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William Ellis - Eighteenth-century farmer, journalist and entrepreneur (Paperback)
Loot Price: R480
Discovery Miles 4 800
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William Ellis - Eighteenth-century farmer, journalist and entrepreneur (Paperback)
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Loot Price R480
Discovery Miles 4 800
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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William Ellis, who lived and farmed at Little Gaddesden in
Hertfordshire in the first half of the eighteenth century (d.
1759), is an important figure in English agricultural history. In
his time the most prolific writer on agriculture in England, his
many works were read not only at home but also in the American
colonies and continental Europe. Ellis was essentially an
agricultural journalist, then a relatively new occupation. He wrote
about his own life as well as those of the ordinary people of
Little Gaddesden and further afield – he travelled extensively
throughout the southern half of England. Most of his copy was
derived from conversations he had had with farmers, their wives and
other rural folk, the sheer immediacy of his books outshining those
of his rivals. Ellis’s style was discursive, particularly so in
The Country Housewife’s Family Companion (1750). As well as
providing a compendium of household management, cookery and
medicine, Ellis delighted in relaying gossip. He included the
activities of farmers, wives and maids, labourers, travellers and
beggars, as well as the gentry and aristocracy, rich pickings for
social historians. Ellis also used his books to advertise his
business as a supplier of agricultural instruments, seeds, plants,
trees and fowls, an innovative approach. The Swedish botanist Pehr
Kalm visited Little Gaddesden in 1748 to inspect Ellis’s farming
and the various farm implements he advertised for sale. The two men
didn’t warm to each other, but Kalm’s independent observations
add to what we know about Ellis. Piecing together the scant facts
about Ellis’s early life, Malcolm Thick has uncovered new
information on his time before he commenced farming, and unravelled
some of the complexities of his two marriages. The book’s central
focus is on Ellis’s agricultural writings, which provide a
fascinating picture of rural life in the period and shed light on
the evolution of English farming. This is the first book about
Ellis for over sixty years and the first to consider him fully in
the round – as a farmer, an active member of his community, an
innovative salesman and a wonderfully curious mind.
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