The pioneering oral historian, George Ewart Evans, began to
record the farming ways of East Anglia in the 1950s by listening to
old men and women whose memories went back more than fifty or sixty
years. Many were agricultural labourers, born before the turn of
the century, who had worked on farms before the arrival of
mechanisation.
It was assumed at that time that horses would soon disappear
from the farms, and that this was the last chance of recording the
part they had played for centuries. It later became clear that this
forecast was too pessimistic and in Horse Power and Magic (Faber,
1979) Ewart Evans describes in fascinating detail some important
farms where horses continued to be beneficially used more than
thirty years later. He discovered that the traditions of the older
horsemen had not died out but had been passed on, in only slightly
attenuated form, to a younger generation keen to farm with horses,
proving that the day of the heavy horse was by no means over. He
also describes vividly the ways of horse-tamers whose skills had a
touch of 'magic' about them.
'Taking his works a whole, there is no doubt that George Ewart
Evans will survive as a fascinating pioneer of the extra-academic
recording of human history...he has found a dimension all his own.
This is indeed the very stuff of history.' "Sunday Times"
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