Railroads for Ireland
IF WE take a general view of the career
of Lord George Bentinck during the last year from
the time indeed when he was trying to find a lawyer
to convey his convictions to the House of Commons until
the moment when her Majesty prorogued her Parliament,
the results will be found to be very remarkable.
So much was never done so unexpectedly by any public
man in the same space of time. He had rallied
a great party which seemed hopelessly routed; he had
established a parliamentary discipline, in their ranks
which old political connections, led by experienced
statesmen, have seldom surpassed; he had brought forward
from those ranks, entirely through his discrimination
and by his personal encouragement, considerable talents
in debate; he had himself proved a master in detail
and in argument of all the great questions arising
out of the reconstruction of our commercial system;
he had made a vindication of the results of the Protective
principle as applied to agriculture, which certainly,
so far as the materials are concerned, is the most
efficient plea that ever was urged in the House of
Commons in favour of the abrogated law; he had exhibited
similar instances of investigation in considerable
statements with respect to the silk trade and other
branches of our industry; he had asserted the claims
of the productive classes in Ireland, and in our timber
and sugar producing colonies, with the effect which
results from a thorough acquaintance with a subject;
he had promulgated distinct principles with regard
to our financial as well as to our commercial system;
he had maintained the expediency cf relieving the
consumer by the repeal of excise in preference to
customs’ duties, and of establishing fiscal reciprocity
as a condition of mercantile exchange. On subjects
of a more occasional but analogous nature he had shown
promptitude and knowledge, as in the instances of
the urgent condition of Mexico and of our carrying
trade with the Spanish colonies, both of which he
brought forward in the last hours of the session,
but the importance of which motions was recognized
by all parties. Finally, he had attracted the
notice, and in many instances obtained the confidence,
of large bodies of men in the country, who recognized
in him a great capacity of labour combined with firmness
of character and honesty of purpose.
At the close of the session (August
28), Cord George visited Norfolk, where he received
an entertainment from his constituents at King’s
Lynn, proud of their member, and to whom he vindicated
the course which he had taken, and offered his views
generally as to the relations which should subsist
between the legislation of the country and its industry.
From Norfolk he repaired to Belvoir Castle, on a visit
to the Duke of Rutland, and was present at a banquet
given by the agriculturists of Leicestershire to his
friend and supporter the Marquis of Granby. After
this he returned to Welbeck, where he seems to have
enjoyed a little repose. Thus he writes to a
friend from that place on the 22nd September:
’Thanks for your advice, which
I am following, having got Lord Malmesbury’s
Diary; but I am relapsing into my natural dawdling,
lazy, and somnolent habits, and can with difficulty
get through the leaders even of the “Times.”
’The vehemence of the
farmers is personal against Peel; it is quite clear
that the rising price of wheat has cured their alarm.
The railway expenditure must keep up prices and prosperity,
both of which would have been far greater without
free trade; but in face of high prices, railway prosperity,
and potato famine, depend upon it we shall have an
uphill game to fight.
’O’Connell talks of Parliament
meeting in November, to mend the Irish Labour-rate
Act. Do you believe this?’
The Labour-rate Act, passed at the
end of the session (’46), was one by which the
Lord Lieutenant was enabled to require special barony
sessions to meet in order to make presentments for
public works for the employment of the people, the
whole of the money requisite for their construction
to be supplied by the imperial treasury, though to
be afterwards repaid. The machinery of this act
did not work satisfactorily, but the government ultimately
made the necessary alterations on their own responsibility,
and obtained an indemnity from Parliament when it
met in ’47. The early session, therefore,
talked of by Mr. O’Connell, became unnecessary.
As the only object of this Labour-rate Act was to
employ the people, and as it was supposed there were
no public works of a reproductive nature which could
be undertaken on a sufficient scale to ensure that
employment, the Irish people were occupied, towards
the end of the autumn of ’46, mainly in making
roads, which, as afterwards described by the first
minister, ‘were not wanted.’ In the
month of September more than thirty thousand persons
were thus employed; but when the harvest was over,
and it was ascertained that its terrible deficiency
had converted pauperism into famine, the numbers on
the public works became greatly increased, so that
at the end of November the amount of persons engaged
was four hundred thousand, receiving wages at the
rate of nearly five millions sterling per annum.
These immense amounts went on increasing every week,
and when Parliament met in February, 1847, five hundred
thousand persons were employed on these public works,
which could bring no possible public advantage, at
an expense to the country of between L700,000 and L800,000
per month. No Board of Works could efficiently
superintend such a multitude, or prevent flagrant
imposition, though the dimensions of that department
appeared almost proportionably to have expanded.
