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Edition used:Arthur Young, Arthur Young’s Travels in France during the Years 1787, 1788, 1789, ed. Miss Betham-Edwards (London: George Bell and Sons, 1909).Available in the following formats:20.6 MBThis is a facsimile or image-based PDF made from scans of the original book.7.14 MBThis is a compressed facsimile or image-based PDF made from scans of the original book.777 KBThis is an E-book formatted for Amazon Kindle devices.1.4 MBThis text-based PDF or EBook was created from the HTML version of this book and is part of the Portable Library of Liberty.1.17 MBThis version has been converted from the original text. Every effort has been taken to translate the unique features of the printed book into the HTML medium.1.17 MBThis is a simplifed HTML format, intended for screen readers and other limited-function browsers.511 KBePub standard file for your iPad or any e-reader compatible with that formatAbout this Title:Young was an 18thC pioneer in the detailed observation of economic conditions in the countryside and the collection of statistical data relating to agriculture.

He was extraordinarily lucky in being in France on the eve of and during the early part of the French Revolution. In his dairies he gives close observations of the social, political and economic conditions of the French countryside as it was convulsed by violent revolution.
This makes his Travels in France (1792) particularly valuable to historians. Copyright information:The text is in the public domain.
Fair use statement:This material is put online to further the educational goals of Liberty Fund, Inc. Unless otherwise stated in the Copyright Information section above, this material may be used freely for educational and academic purposes.

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It may not be used in any way for profit. Table of Contents:. Editorial Remarksby Dr.
HartArthur Young (1741-1820) was an 18th century English writer who is best known for the detailed accounts he published of his 'travels' in England, Wales, Ireland and France on the eve of the revolution. After he inherited his father's family estate in 1759 he began experimenting with agricultural improvements in order to maximise output. Although he was not always successful in achieving his goals, his writings contained very detailed observations and analysis of agricultural matters and were extremely popular. He began with A Course of Experimental Agriculture (1770) based upon his personal experiences and then traveled widely, commenting on the state of agriculture in Britain and France.
The following books were the result: A Six Weeks' Tour through the Southern Counties of England and Wales (1768), A Six Months' Tour through the North of England (1770), Farmer's Tour through the East of England (1771), A Tour in Ireland 1776-1779 (1780), and Travels in France during the Years 1787, 1788, 1789 (1792). He also published a number of reference works on agriculture and farming which went through many editions and were translated into several European languages. These included the Farmer's Calendar(1771), Political Arithmetic (1774), and the 45 volume Annals of Agriculture (1784-). Upon his return from France he was appointed to the position of secretary of the Board of Agriculture in the British government in which capacity he organized the collection and preparation of agricultural surveys of the English counties.
Later in life he suffered from blindness brought on by severe cataracts and a failed operation to cure it.Young was a pioneer in the detailed observation of economic conditions in the countryside and the collection of statistical data relating to agriculture. Although modern historians dispute the reliability of his data and the conclusions he sometimes draws from them they recognise the important work he did in beginning the modern collection and analysis of this material. Young is also noteworthy for the sheer luck of being in France on the eve of and during the early part of the French Revolution. He was able to provide in his dairies close observations of the social, political and economic conditions of the French countryside as it was convulsed by violent revolution.
This makes his Travels in France (1792) particularly valuable to historians.Politically, Young was a liberal reformer. He urged the repeal of the penal laws which discriminated against Catholics, he condemned the British regulation of Irish commerce, and criticised the Irish Parliament's industrial policy of prohibitions and bounties. He was a staunch supporter of property rights in agriculture as a means of reducing poverty. Some of his more famous sayings were 'the magic of property turns sand into gold' and 'give a man the secure possession of a bleak rock, and he will turn it into a garden; give him a nine years' lease of a garden, and he will convert it into a desert.' Betham-Edwards (Miss Matilda Betham-Edwards, 1836-1919) published editions of Young's Travels in France in 1889 (listed as the 2nd ed.), 1890 (3rd ed.), 1892 (4th corrected ed.). 'Let every real patriot shed a tear,For genius, talent, worth, lie buried here.'
In France such a man would have had his statue long ago. Perhaps this more modest tribute were more to his taste. That a native of his beloved Suffolk, herself a frequent wayfarer throughout the length and breadth of France, should edit his French Travels a hundred years after they were written, would surely have pleased Arthur Young well.Of his children two survived him, his daughter Mary, who died unmarried, and his son Arthur, whose son, the present owner of Bradfield, is the last of Arthur Young's race and name.
