Everything about Statistical Accounts Of Scotland totally explained
Statistical Accounts of Scotland are indispensable documents for the study of
Scotland in the 18th and 19th Centuries. The most important are the “
Old (or First) Statistical Account of Scotland”, published between
1791 and
1792 by
Sir John Sinclair of Ulbster, and the “
New (or Second) Statistical Account of Scotland" published under the auspices of the
General Assembly of the Church of Scotland between
1834 - and
1845 . A modern “
Third Statistical Account of Scotland” was published between
1951 and
1992 .
Early attempts
Attempts at getting an accurate picture of the geography, people and economy of Scotland had been attempted in the 1620s and 1630s, using the network of about 900 ministers of the established
Church of Scotland. The time and resources involved, not to mention the troubled times of the
Civil Wars, led to limited results.
Sir Robert Sibbald (1684 - 1690s)
However, the
Geographer Royal for Scotland,
Sir Robert Sibbald took this forward between
1684 and the early 1690s. Sir Robert circulated some “General Queries” to parish ministers, but again this was the time of the
Glorious Revolution and, though progress was made, the results provided a very incomplete picture of the nation.
The General Assembly of the Church of Scotland (1720 - 1755)
The General Assembly proposed a “Geographical Description of Scotland” and took some action on this between
1720 and
1744, again during troubled times for the country, latterly involving the
Jacobite Rebellion under
Bonnie Prince Charlie . Nonetheless, during
1743. The
Moderator of the General Assembly, the Rev Robert Wallace organised the distribution of questionnaires, as part of a scheme to find out how to support a scheme for the widows and orphans of clergy. This work helped to develop
actuarial methods, and explains the involvement of a society for ministers’ widows and orphans in later work.
The Rev
Alexander Webster produced a population census of Scotland in
1755, based to some extent on Wallace’s work.
Sir James Steuart (1767) and David Erskine (1781)
In
1767, Sir
James Denham-Steuart suggested a national survey in his “Enquiry into the principles of Œconomy” and this was taken up in
1781 by
David Erskine,
Earl of Buchan. However, by the time this came to fruition in
1792, it had been overtaken by the work of
Sir John Sinclair of Ulbster
The First (Old) Statistical Account of Scotland
Sir John Sinclair of Ulbster had studied German state surveys and wished to use what he called for the first time these “statistical” methods to measure the “
quantum of happiness” that existed in the nation and find ways of improving this. In this he was a “
remarkable example of Enlightenment idealism at work”. He stressed the empirical ideal of that age by lauding its “
anxious attention to the facts” and he set about completing the work left unachieved by the previous attempt mentioned above. The results are crucial to an understanding of Scotland on the eve of both the
Industrial Revolution and the
French Revolution.
In
1790, Sir John sent structured questionnaires to over 900 parish ministers, covering the whole country. This contained 160 questions in 4 sections, namely
- Geography and topology
- Population questions
- Agricultural and Industrial production
- Miscellaneous questions
There were follow up questions in Appendices - six new questions in
1790 and four more in
1791. There was an excellent response, but since it wasn't complete, Sir John sent out “
Statistical Missionaries” in
1796 . The project was complete by June
1799, though much had been published, and Sir John was able to lay before the General Assembly a complete portrait of the nation. The reports are of inestimable historical value. Some are excellently written by ministers who were themselves meticulous Enlightenment scholars (see for example the response by the
Rev Dr James Meek for the Parish of
Cambuslang in
Lanarkshire).
The Second (New) Statistical Account of Scotland
As mentioned above, early attempts at producing an accurate statistical account of Scotland were related to schemes to support the widows and orphans of the clergy. In
1832 the “
Committee for the Society for the Sons and Daughters of the Clergy”, with the blessing of the
General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, took Sir John’s work further. It was to be more modern (including maps for each county) and was to draw upon the specialist knowledge of local doctors and schoolmasters. It very self-consciously set out not to produce a new statistical account, but a statistical account of a new country - one that the revolutions mentioned above had changed rapidly. It was, however, very much the child of the “Old Statistical Account”. Indeed, the
Rev Dr John Robertson, the Minister responsible for of the new account for
Cambuslang, was the former assistant to the
writer of the old account.
The Third Statistical Account of Scotland
The Third Statistical Account was initiated after the
Second World War and followed a similar parish format to the earlier accounts. The first volume, covering
Ayrshire, was published in
1951. Ultimately it was more rigorous and wide-ranging than either of its predecessors, covering
industry,
transport,
culture and
demographics. Volume editors ensured a more generic approach than before, but even so the spirit of the originals was retained, even if idiosyncrasies remained.
The scale of the project, difficulties with funding and finding publishers (which included
Collins and Oliver & Boyd) meant that the project took over forty years to complete and it wasn't until
1992 that the last volume,
The County of Roxburgh, was published. Another consequence of this was that the later volumes covered administrative divisions which no longer existed.
Although the project was more
secular than before, sections of the accounts continued to focus on religious life, and several of the parish accounts were still written by Church of Scotland ministers.
Note: each volume is entitled either County of... or City of....
Aberdeen (1953), MacKenzie, H.
Aberdeenshire (1960), Hamilton, H.
Angus (1977), Illsley, W.A.
Argyll (1961), MacDonald, C.M.
Ayrshire (1951), Strawhorn & Boyd
Banffshire (1961), Hamilton, H.
Berwickshire (1992), Herdman, J.
Caithness (1961), Smith, J. S.
Dumfriesshire (1962), Houston, G.
Dunbartonshire (1959), Dilke, M.S. & Templeton, A.A.
Dundee (1979), Jackson, J.M.
East Lothian (1953), Snodgrass, Catherine P.
Edinburgh (1966), Keir, D.
Fife (1952), Smith, A.
Glasgow (1958), Cunnison & Gilfillan
Inverness-shire (1985), Barron, H.
Stewartry of Kirkcudbright & Wigtownshire (1965), Laird, J. & Ramsay, D.G.
Kincardineshire (1988), Smith, D.
Lanarkshire (1960), Thomson, G.
Midlothian (1985), Kirkland, H.
Moray & Nairnshire (1965), Hamilton, H.
Orkney (1985), Miller, R.
Peeblesshire & Selkirkshire (1964), Bulloch, J.P.B. & Urquhart, J.M.
Perthshire & Kinross-shire (1980), Taylor, D.B.
Renfrewshire & Bute (1962), Moisley, H.A., Thain, A.G., Somerville, A.C. & Stevenson, W.
Ross & Cromarty (1987), Mather, A.S.
Roxburghshire (1992), Herdman, J.
Shetland (1985), Coull, J.R.
Stirlingshire & Clackmannanshire (1966), Rennie & Gordon
Sutherland (1988), Smith, J. S. D.Further Information
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