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Topic: Agriculture and Drink !!!!Question ! (Read 678 times)
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GRACELAND
RootsChat Aristocrat
     
Posts: 1701

Elvis Presley* ARTIST OF THE CENTURY..*
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Hello, 
Came across this in A little book at a Boot sale ‘the book is Called
The Country Man
And this Copy is Dated Autumn 1955 and was 2s 6d Post-free!!
But this is An Advert in side,
Success to the Harvest,
By one of the oldest of all country traditions –as old as agriculture itself –the hard work of the harvesting is linked with copious liquid refreshment. In his Rural Economy (1790) Farmer Marshall tells us – “In hay and corn harvest, the customary daily allowance is a Gallon of beer (in hot weather they drank more) and besides this, mowers expect two quarts of ale, and never less than one…. During the winter months the quantity of small beer drank is not much less than in harvest Mr William Mow of Thorpe a leading man in this neighbourhood, allows his labourers a Gallon a day the year round!!
ICI was the Advertiser Advertising fertilizers!
************************************************  But now one wonders,
How many were drunk on the Job?
How many died of Drink related Diseases?? How many were injured or killed because of drink or too much in the field ??
How strong was this drink then??
Interesting!! With water the Way it was then Beer was probably better to drink !! 
I like a glass of Cider My self but not a Gallon 
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« Last Edit: Tuesday 06 June 06 13:54 UTC (UK) by GRACELAND »
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God Knew Elvis was Tired so he called him to rest !................ "I like it well done, Cooked. I ain't orderin' a pet." --Elvis Presley, On Meat "Don't be like nobody else or you'll be livin' a lie, and that ain't livin'." --Elvis Presley, On Individuality
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Sylviaann
RootsChat Aristocrat
     
Posts: 2854

Isabella Barette
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Ah but Beer and tea saved many a life. Water was not always fit to drink.
I don't think the beer was very strong. Many people made their own
Sylviaann
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Census information is Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.ukNorfolk: Gooch, Loveday, Lake, Betts Suffolk: Gooch, Crosby, Turner Hampshire: Laws, Burrows Kent: Beer Jersey: Barette, de Gruchy East London: Middleton, Gower, O'Farrell, Smith, Weston
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Nick Carver
RootsChat Aristocrat
     
Posts: 1261
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Beer in those days was much stronger than it is today. Many rural villages will have a Malting Lane or Maltings where the beer for large landowners was brewed. There were many people in my village whose occupation was 'Maltster'.
All the comments about water quality are correct, but what we should also bear in mind is that in drinking a gallon a day over many years, the body would be more able to cope with the alcohol levels. I recall those distant student days where my own alcohol consumption was far greater than I could manage nowadays.
You should take a look at contemporary accounts of the quantities of gin that were drunk. They were routinely in volumes that even the most hardened alcoholic of today would find impressive.
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E Yorks - Carver, Steels, Cross, Maltby, Whiting, Moor, Laybourn W Yorks - Wilkinson, Kershaw, Rawnsley, Shaw Norfolk - Carver, Dowson Cheshire - Berry, Cooper Lincs - Berry London/Ireland/Scotland/Lincs - Sullivan Northumberland/Durham - Nicholson, Cuthbert, Turner, Robertson Berks - May Beds - Brownell
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AngelFish
RootsChat Senior
   
Posts: 253

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I've been told a photograph exists of my Great Grandfarther taking beer to his workers on a farm in Lincolnshire, at harvest. I've been lead to believe he was well known for it. This would have been in the late 1800's. I'd love to see the picture!
I wish someone would bring me beer at work... but I might fall off my chair... 
Angelfish
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Nick Carver
RootsChat Aristocrat
     
Posts: 1261
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Of course one good reason for the strength of beer to decline is that the duty that is levied has over the course of time been related to the alcohol content. An excellent illustration of that is the difference in price between a cask strength malt whisky (yum) and a standard strength malt whisky which might just be the diluted version of the former.
It may also be that when opening hours were introduced during WWI, that the strength went down as well.
I've noticed that the lighter the colour of real ale, the stronger it seems to be. I don't think I have consumed enough variety of ale to put that forward as a hypothesis, but it is certainly my observation. Anyone else noticed the same?
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E Yorks - Carver, Steels, Cross, Maltby, Whiting, Moor, Laybourn W Yorks - Wilkinson, Kershaw, Rawnsley, Shaw Norfolk - Carver, Dowson Cheshire - Berry, Cooper Lincs - Berry London/Ireland/Scotland/Lincs - Sullivan Northumberland/Durham - Nicholson, Cuthbert, Turner, Robertson Berks - May Beds - Brownell
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