Weather and Harvesting

Year Year Year
Month Weather Month Weather Month Weather
January ........... January ........... January ...........
February ........... February ........... February ...........
March ........... March ........... March ...........
April ........... April ........... April ...........
May ........... May ........... May ...........
June ........... June ........... June ...........
July: 1st week ........... July: 1st week ........... July: 1st week ...........
July: 2nd week ........... July: 2nd week ........... July: 2nd week ...........
July: 3rd week ........... July: 3rd week ........... July: 3rd week ...........
July: 4th week ........... July: 4th week ........... July: 4th week ...........
August ........... August ........... August ...........
Harvest Forecast ........... Harvest Forecast ........... Harvest Forecast ...........
Harvest Forecast Execellent Very Good Good Average Bad Very Bad Disastrous
sheaves per acre 50 - 48 47 - 46 45 - 43 42 - 40 39 - 38 37 - 36 35 - 34
Year ........... Production per Acre ...........
Assets Debits
Food Production ........... Tithes ...........
Rent (not serfs) ...........
Food Consumption ...........
Wages (paid) ...........
Total ........... Total ...........
Assets Total ........... Debits Total ...........
Debits Total ........... Assets Total ...........
Surplus ........... Deficit ...........
Crop Prices per quarter
Wheat ........... Oats ...........
Barley ........... Peas ...........

Primary Sources

(1) John Brown, A Memoir of Robert Blincoe (1828)

A girl named Mary Richards, who was thought remarkably handsome when she left the workhouse, and, who was not quite ten years of age, attended a drawing frame, below which, and about a foot from the floor, was a horizontal shaft, by which the frames above were turned. It happened one evening, when her apron was caught by the shaft. In an instant the poor girl was drawn by an irresistible force and dashed on the floor. She uttered the most heart-rending shrieks! Blincoe ran towards her, an agonized and helpless beholder of a scene of horror. He saw her whirled round and round with the shaft - he heard the bones of her arms, legs, thighs, etc. successively snap asunder, crushed, seemingly, to atoms, as the machinery whirled her round, and drew tighter and tighter her body within the works, her blood was scattered over the frame and streamed upon the floor, her head appeared dashed to pieces - at last, her mangled body was jammed in so fast, between the shafts and the floor, that the water being low and the wheels off the gear, it stopped the main shaft. When she was extricated, every bone was found broken - her head dreadfully crushed. She was carried off quite lifeless.