The New Statistical Account of Scotland: LanarkW. Blackwood and Sons, 1845 |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-5 sur 100
Page 21
... rent of arable land is L. 1 , 3s . per Scotch statute acre ; the average price of a cow's grazing on good land , L ... rents are in general well paid . The farms are all small , and the buildings and enclosures indifferent . Quarry ...
... rent of arable land is L. 1 , 3s . per Scotch statute acre ; the average price of a cow's grazing on good land , L ... rents are in general well paid . The farms are all small , and the buildings and enclosures indifferent . Quarry ...
Page 22
... rent , 3d . for light , and 2d . for carriage of the web . Men advanced in life , dispirited by the remembrance of better times , may make about 3s . 6d . The only addition to this miserable pit- tance is what their wives can earn by ...
... rent , 3d . for light , and 2d . for carriage of the web . Men advanced in life , dispirited by the remembrance of better times , may make about 3s . 6d . The only addition to this miserable pit- tance is what their wives can earn by ...
Page 28
... rent of the hospital lands , is distributed by the magistrates among the poor of the burgh , and L. 40 by the cor- poration of shoemakers to the poor belonging to them . The landward paupers are maintained by the L. 8 received out of ...
... rent of the hospital lands , is distributed by the magistrates among the poor of the burgh , and L. 40 by the cor- poration of shoemakers to the poor belonging to them . The landward paupers are maintained by the L. 8 received out of ...
Page 35
... Rent of Land . - The quality of land varies very much : some of it is very rich , but unfortunately the poorer soil predominates . The average rent of the whole may be stated at L. 1 per acre Scotch , -while the waste lands may be ...
... Rent of Land . - The quality of land varies very much : some of it is very rich , but unfortunately the poorer soil predominates . The average rent of the whole may be stated at L. 1 per acre Scotch , -while the waste lands may be ...
Page 36
... rent . Rate of Wages . - Farm - servants are not so high priced , nor so difficult to be got as they were a few years back ; at present , a good man - servant , fit for the plough , & c . may be hired for L. 14 a - year , with bed and ...
... rent . Rate of Wages . - Farm - servants are not so high priced , nor so difficult to be got as they were a few years back ; at present , a good man - servant , fit for the plough , & c . may be hired for L. 14 a - year , with bed and ...
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Expressions et termes fréquents
acres amount annum appears attended average number Baillie banks barony belonging Biggar Bishop of Glasgow Blantyre bolls Bothwell bridge built burgh Cadder Calder Cambuslang Cambusnethan Carluke Carnwath Castle chalders chapel chiefly church Clyde coal considerable crops Dalserf district Douglas Dunsyre Earl east Edinburgh Elsrickle erected extent farm fathoms feet females former freestone Glasgow glebe Gorbals Govan ground Hamilton heritors hill improvement inches inhabitants ironstone James John Kilbride Kilbucho kirk labour Lammingtoune Lanark land Larkhall late lime limestone Lockhart Lord manse manufacture merks miles Millheugh minister Monkland nearly parish parochial pasture persons planted poor population presbytery present proprietors rent rish river river Clyde road Robert Rutherglen sandstone Scotland Scots seams Shotts side Society soil stipend stone Strathaven teinds tion town trees upwards village whole William wrought
Fréquemment cités
Page 202 - A Description and Draught of a new-invented Machine, for carrying Vessels or Ships out of, or into, any Harbour, Port, or River, against Wind and Tide, or in a calm.
Page 383 - For I was ashamed to require of the king a band of soldiers and horsemen to help us against the enemy in the way: because we had spoken unto the king, saying, The hand of our God is upon all them for good that seek him; but his power and his wrath is against all them that forsake him.
Page 310 - Ocean, the first thing which strikes us is, that, the north-east and south-east monsoons, which are found the one on the north and the other on...
Page 782 - Where Bothwell's bridge connects the margin steep, And Clyde, below, runs silent, strong, and deep, The hardy peasant, by oppression driven To battle, deemed his cause the cause of heaven ; Unskilled in arms, with useless courage stood, While gentle Monmouth grieved to shed his blood : But fierce Dundee, inflamed with deadly hate.
Page 383 - God, to seek of him a right way for us, and for our little ones, and for all our substance.
Page 161 - I perceived that he imagined the presence of sulphur in the air to be the cause of blast-furnaces working irregularly, and making bad iron in the summer months. Subsequently to this conversation, which had in some measure directed my thoughts to the subject of blastfurnaces...
Page 403 - The city was three-quarters of a mile in length, and about a quarter of a mile in width.
Page 152 - ... to apply it with exactness), and struck with an iron mallet. Thus the figure was impressed upon the cloth, one colour only being used at once ; and if other colours were required to complete the pattern, it was necessary to repeat the operation with different blocks. In order to produce more delicate patterns than could be engraved on wood...
Page 153 - ... biting nature, and served merely to open pores in the fibres of the cloth, into which the colouring matter might insinuate itself. And after the inaccuracy of this notion was discovered, and the real use of mordants ascertained, the term was still continued as sufficiently appropriate, or rather as a proper name, without any allusion to its original signification. The term mordant, however, is not limited to those substances merely which serve like alumina to fix the colours. It is applied also...
Page 143 - ... those machines, extend the rove, and reduce it to a thread of the required fineness. The twist is given to this thread by flyers, driven by bands, which receive their motion from a horizontal fly wheel, or from a longitudinal cylinder. The yarn produced by this mode of spinning is called water twist, from the circumstance of the machinery, from which it is obtained, having been, at first, generally put into motion by water. In 1775, the mule-jenny or mule was invented by Samuel Crompton, of Bolton....