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406
[BRITISH
AGRICULTURE
Highest. Lowest. Difference.
Horses 2,116,800 in 1905 1,819,687 in 1875 295,113
Cattle 11,674,0191905 9,731,5371877 1,942,482
Sheep 33,642,8081892 27,448,2201882 6,194,588
Pigs 4,362,0401890 2,863,4881880 1,498,552

After 1892 cattle, which in that year numbered 11,519,417, and sheep declined continuously for three years to the totals of 1895, the diminution being mainly the result of the memorable drought of 1893. Sheep, which numbered 32,571,018 in 1878, declined continuously to 27,448,220 in 1882—a loss of over five million head in five years. This was chiefly attributable to the ravages of the liver fluke which began in the disastrously wet season of 1879. Pigs, being prolific breeders, fluctuate more widely in numbers than cattle or sheep, for the difference of 1,498,552 in their case represents one-third of the highest total, whereas the difference is less than one-seventh for horses, less than one-sixth for cattle, and less than one-fifth for sheep.

Table XII.—Numbers of Horses, Cattle, Sheep and Pigs in the
United Kingdom.

Year. Horses. Cattle. Sheep. Pigs.

1875

1,819,687

10,162,787

33,491,948

3,495,167

1880

1,929,680

9,871,153

30,239,620

2,863,488

1885

1,909,200

10,868,760

30,086,200

3,686,628

1890

1,964,911

10,789,858

31,667,195

4,362,040

1895

2,112,207

10,753,314

2 9,774,853

4,238,870

1900

2,000,402

11,454,902

31,054,547

3,663,669

1905

2,116,800

11,674,019

29,076,777

3,601,659


The relative proportions as distinguished from the actual numbers—in which stock are distributed over the several sections of the United Kingdom do not vary greatly from year to year. Table XIII., in which the totals for the United Kingdom include those for the Channel Islands and Isle of Man, illustrates the preponderance of the sheep-breeding industry in the drier climate of Great Britain, and of the cattle-breeding industry in the more humid atmosphere of Ireland. In Great Britain in 1905, for every head of cattle there were about four head of sheep, whereas in Ireland the cattle outnumbered the sheep. Again, whilst Great Britain possessed only half as many cattle more than

Table XIII.—Numbers of Horses, Cattle, Sheep and Pigs in the
United Kingdom in 1905.

1905.

Horses. Cattle. Sheep. Pigs.
England 1,204,124 5,020,936 14,698,018 2,083,226
Wales 161,923 738,789 3,534,967 211,479
Scotland 206,386 1,227,295 7,024,211 130,214
Great Britain 1,572,433 6,987,020 25,257,196 2,424,919
Ireland 534,875 4,645,215 3,749,352 1,164,316
United
Kingdom[1]
2,116,800 11,674,019 29,076,777 3,601,659

Ireland, she possessed six times as many sheep. The cattle population of England alone slightly exceeded that of Ireland, but cattle are more at home on the broad plains of England than amongst the hills and mountains of Wales and Scotland, which are suitable for sheep. Hence, whilst in England sheep were not three times as numerous as cattle, in Wales they were nearly five times, and in Scotland nearly six times as many. Great Britain had twice as many pigs as Ireland, but the swine industry is mainly. English and Irish, and England possessed more than six times as many pigs as Wales and Scotland together, the number in the last-named country being particularly small. One English county alone, Suffolk, maintained more pigs than the whole of Scotland.

British Imports of Live Animals and Meat.

The stock-breeders and graziers of the United Kingdom have, equally with the corn-growers, to face the brunt of foreign competition.

Up to 1896 store cattle were admitted into the United Kingdom for the purpose of being fattened, but under the Diseases of Animals Act of that year animals imported since then have to be slaughtered at the place of landing. The dimensions of this trade are shown in Table XIV.

Table XIV.—Numbers of Cattle, Sheep and Pigs imported into the
United Kingdom, 1891–1905.

Year.

Cattle.

Sheep.

Pigs.

1891

507,407

344,504

542

1892

502,237

79,048

3826

1893

340,045

62,682

138

1894

475,440

484,597

8

1895

415,565

1,065,470

321

1896

562,553

769,592

4

1897

618,321

611,504

1898

569,066

663,747

450

1899

503,504

607,755

1900

495,645

382,833

. .

1901

495,635

383,594

. .

1902

419,488

293,203

1903

522,546

354,241

1904

549,532

382,240

1905

565,139

183,084

150

The animals come mainly from the United States of America, Canada and Argentina, and the traffic in cattle is more uniform than that in sheep, whilst that in pigs seems practically to have reached extinction. The quantities of dead meat imported increased with great rapidity from 1891 to 1905, a circumstance largely due to the rise of the trade in chilled and frozen meat. Fresh beef in this form is imported chiefly from the United States and Australasia, fresh mutton from Australasia and Argentina.

Table XV. shows how rapidly this trade expanded during the decade of the ’nineties. The column headed bacon and hams indicates clearly enough that the imports of fresh meat did not displace those of preserved pig meat, for the latter expanded from 4,715,000 cwt. to 7,784,000 cwt. during the decade. The column for all dead meat includes not only the items tabulated, but also

Table XV.—Quantities of Dead Meat imported into the United
Kingdom, 1891–1905—Thousands of Cwt.

Year. Fresh
Beef.
Fresh
Mutton.
Fresh
Pork.
Bacon
and Hams.
All
Dead Meat.

1891

1921

1663

128

4715

9,790

1892

2080

1700

132

5135

10,500

1893

1808

1971

182

4187

9,305

1894

2104

2295

180

4819

10,610

1895

2191

2611

288

5353

11,977

1896

2660

2895

299

6009

13,347

1897

3010

3193

348

6731

14,729

1898

3101

3314

558

7684

16,445

1899

3803

3446

669

7784

17,658

1900

4128

3393

695

7444

17,912

1901

4509

3608

792

7633

18,764

1902

3707

3660

655

6572

16,971

1903

4160

4017

706

6298

17,498

1904

4350

3495

610

6696

17,517

1905

5038

3811

506

6817

18,680

the following, the quantities stated being those for 1905:—Beef, salted, 142,806 cwt.; beef, otherwise preserved, 598,030 cwt.; preserved mutton, 30,111 cwt.; salted pork, 205,965 cwt.; dead rabbits, 656,078 cwt.; meat, unenumerated, 875,032 cwt. The quantities of these are relatively small, and, excepting rabbits from Australia, they show no general tendency to increase. The extent to which these growing imports were associated with a decline in value is shown in Table XVI.

The trend of the import trade in meat, live and dead (exclusive of rabbits), may be gathered from Table XVII., in which are given the annual average imports from the eight quinquennial periods embraced between 1866 and 1905. An increase in live cattle accompanied a decrease in live sheep and pigs, but the imports of dead meat expanded fifteen-fold over the period.

The rate at which the trade in imported frozen mutton increased as compared with the industry in home-grown mutton is illustrated in the figures published annually by Messrs W.

  1. Including Channel Islands and Isle of Man.
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