Second Shetland Truck System Report
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Chapter 162 : Hillswick, Northmavine, January 11, 1872, Mrs. MARY HUGHSON, examined.6338. Are you th
Hillswick, Northmavine, January 11, 1872, Mrs. MARY HUGHSON, examined.
6338. Are you the wife of Andrew Hughson, a fisherman and tenant here?-Yes; he is a tenant to Mr. Gifford on the Busta estate.
6339. Where do you live?-At Hillswick.
6340. Is your husband a fisherman?-He is a day labourer for the most part, and does land-work. He has been at the fis.h.i.+ng, but not lately.
6341. Is he too old to go to the fis.h.i.+ng now?-No; but he has been used to work on the land.
6342. Are you in the habit of knitting?-Very little.
6343. Do you knit any at all?-I knit for the family.
6344. Don't you sell your hosiery?-I have not sold much here. It is not very long since we came from Lerwick.
6345. Did you use to sell it there?-Sometimes.
6346. Were you always paid for it in goods?-Yes.
6347. Did you want to get cash for it?-No, I never asked cash.
6348. Do any of your daughters knit hosiery here?-Yes; and they sell it in Lerwick, as they were born there.
6349. Do they always go to Lerwick with it?-No; they sometimes sell it to Mr. Anderson at Hillswick.
6350. Do they always get goods for it?-Yes.
6351. Do they want cash?-They don't ask for it; it is not the custom.
6352. Are they quite content to take the price in the goods they want?-I suppose so.
6353. Do they also work at kelp?-Yes, in some way, we all work at kelp.
6354. How do you sell it?-We get 4s. 6d. per cwt. for it from Mr.
Anderson.
6355. How are you paid for it?-We are paid in whatever we may ask for, in meal or tea, or goods of any kind.
6356. The way in which the kelp trade is carried on is, that you gather the kelp yourselves, and burn it and sell it?-Yes.
6357. Have you to pay for the privilege of gathering it?-We pay nothing.
6358. Can you sell it to any person you like?-There is no person buying it here except Mr. Anderson.
6359. How do you settle about your kelp? Have you an account in Mr. Anderson's books?-We get what we want, and pay for these goods with the kelp, and then anything we take out additional goes into the account for another year.
6360. Do you only settle once a year?-Yes.
6361. Do you always get 4s. 6d. a cwt. for it?-Yes; I got 5s. per cwt. some years ago, but the price is lower now.
6362. How long, in the course of the year, do you work at the kelp?-We work at it while the season is dry-from Whitsunday till the 1st August.
6363. During that time how many cwts. will you and your daughters gather?-Some years less, and some years more.
We will sometimes have about 2 worth.
6364. That will be about half a ton?-Yes.
6365. Did you take the price of that in goods?-We took some part of it in clothes, and some part in meal or tea, or just what we required of money articles.
6366. What do you mean by money articles?-Groceries, or meal or bread, or anything of that kind.
6367. Why do you call them money articles?-Because it is not often that they are got for hosiery or anything of that sort.
6368. Is it a common way of speaking here, to call groceries money articles because they are not given for hosiery?-Tea is sometimes given for hosiery, and bread and meal. They will give a certain quant.i.ty of these money articles for hosiery if they are asked for.
6369. Is there a less price given for the hosiery if it is paid in money, or in money articles?-I don't know; I never asked or received money, for hosiery either here or elsewhere.
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6370. Is there a different price for kelp according as it is paid in money or in goods?-I have heard it said that it is 4s. in money, or 4s. 6d. in goods.
6371. Have you always got the price of it in goods?-Yes.
6372. Did you never get money for your kelp at all?-No; I never asked money, and I never got it.
6373. When is the kelp settled for?-We settle for it when we sell it.
6374. Do you sell it all in a lump at the end, or at different times during the season?-Perhaps we sell it every time we burn it, and we settle for it then.
6375. Do you go to the shop and say how much you have?-Yes.
We tell the merchant how much we have, and he takes us in and pays us for it then.
6376. Is there anything marked into a book about it?-Nothing.
We get payment for it when we sell it. If we are due anything to the merchant, he takes it off the price, and then we get the balance in whatever way we want.
6377. Do you take the whole value of it at the same time?- Sometimes, and sometimes not.
6378. How do you know whether you are due anything at the time?-We ascertain that from the books.
6379. Is there an account in your name in Mr. Anderson's books?-Yes; and if there is anything over at the end of the season, we get it.
6380. Is it paid to you in cash at the end of the season?-Yes; if there is anything due at the end of the season, we get it in cash.
6381. Have you ever got any cash from him at the end of the season?-I never asked it, because I just cleared off with him; and perhaps there was nothing due to me.
6382. Do you think you would be any better if you were paid in cash?-I don't know. I am getting so far on in years, that it is not much cash I would have to get now.