Edition: current; Page: li. BIBLIOGRAPHYby Matilda Betham-EdwardsA Six Weeks' Tour through the Southern Counties of England and Wales.
London, 1768. Second edition, enlarged, 1769. Third edition, 1772. 8vo.A Six Months' Tour through the North of England, containing an account of the present state of Agriculture, Manufactures, and Population in several counties of this kingdom.
London, 1771. Plates.The Farmer's Tour through the East of England; being a Register of a Journey through various counties, to inquire into the state of Agriculture, Manufactures, and Population. Descargar libro stop ansiedad pdf to excel download. London, 1770 71. 4 vols.Tour in Ireland; with general observations on the present state of that kingdom in 1776-7-8. Dublin, 1780.
London, 1780. 2 vols.Travels during the years 1787, 1788, 1789, and 1790, undertaken more particularly with a view of ascertaining the Cultivation, Wealth, Resources, and National Prosperity of the Kingdom of France.
Edmunds, 1794. Is a second edition, the first edition having been published in 1792. Reprinted, Dublin, 1798. 2 vols.The Farmer's Letters to the People of England; containing the sentiments of a practical Husbandman on the present condition of Husbandry, &c. London, 1768, 1771. 2 vols.The Farmer's Guide in Hiring and Stocking Farms.
London, 1770. With plans.Rural Economy, or Essays on the Practical Part of Husbandry. London, 1770.
8vo.A Course of Experimental Agriculture. London, 1770.
Edition: current; Page: lii Political Arithmetic, or Observations on the present state of Great Britain, and the principles of her policy in the Encouragement of Agriculture. London, 1774.The Farmer's Kalendar. London, 1800. 25th edition. Edited and extended by J.
London, Routledge, 1862, bds., 10 s. 6 d.Essays on Manures. London, 1804. 8vo.Advantages which have resulted from the Board of Agriculture. London, 1809.
8vo.Inquiry into the progressive value of money, as marked by the price of Agricultural Products. London, 1812.Agricultural Surveys. Published by the Board of Agriculture.Essex. 1809 or 1813. 1794.Baxteriana; a selection from the works of Richard Baxter. Select Passages from the Writings of John Owen, D.D.
1817.Tracts and Pamphlets (in British Museum) as follows:—On the Husbandry of three celebrated Farmers, Bakewell, Arbuthnot, and Duckett. 1811.The Expediency of a Free Exportation of Corn at this time. 1770.An Idea of the Present State of France.
1798.Letter concerning the Present State of France. 1769.Observations on the Waste Lands of Great Britain. 1773.Proposals to the Legislature for numbering the People.
1771.The question of Wool truly stated. 1788.On the Size of Farms (contributed to Hunter's 'Georgical Essays'). 1803.On Summer Fallowing, in Hunter's 'Georgical Essays.' 1803.Letters on Agriculture to General Washington. 1813.An Address. Edition: current; Page: liii The Constitution safe without Reform.
1795.An Inquiry into the state of the public mind among the Lower Classes. 1798.An Essay on the management of Hogs.
1769.The Example of France. (Numerous editions.)Peace and Reform. 1799.An Inquiry into the propriety of applying Wastes to the better maintenance of the Poor. The Annals of Agriculture' contain many contributions of Arthur Young not reprinted elsewhere. Edition: current; Page: liv Edition: current; Page: lv.
TRAVELS DURING THE YEARS1787, 1788, AND 1789.THERE are two methods of writing travels; to register the journey itself, or the result of it. In the former case, it is a diary, under which head are to be classed all those books of travels written in the form of letters.
The latter usually falls into the shape of essays on distinct subjects. Of the former method of composing, almost every book of modern travels is an example. Of the latter, the admirable essays of my valuable friend Mr. Professor Symonds, upon Italian agriculture, are the most perfect specimens.It is of very little importance what form is adopted by a man of real genius; he will make any form useful, and any information interesting.
But for persons of more moderate talents, it is of consequence to consider the circumstances for and against both these modes.The journal form hath the advantage of carrying with it a greater degree of credibility; and, of course, more weight. A traveller who thus registers his observations is detected the moment he writes of things he has not seen.