What with commissioners, chief clerks, check clerks,
and pay clerks, the establishment of the Board of
Works in Ireland, at the end of ’46, consisted
of more than eleven thousand persons.
Always intent upon Ireland, this condition
of affairs early and earnestly attracted the attention
of Lord George Bentinck. So vast an expenditure
in unproductive labour dismayed him. He would
not easily assent to the conclusion that profitable
enterprise under the circumstances was impossible.
Such a conclusion seemed to him unnatural, and that
an occasion where we commenced with despair justified
a bold and venturesome course. The field is legitimately
open to speculation where all agree that all is hopeless.
The construction of harbours, the development of fisheries,
the redemption of waste lands, were resources which
had been often canvassed, and whatever their recommendations,
with the exception of the last, they were necessarily
very limited; and the last, though it might afford
prompt, could hardly secure profitable, employment.
Prompt and profitable employment was the object which
Lord George wished to accomplish. Where millions
were to be expended by the state, something more advantageous
to the community should accrue than the temporary
subsistence of the multitude.
Lord George had always been a great
supporter of railway enterprise in England, on the
ground that, irrespective of all the peculiar advantages
of those undertakings, the money was spent in the country;
and that if our surplus capital were not directed
to such channels, it would go, as it had gone before,
to foreign mines and foreign loans, from which in a
great degree no return would arrive. When millions
were avowedly to be laid out in useless and unprofitable
undertakings, it became a question whether it were
not wiser even somewhat to anticipate the time when
the necessities of Ireland would require railways
on a considerable scale; and whether by embarking
in such enterprises, we might not only find prompt
and profitable employment for the people, but by giving
a new character to the country and increasing its
social relations and the combinations of its industry,
might not greatly advance the period when such modes
of communication would be absolutely requisite.
Full of these views, Lord George,
in the course of the autumn, consulted in confidence
some gentlemen very competent to assist him in such
an inquiry, and especially Mr. Robert Stephenson,
Mr. Hudson, and Mr. Laing. With their advice
and at their suggestion, two engineers of great ability,
Mr. Bidder and Mr. Smith, were despatched to Ireland,
personally to investigate the whole question of railroads
in that country.
Meditating over the condition of Ireland,
a subject very frequently in his thoughts, and of
the means to combat its vast and inveterate pauperism,
Lord George was frequently in the habit of reverting
to the years ’41-42 in England, when there were
fifteen hundred thousand persons on the parish rates;
eighty-three thousand able-bodied men, actually confined
within the walls of the workhouse, and more than four
hundred thousand able-bodied men receiving out-door
relief. What changed all this and restored England
in a very brief space to a condition of affluence
hardly before known in her annals? Not certainly
the alterations in the tariff which were made by Sir
Robert Peel at the commencement of his government,
prudent and salutary as they were. No one would
pretend that the abolition of the slight duty (five-sixteenths
of a penny) on the raw material of the cotton manufacturer,
or the free introduction of some twenty-seven thousand
head of foreign cattle, or even the admission of foreign
timber at reduced duties, could have effected this.
Unquestionably it was the railway enterprise which
then began to prevail that was the cause of this national
renovation. Suddenly, and for several years,
an additional sum of thirteen millions of pounds sterling
a year was spent in the wages of our native industry;
two hundred thousand able-bodied labourers received
each upon an average twenty-two shillings a week,
stimulating the revenue both in excise and customs
by their enormous consumption of malt and spirits,
tobacco and tea. This was the main cause of the
contrast between the England of ’41 and the
England of ’45.
Was there any reason why a proportionate
application of the same remedy to Ireland should not
proportionately produce a similar result? Was
there anything wild or unauthorized in the suggestion?
On the contrary: ten years before (1836), the
subject had engaged the attention of her Majesty’s
government, and a royal commission had been issued
to inquire into the expediency of establishing railway
communication in Ireland. The commissioners,
men of great eminence, recommended that a system of
railways should be established in Ireland, and by the
pecuniary assistance of government. They rested
their recommendation mainly on the abundant evidence
existing of the vast benefits which easy communication
had accomplished in Ireland, and of the complete success
which had attended every Parliamentary grant for improving
roads in that country.
The weakness of the government, arising
from the balanced state of parties, rendered it impossible
at that time for them to prosecute the measures recommended
by the royal commissioners, though they made an ineffectual
attempt in that direction. Could it be suspected
that the recommendation of the commissioners had been
biassed by any political consideration? Was it
a Whig commission attempting to fulfil a Whig object?
