Colliers and Salters (Scotland) Act 1775 explained

Short Title:Colliers and Salters (Scotland) Act 1775
Type:Act
Parliament:Parliament of Great Britain
Long Title:An Act for altering, explaining, and amending, several Acts of the Parliament of Scotland, respecting Colliers, Coal-bearers, and Salters.
Year:1775
Citation:15 Geo. 3. c. 28
Royal Assent:22 May 1775
Repealing Legislation:Statute Law Revision Act 1871
Status:repealed

The Colliers and Salters (Scotland) Act 1775 is an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain (15 Geo. 3. c. 28) which changed the working conditions of miners in Scotland.

Background

A 1606 act Anent Coilyearis and Saltaris had placed Scottish "coalyers, coal-bearers and salters" in a condition of permanent bondage to their employer.[1] Any such worker who absented from that employer and sought to work elsewhere was to be punished as a thief.[2] The Act also included provision whereby vagabonds could be placed unwillingly into the same compulsory labour.

Erskine May notes that these workers were thereafter treated "a distinct class, not entitled to the same liberties as their fellow-subjects".[3]

The 1775 Act noted that the Scottish coal workers existed in "a state of slavery or bondage"[4] and sought to address this. The main focus of the legislation was to remove the condition of servitude on new entrants to these industries, thus opening them to greater expansion. Although the Act noted "the reproach of allowing such a State of Servitude to exist in a Free Country", it sought not to do "any injury to the present Masters", so created only gradual conditions whereby those already in servitude in the mines could seek to be liberated from it after a period of seven or ten years depending on age.[5] The Act also included a provision for extending that term by two years if a miner acted in combination with others.[5]

Consequences

As Erskine May noted, "these poor ignorant slaves, generally in debt to their masters, were rarely in a condition to press their claims to freedom" so the later conditions were largely ineffective. It took a further Act, the Colliers (Scotland) Act 1799 (39 Geo. 3. c. 56), to liberate the remaining mine workers from the conditions created by the 1606 Act,[6] while also extending provisions against organised labour.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Laws relating to Colliers in Scotland - 1606 Act . 2009-09-13 .
  2. Book: Goodare, Julian . The government of Scotland, 1560-1625 . 265.
  3. Web site: Constitutional History of England since the Accession of George the Third Vol III Ch XI . May. Thomas Erskine . Erskine May, 1st Baron Farnborough . https://web.archive.org/web/20030924231527/http://home.freeuk.com/don-aitken/emay3v025.html . dead . 24 September 2003 . 2009-09-11 .
  4. Web site: Laws relating to Colliers in Scotland - 1775 Act . 2009-09-13.
  5. Book: Duncan, Robert. The Mineworkers. 2005. Birlinn. 9781841583655.
  6. Book: Mantoux, Paul . The Industrial Revolution in the Eighteenth Century: An Outline of the Beginnings of the Modern Factory System in England . 1961. 74.