Beacon in the West  
A Hundred Years of the Stornoway Trust
Author(s): Roger Hutchinson
Published by Birlinn
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781788855938
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781788855938 Price: INR 844.99
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In 1918 Lord Leverhulme bought the island of Lewis with ambitious plans to massively expand its fishing industry and increase its population.

In 1923, when his plans had failed, he offered it free of charge to the islanders in two parts. One part, which included impoverished rural areas, was economically unviable. But the other, based around the busy fishing port and administrative center of Stornoway, was a different matter. In accepting Leverhulme’s offer, the hardheaded, churchgoing business class of Stornoway took on the responsibility of making the radical slogan ‘Land for the People’ a reality. It was an unlikely coupling, but it worked to perfection.

The 20th century was a tumultuous time for Lewis. Migration and depopulation were exacerbated by two world wars. Such problems could not be addressed in the lottery of private landownership, but in the stable, democratic government of the Stornoway Trust, town and country alike would weather the storms.

Roger Hutchinson tells the story of those storms, and of the people who guided their pioneering estate into the relative security and prosperity of the 21st century. In doing so he paints a vivid portrait of a unique landholding experiment, of Highland land struggle and of the island of Lewis itself.
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In 1918 Lord Leverhulme bought the island of Lewis with ambitious plans to massively expand its fishing industry and increase its population.

In 1923, when his plans had failed, he offered it free of charge to the islanders in two parts. One part, which included impoverished rural areas, was economically unviable. But the other, based around the busy fishing port and administrative center of Stornoway, was a different matter. In accepting Leverhulme’s offer, the hardheaded, churchgoing business class of Stornoway took on the responsibility of making the radical slogan ‘Land for the People’ a reality. It was an unlikely coupling, but it worked to perfection.

The 20th century was a tumultuous time for Lewis. Migration and depopulation were exacerbated by two world wars. Such problems could not be addressed in the lottery of private landownership, but in the stable, democratic government of the Stornoway Trust, town and country alike would weather the storms.

Roger Hutchinson tells the story of those storms, and of the people who guided their pioneering estate into the relative security and prosperity of the 21st century. In doing so he paints a vivid portrait of a unique landholding experiment, of Highland land struggle and of the island of Lewis itself.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Map
  • 1 Leaving Lewis
  • 2 The Biggest Offshore British Island
  • 3 Prohibition and Population
  • 4 Crofts Fit for Heroes
  • 5 The First in the Field
  • 6 Aviators, Golfers and Crofters
  • 7 Not a Land Problem, But a Housing One
  • 8 A New Party and a New Council
  • 9 The Yukon Comes to Lewis
  • 10 Blowing in the Wind
  • 11 A Quiet Revolution in the Western Isles
  • Appendices
  • Bibliography
  • Index
  • Picture Sections
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