Another commission, more memorable, at the head of
which was the Earl of Devon, was appointed by a Tory
government some years afterwards, virtually to consider
the condition of the people of Ireland, and the best
means for their amelioration. The report of the
Devon commission confirmed all the recommendations
of the railway commissioners of ’36, and pointed
to these new methods of communication, by the assistance
of loans from the government, as the best means of
providing employment for the people.
When Mr. Smith of Deanston was examined
by a Parliamentary committee, and asked what measure
of all others would be the one most calculated to
improve the agriculture and condition of Ireland, he
did not reply, as some might have anticipated, that
the most efficient measure would be to drain the bogs;
but his answer was, ’advance the construction
of railways, and then agricultural improvement will
speedily follow.’
To illustrate the value of railways
to an agricultural population, Mr. Smith, of Deanston,
said, ’that the improvement of the land for one
mile only on each side of the railway so constructed
would be so great, that it would pay the cost of the
whole construction.’ He added, that there
were few districts’ in Ireland, in which railway
communication could be introduced, where the value
of the country through which the railway passed would
not be raised to an extent equal to the whole cost
of the railway.
Arguing on an area of six hundred
and forty acres for every square mile, after deducting
the land occupied by fences, roads, and buildings,
Mr. Smith, of Deanston, entered into a calculation
of the gain deliverable from the mere carriage of
the produce of the land, and the back carriage of
manure, coals, tiles, bricks, and other materials,
and estimated the saving through those means on every
square mile to more than L300, or something above
L600 on 1,280 acres abutting each mile of railway,
this being the difference of the cost of carriage under
the old mode of conveyance as compared with the new.
Following up this calculation, he showed that fifteen
hundred miles of railway would improve the land through
which it passed to the extent of nearly two million
acres at the rate of a mile on each side; and, taken
at twenty-five years’ purchase, would equal
twenty-four millions sterling in the permanent improvement
of the land.
The ground, therefore, was sound on
which Lord George cautiously, and after due reflection,
ventured to place his foot.
And now, after the reports of these
two royal commissions, what was the state of railway
enterprise in Ireland in the autumn of ’46, when
a vast multitude could only subsist by being employed
by the government, and when the government had avowedly
no reproductive or even useful work whereon to place
them; but allotted them to operations which were described
by Colonel Douglas, the inspector of the government
himself, ’as works which would answer no other
purpose than that of obstructing the public conveyances?’
In ’46, acts of Parliament were
in existence authorizing the construction of more
than fifteen hundred miles of railway in Ireland,
and some of these acts had passed so long as eleven
years previously, yet at the end of ’46 only
one hundred and twenty-three miles of railway had
been completed, and only one hundred and sixty-four
were in the course of completion, though arrested
in their progress from want of funds. Almost
in the same period, two thousand six hundred miles
of railway had been completed in England, and acts
of Parliament had passed for constructing five thousand
four hundred miles in addition: in the whole,
eight thousand miles.
What then was the reason of this debility
in Ireland in prosecuting these undertakings?
Were they really not required; were the elements of
success wanting? The first element of success
in railway enterprise, according to the highest authorities,
is population; property is only the second consideration.
Now, Ireland in ’46 was more densely inhabited
than England. A want of population could not therefore
be the cause. But a population so impoverished
as the Irish could not perhaps avail themselves of
the means of locomotion; and yet it appeared from research
that the rate of passengers on the two Irish railways
that were open greatly exceeded in number that of
the passengers upon English and Scotch railways.
The average number of passengers on English and Scotch
railways was not twelve thousand per mile per annum,
while on the Ulster railway the number was nearly
twenty-two thousand, and on the Dublin and Drogheda
line the number exceeded eighteen thousand.
The cause of the weakness in Ireland
to prosecute these undertakings was the total want
of domestic capital for the purpose, and the unwillingness
of English capitalists to embark their funds in a country
whose social and political condition they viewed with
distrust, however promising and even profitable the
investment might otherwise appear. This was remarkably
illustrated by the instance of the Great Southern
and Western Railway of Ireland, one of the undertakings
of which the completion was arrested by want of funds,
yet partially open. Compared with a well-known
railway in Great Britain, the Irish railway had cost
in its construction L15,000 per mile, and the British
upwards of L26,000 per mile; the weekly traffic on
the two railways, allowing for some difference in
their extent, was about the same on both, in amount
varying from L1,000 to L1,300 per week; yet the unfinished
British railway was at L40 premium in the market,
and the incomplete Irish railway at L2 discount.
