly ten times as great as that of Beverley. Among the manufacturing trades, for
example, there were 38 tanners in Beverley, compared with 97 in Hull, 52
wheelwrights (49), 52 blacksmiths (309), 37 whitesmiths (96), 22 millwrights (79),
44 engine and machine workers (317), and 28 in iron manufacture (105). Leather
working and the manufacture and repair of agricultural machinery were evidently
prominent in Beverley. The returns also suggest that the town, with its pleasant
residential streets, the open spaces of Westwood, and the belief that it was a healthy
place, had attracted a professional and rentier population. There were 16 medical
men in Beverley, compared with 107 in Hull, 57 schoolteachers (267), 87 proprietors
of houses or land (364), and 150 annuitants of both sexes (703). In general it was
a town with one or two modern industries and some professional and gentry
families, but, over all, a place without much money.
At the end of the century the picture was much the same. The 1901 census
provided numbers, in grouped occupations, for municipal boroughs. In Beverley
there were 165 in engineering, 476 tanners, 116 in woodworking other than
housebuilding, and, among the women, 689 domestic servants and 236 milliners. Men employed in shipbuilding were not separately enumerated. (fn. 11)
Three or four industries were particularly prominent. Grain milling was long
established in the town and in 1834 there were nine millers altogether, including
five on or near Westwood, two at Grovehill, and one, with a water mill, in Hull
Road. (fn. 12) By the end of the century all but one had gone out of business. (fn. 13) Josiah
Crathorne had started milling at Grovehill c. 1830. By the 1850s he used steam as
well as wind power and the mill was later much, enlarged. (fn. 14) With its favourable
situation beside the river Hull, Crathorne's was able to make the change to rollergrinding of imported grain which became so important in Hull after 1885. Yet
when the mill was burned down in 1907 it was not rebuilt: (fn. 15) it seems likely that a
mill 8 miles away from its importing and distributing centre was in a poor competitive position.
Tanning, which probably employed more men than any other occupation in
Beverley in 1901, was equally long established. In 1851 there were half a dozen
firms, along the southern edge of the town, the largest being those of William
Hodgson, George Cussons, and George Catterson. Hodgson's, which had been
started in 1812, became predominant; it was on a fairly large scale, making average
annual profits of over £2,000 between 1832 and 1850. (fn. 16) In 1851 Hodgson's,
employed 70 men and in 1890 as many as 450 at the tannery in Flemingate. (fn. 17) With
its position near the head of the beck it had easy access to a supply of imported
hides, and by the 20th century it owned a fleet of 15 powered barges. (fn. 18) The firm
was typical of many in and around Hull in the later 19th century. Its proprietor
from 1845, Richard Hodgson, was a leading Liberal in the town and a supporter
of the Mechanics' Institute. (fn. 19) He was nevertheless determinedly opposed to trade
unionism, as was demonstrated in the bitter strike which broke out in May 1890,
when 75 of his employees, who were members of the Dockers' Union, were
dismissed. That was immediately followed by sympathetic, action, in Hull where
dockers refused to handle material consigned to the tannery and seamen refused
to carry Hodgson's products. Tom Mann and Ben Tillett both came to address
the strikers in Beverley. Hodgson's refused any concessions and the strike collapsed
in September 1890. (fn. 20) It was an episode which well illustrates the close relationship
between industry in Beverley and Hull. The longest lasting of Hodgson's rivals
was Cussons's. The tannery in Keldgate had been acquired by George Cussons in
1834 and was worked by the Cussons family until c. 1910. It was sold to Hodgson's
in 1915 and after a period of disuse was later revived. (fn. 21)
The largest enterprise in Beverley in the mid 19th century was Crosskill's
ironworks. (fn. 22) The firm had been established by William Crosskill, a whitesmith,
by 1825, when it began to make articles in, cast iron, such as railings and lamp
standards for the Beverley gas undertaking. Some years later, in 1844, Crosskill
provided lamp standards for the street lighting system installed in Hamburg, and
from 1849 a branch in Liverpool sold kits of emigrants' tools. He had expanded into the manufacture of agricultural machinery in the 1830s, and increasingly
concentrated on it. His catalogue shows a wide range of machines, the best known
being the clod-crusher, of which he had sold 2,478 by 1850, but he also produced
ploughs, harrows, and threshing machines. The history of the firm is a confusing
mixture of a wide-ranging and inventive output, the expansion of premises and
numbers employed, and persistent financial trouble. In 1847, the year of the
collapse of the railway boom, Crosskill's was in difficulty and was mortgaged to
the East Riding Bank. During the Crimean War the firm produced over 3,000
army carts and wagons and some ordnance: yet in 1855, when trade in Hull was
depressed as a result of the war, the bank foreclosed.
After it was found that the trustees for Crosskill's creditors were abusing the
terms of the trust, the firm was sold in 1864 to a company led by Sir Henry
Edwards, the Conservative M.P. for the town. Edwards claimed that he bought
the 'Old Foundry', as it was called, as an act of charity to save the employees from
destitution, but it is clear that his underlying motive was to create a base for
patronage. Others not immediately concerned held that the firm had been
chronically in trouble for some time, though no precise reason could be given. (fn. 23)
One explanation may well be that the opening of the Hull and Selby line in 1840
reduced the competitive advantage which the firm had enjoyed in the Hull export
trade. In general, a small firm working on large contracts, such as that for the
Hamburg gas undertaking, was likely to suffer from liquidity problems.
