Information AboutArthur Young |
Arthur was the second son of the Rev. Arthur Young, rector of Bradfield, Suffolk , who was chaplain to Speaker Arthur Onslow . After attending school at Lavenham , Arthur Young was in 1758 placed in a mercantile house at King's Lynn , but had no interest in commerce. At the age of seventeen, he published a pamphlet ''On the War in North America'', and in 1761 went to London and started a periodical, entitled ''The Universal Museum'', which was dropped on the advice of Samuel Johnson . He also wrote four novels, and ''Reflections on the Present State of Affairs at Home and Abroad'' in 1759 . After his father's death in the same year, his mother placed him in charge of the family estate at Bradfield Hall; but the property was small and encumbered with debt. From 1763 to 1766 he devoted himself to farming on this property. In 1765 he married a Miss Allen; but the marriage was not happy, though he was a family man. In , writing under the nom de plume of "Ralph Robinson." Young's first visit to France was in 1787 . Travelling all over that country around the start of the French Revolution , he described the condition of the people and the conduct of public affairs at that critical juncture. The ''Travels in France'' appeared in two volumes in 1792 . On his return home he was appointed secretary of the Board of Agriculture, 1793 just formed under the presidency of Sir John Sinclair . In this capacity he gave most valuable assistance in the collection and preparation of agricultural surveys of the English counties. His sight, however, failed, and in 1811 he had an operation for Cataract , which proved unsuccessful. On his death, he left an autobiography in manuscript, which was edited ( 1898 ) by Miss M. Betham-Edwards, and is the main authority for his life. He also left the materials for a great work on the ''Elements and practice of agriculture''. More recently attention has moved to the small print of his writings and Young has been studied for his methods of investigation. Richard Stone (1997) presents him as a pioneer national income statistician, continuing the work of Gregory King who had lived a century before. Young produced three estimates of the national income of England, in his ''Tour through the North of England,'' ''Farmer's Tour through the East of England'' and in his ''Political Arithmetic.'' Brunt (2001) emphasises the way Young collected his information and presents him as a pioneer of sample surveys. Young influenced such contemporary observers of economic and social life as Frederick Morton Eden and Sinclair . Arthur Young was the greatest of all English writers on agriculture; but it is as a social and political observer that he is best known, and his ''Tour in Ireland'' and ''Travels in France'' are still full of interest and instruction. He saw clearly and exposed unsparingly the causes which retarded the progress of Ireland. He strongly urged the repeal of the penal laws which pressed upon the Catholics; he condemned the restrictions imposed by Great Britain on the commerce of Ireland, and also the perpetual interference of the Irish parliament with industry by prohibitions and bounties. He favoured a legislative union of Ireland with Great Britain, though he did not regard such a measure as absolutely necessary, many of its advantages being otherwise attainable. He thought the soil of France superior to that of England, but noted that agriculture was neither as well understood nor as highly regarded as in England. He blamed the upper classes for their neglect of it. "Banishment (from court) alone will force the French nobility to execute what the English do for pleasure—reside upon and adorn their estates." Young saw the commencement of violence in the rural districts, and his sympathies began to take the side of the classes suffering from the excesses of the Revolution. This change of attitude was shown by his publication in 1793 of a tract entitled ''The Example of France a Warning to England''. Of the profounder significance of the French outbreak he seems to have had little idea, and thought the crisis would be met by a constitutional adjustment in accordance with the English type. He strongly condemned the Metayer system, then widely prevalent in France, as "perpetuating poverty and excluding instruction"—as, in fact, the ruin of the country. Some of his phrases have been often quoted by the advocates of peasant proprietorship as favouring their view.
But these sentences, in which the epigrammatic form exaggerates a truth, and which might seem to represent the possession of capital as of no importance in agriculture, must not be taken as conveying his approbation of the system of small properties in general. He approved it only when the subdivision was strictly limited, and even then with great reserves; and he remained to the end what John Stuart Mill calls him, "the apostle of la grande culture". The Directory in 1801 ordered his writings on the art to be translated and published at Paris in 20 volumes under the title of ''Le Cultivateur anglais''. His ''Travels in France'' were translated in 1793 / 1794 by Soules; a new version by M. Lesage, with an introduction by M. de Lavergne, appeared in 1856 . An interesting review of the latter publication, under the title of ''Arthur Young et la France de 1789'', will be found in M. Baudrillart's Publicities modernes (2nd ed., 1873). DISCUSSION There is a chapter on Young as an economic statistician in
On Young as a survey statistician see
RESOURCES AND EXTERNAL LINKS
The National Portrait Gallery has 5 portraits of Young |
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