It was clear, therefore, that the commercial principle,
omnipotent in England, was not competent to cope with
the peculiar circumstances of Ireland.
Brooding over the suggestions afforded
by the details which we have slightly indicated, Lord
George Bentinck, taking into consideration not merely
the advantage that would accrue to the country from
the establishment of a system of railroads, but also
remembering the peculiar circumstances of the times,
the absolute necessity of employing the people, and
the inevitable advance of public money for that purpose,
framed a scheme with reference to all these considerations,
and which he believed would meet all the conditions
of the case. He spared no thought, or time, or
labour, for his purpose. He availed himself of
the advice of the most experienced, and prosecuted
his researches ardently and thoroughly. When
he had matured his scheme, he had it thrown into the
form of a parliamentary bill by the ablest hands, and
then submitted the whole to the judgment and criticism
of those who shared his confidence and counsels.
Towards the end of November he was at Knowsley, from
whence he communicated with the writer of these pages.
’I am here hatching secret plans for the next
session; and now, if you have not quite abjured politics,
as you threatened for the next three months to do,
devoting yourself to poetry and romance, I think I
ought to have a quiet day with you, in order that
we may hold council together and talk over all our
policy. I shall be at Harcourt House on the 30th.
I shall stay there till the 3rd of December, for a
meeting on that day of the Norfolk Estuary Company,
of which I am chairman. Would that evening suit
you or Friday or Wednesday?
I am not well acquainted with the geography of Buckinghamshire,
but presume you are accessible either by rail or road
in less than twelve hours.
’The activity in the dockyard
must be in preparation to interfere in Portugal, to
keep King Leopold upon the Portuguese throne:
it cannot be for Mexico, for our friend the “Times”
formally abandoned Mexico in his leader some days
ago.
’ has been entertaining
Lord in Ireland, and writes: “How
Peel must chuckle at the Whig difficulties.”
I dare say he does, but in Ireland it seems to me
Lord Besborough is putting the fate Irish government
to shame, whilst the rupture of the entente cordiale,
the conquest of California and New Mexico, and the
complications in the river Plata, are complete
inheritances from Lord Aberdeen.
’Eaton has come to life again:
else there was a prospect of George Manners quietly
succeeding him in Cambridgeshire. I fear we shall
do no good in Lincolnshire, notwithstanding the industry
of our dear friend the “Morning Post,”
in getting hold of Lord Ebrington’s and Lord
Rich’s letters to Lord Yarborough. I suppose
there is no mistake in Lord Dalhousie ("the large
trout”) going out to Bombay with the reversion
of Bengal.
’The duchy of Lancaster is to
be put in commission, Lord to be one of the
commissioners, but unpaid. He has begun,
I presume, to overcome the false delicacy which prevented
his acceptance of office under the Whigs in July.
S thought G was to be another of the
Board, but that turns out a mistake, but Lord H
is to be.
’The manufacturers are working
short time, and reducing wages in all directions,
John Bright and Sons at Rochdale among the rest.
The Zollverein increasing their import duties
on cotton and linen yarn, and putting export duties
of 25 per cent. (some of the states at least) on grain.’
We must not omit to record, that in
the autumn of this year, at Goodwood races, the sporting
world was astounded by hearing that Lord George Bentinck
had parted with his racing stud at an almost nominal
price. Lord George was present, as was his custom,
at this meeting, held in the demesne of one who was
among his dearest friends. Lord George was not
only present but apparently absorbed in the sport,
and his horses were very successful. The world
has hardly done justice to the great sacrifice which
he made on this occasion to a high sense of duty.
He not only parted with the finest racing stud in
England, but he parted with it at a moment when its
prospects were never so brilliant; and he knew this
well. We may have hereafter to notice on this
head an interesting passage in his life.
He could scarcely have quitted the
turf that day without a pang. He had become the
lord paramount of that strange world, so difficult
to sway, and which requires for its government both
a stern resolve and a courtly breeding. He had
them both; and though the blackleg might quail before
the awful scrutiny of his piercing eye, there never
was a man so scrupulously polite to his inferiors
as Lord George Bentinck. The turf, too, was not
merely the scene of the triumphs of his stud and his
betting-book. He had purified its practice and
had elevated its character, and he was prouder of
this achievement than of any other connected with
his sporting life. Notwithstanding his mighty
stakes and the keenness with which he backed his opinion,
no one perhaps ever cared less for money. His
habits were severely simple, and he was the most generous
of men. He valued the acquisition of money on
the turf, because there it was the test of success.
He counted his thousands after a great race as a victorious
general counts his cannon and his prisoners.