After 1864 the firm was continued under the name of the Beverley Iron &
Waggon Co. Its political justification disappeared with the disfranchisement of the
town in 1870, but it survived until the depression of the late seventies, when it
was closed in 1879 with the loss of 200-300 jobs. (fn. 24) The premises in Mill Lane
were sold and much of the site was used for a recreation ground and the Cottage
Hospital in the 1880s. (fn. 25) The fact that the firm had debts of £24,000 when it was
closed (fn. 26) suggests that Edwards had formerly subsidized it to a considerable amount,
but had ceased to do so. In the mean time, in 1864, Crosskill's sons Alfred and
Edmund had set up a rival firm, trading as William Crosskill & Sons, on a site in
Eastgate. They continued to make railway wagons and farm carts there until 1904,
when they in their turn were taken over by the East Yorkshire Cart & Waggon
Co. (fn. 27) The latter company had until 1880 been known as Sawney & Co., and it had
works in Trinity Lane which William Sawney first occupied in 1862. (fn. 28) As the East
Yorkshire and Crosskills Cart & Waggon Co. it eventually went into liquidation
in 1914, and a later revival of the firm was short lived. (fn. 29) While none of those firms
became permanently established, the need for a supplier of agricultural machinery
was clearly persistent.
The last of the leading industries, shipbuilding, is perhaps a surprising one to
find on the banks of the narrow river Hull. The building and repair of wooden
ships was long established at Grovehill, and also beside the beck (fn. 30) where a second
dry dock was made near the lock in 1858. (fn. 31) The first to make iron vessels were
Henry and Joseph Scarr, who already had an engineering works near the head of the beck. In 1882 they launched two iron boats, the first next to their works and
a larger one a little further down the beck. (fn. 32) In 1884 a dredger 70 ft. long and with
a beam of 23 ft. had to be taken to the lock to be launched, and in the 1890s Scarrs
moved to a more spacious yard by the river, in Weel. (fn. 33) In 1882 a larger firm, the
Vulcan Iron Co. of Hull, established a shipyard on land owned by the corporation
at Grovehill and began the production of bigger ships. Two years later the company
was wound up and the yard was let to Cochrane, Hamilton & Cooper; it in turn
collapsed in 1900 and the yard was taken by Cook, Welton & Gemmell of Hull
the next year. (fn. 34) Engines, dredging gear, and other equipment were supplied by
Hull firms: Beverley shipbuilding was an integral part of the Hull economy. It was
possible to build bigger ships than might now be expected: in September 1884,
for example, the Vulcan Iron Co. launched two ocean-going vessels of 1,500 tons. (fn. 35)
Altogether Cochrane's built 245 vessels between 1884 and 1901. (fn. 36)
The development of shipbuilding at Beverley was partly in consequence of the
fast growth of steam trawling from the Humber in the 1880s and 1890s. (fn. 37) An
explanation of the otherwise puzzling choice of Beverley, with its reliance on the
narrow river Hull, may lie in the fact that the Vulcan shipyard was opened shortly
after the final closure of the Beverley Iron & Waggon Company's works, which
offered a supply of experienced iron workers. When Cochrane's took over the yard
in 1884 it was hoped that shopkeepers in the town would regain their income from
the 'upwards of £500' in weekly wages which the workers had lost when the
ironworks was closed. (fn. 38) The iron shipbuilding industry in Beverley was a creation
of the last years of the century, a period of rapid economic growth in Hull. For
most of the 19th century it would be truer to say that Beverley grew very slowly.
Of the lesser industries in the town several were concerned with processing
agricultural produce or making goods for agricultural use. Breweries and maltings
included the old-established Golden Ball brewery in Toll Gavel, which was rebuilt
for the Stephensons to designs by William Hawe c. 1868. (fn. 39) Seed crushing and
fertilizer manufacture were carried on at Hull Bridge, (fn. 40) and the former also at
Beckside. (fn. 41) By 1848 Tigar & Co. had added fertilizers to its other products at
Grovehill and fertilizers later became the firm's main concern. (fn. 42) There were also
several whiting works in Beverley Parks, together with one at Beckside. (fn. 43) Other
occupations notable at an earlier period still flourished. In the 1851 census returns
there were 75 gardeners and nurserymen, and the Swailes family had over 100 a.
of garden ground in 1865. (fn. 44) The half dozen brickmakers in 1851 included Anthony
Atkinson, who retired in 1865 after 45 years in business. (fn. 45) It also remained the
case, throughout the 19th century, that many townsmen were directly involved
with agriculture; for farmers and cowkeepers there was much open land around
the town, as well as the freemen's rights on the common pastures. In the 1851
census returns some 280 people had agricultural occupations. (fn. 46)
Many of the industrial premises, together with the gas works, were situated at
Grovehill or near the beck and depended in varying degrees on water traffic. In a
period when many inland waterways were losing money or being closed down the
beck continued to flourish. The tonnage carried grew from some 31,000 in 1838
to nearly 40,000 in 1868, 56,000 in 1898, and 101,540 in 1905. (fn. 47) The town's trade
was increasing, but only slowly, particularly in the first half of the century.