ABSTRACT

This volume comprehensively describes how British farmers coped with the problems of shortage of labour and other factors of production, as well as assessing how well agriculture performed as a supplier of food to the nation. Use of previously neglected records provides much evidence on issues such as the deployment of substitute labour and the introduction of the tractor into British farming for the first time. Challenging accepted view on the period, the author shows that shortages of labour and other factors of production had only a slight effect on farm output and the national food supply.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part |67 pages

1914–16

chapter |13 pages

The Evolution of Policy

chapter |24 pages

Recruiting and Farm Labour

chapter |9 pages

Power and Machinery

chapter |10 pages

Fertilisers and Feeds

chapter |9 pages

Farming in Wartime

part |109 pages

1917–18

chapter |15 pages

Policy

The Peak of Intervention

chapter |16 pages

Tractors and Machinery

chapter |7 pages

Fertilisers and Feeds

part |45 pages

The Achievement