Hop trade and plantations
Happily for Canterbury, it has felt but little, if any
injury from the frequent decays of its manufactures;
it has found another, and that a permanent and much
greater resource of wealth, in the cultivation of hops,
the plantations of which cover many hundred acres of
land contiguous to it. (fn. 1) In them, the labouring poor,
both men and women, find a constant employment
throughout the year; as the aged and infirm do in the
manufacturing of the bagging, in which the hops are
put. The lands are continued in a superior state of
cultivation, and their annual value raised higher than
those for corn or any other produce; the woods of the
neighbouring country for many miles round, here find
a sale for their growth of poles, at a very advantageous
price, the planters themselves, which are almost every
inhabitant of the town and neighbourhood, find resources from the lucrative produce of these grounds;
and the return of money from London, at the latter
end of the year, upon the sale of the hops is so great,
that it is felt by all ranks of people, and diffuses a universal plenty and prosperity, not only to the city itself,
but to the neighbourhood around it. This traffic of
the hop trade is so much the predominant pursuit of
every individual, that it is no wonder it should have the
general preserence here to all others; so that, except
the manufacture above mentioned, a small one of
worsted, and the article of brawn, which last is not inconsiderable, there is no other trade but what the inhabitants carry forward, for the supply of the necessaries
of life, and the mutual support and accommodation of
one another.
Footnotes
| 1 |
The plantation of hops in the eastern division of Kent,
pays in general, a 4th part nearly of the produce of the whole
kingdom to the hop duty. In the circuit of two miles and an
half round Canterbury, it is computed there are between two
and three thousand acres of hop ground. This plantation is
called the city grounds. The hops growing here are of a very
fine rich quality, and if well managed are of a good colour;
they are highly esteemed by the London brewers for their great
strength; doing more execution in the copper than those of any
other district. |