Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 21.djvu/560

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534 SCOTLAND [-TATISTICS. acquired a considerable celebrity in shipbuilding ; and a powerful French baron had a ship specially built at Inverness in 1249 to convey him and his vassals to the Holy Land. The principal ship- owners at this period were the clergy, who embarked the wealth of their religious houses in commercial enterprises. Definite state- ments regarding the number and tonnage of shipping are, however, lacking till the 18th century. From two reports printed by the Scottish Burgh Record Society in 1881, it appears that the number of vessels belonging to the principal ports Leith, Dundee, Glasgow, Kirkcaldy, and Montrose in 1656 was 58, the tonnage being 3140, and that by 1692 they had increased to 97 of 5905 tons. These figures only represent a portion of the total shipping of the king- dom. At the time of the Union in 1707 the number of vessels was 215 of 14,485 tons. The following table (XIX.) gives the numbers for various years from 1850 : 1S50. 1M& 1370. 1884. No. Tons. No. Tons. No. Tons. No. Tons. Sailing vessels Steam vessels Total .... 3432 169 491,395 30,827 3172 314 552,212 71,579 2715 6S2 3297 727,942 209,142 2065 14U3 827,295 800,780 3601 522,222 34S6 623,791 937,084 8468 1,694,075 Table XX. shows the progress of the coasting and foreign trade since 1855: Year. Coasting. Colonial and Foreign. Total. Entered. Cleared. Entered. Cleared. Entered. Cleared. 1855 1880 1884 l,M8,6M (LCgSJSSt 7,167,230 2,057,936 5,r>!)l,136 6,098,938 668,078 2,700,915 3,073,561 840,150 8,001,897 3,638,423 8,631,630 9,329,768 10,240,791 2,898,080 8,693,033 9,737,361 Com- merce. Table XXI. shows the great expansion of the foreign and colonial trade since 1755 : Tear. Imports. Exports. Y,:;r. Imports. Exports. 1755 1790 1795 1800 1815 464,411 1,688,337 1,268,520 2,212,790 8,447,853 535,576 1,235,405 976,791 2,340,069 6,997,709 1825 1851 1874 1880 1884 4,994,804 8,921,108 81,012,750 84,997,652 30,600,258 5,842,296 5,016,116 17,912,932 18,243,078 20,322,355 The value of the imports into Scotland is only about a tenth of that of England, but this does not represent the proper proportion of foreign imports used or consumed in Scotland, as large quantities find their way to Scotland from England by rail, nearly all the tea, for example, consumed in Great Britain being imported into London, while various other ports have almost a monopoly of certain other imports. Reckoning by the combined value of their imports and exports, the principal ports of Scotland are Glasgow, Leith, Greenock, Dundee, Grangemouth, and Abetdeen, in the order named, but for particulars regarding the trade of these and other poi ts reference must be made to the articles on the several towns. Ship- For many of the most important improvements in the construe- building, tion of bhips, especially steam vessels, Great Britain is indebted to the enterprise and skill of the Clyde shipbuilders. From the time of the construction by Mr Robert Napier of the steamers for the Cunard line, formed in 1840, the shipbuilders on the Clyde have enjoyed an unrivalled reputation for the construction of large ocean steamers, both as regards mechanical appliances and the beauty and convenience of the internal arrangements. Shipbuilding is also carried on to a considerable extent at Dundee, Leith, and Aberdeen, and to a certain degree at most of the ports of the king- dom, but within recent years the industry has been in a vry fluctuating condition, the tonnage of the vessels constructed annu- ally varying between 1880 and 1SS5 from a little over 100,000 to nearly 300,000. National Wealth. The immense increase in the wealth of Nations Scotland within the last 200 years is sufficiently proved by the fact wealth, that, while in 1674 the valued rent was only 3,656,408 Scots or 304,700 sterling, the gross annual value of the land according to the estimate in the return of 1873 was 18,(59S,804, or more tnan sixty times as much, and about fifteen times as great as the proportional increase of population. This increase is of course partly due to agricultural improvements and partly to the discovery and development of the mineral wealth in coal and iron, but it may also be accounted for by the smaller representative value of money, and by the fictitious increase in rents in towns, which does not represent an increase in absolute value. The annual value of real property assessed for income-tax under schedule A in 1843 was 9,481,000 ; the average value for the three years ending 5th April 1883 was 16,995,718, and for the year ending 5th April 1884 the value was 17, 066,705. For the year ending 5th April 1857 the amount of property and income charged with duty was 22,563,238 ; and during the following twenty-five years it was more than doubled, the average amount for the three years ending 5th April 1883 being 48,069,765, and for the year ending 5th April 1884 49,600,348. This is less than a tenth of that for the United Kingdom. The total amount of money lying in deposit in savings banks in 1884 was 7,709,471, about a seventh part of the whole amount deposited in the savings banks of the Lnited Kingdom. Notice of the rise and progress of banking in Scotland will be found under KAN KINO (vol. lii. pp. 332-336). The total paid-up capital of the Scottish banks at the dates of balance in 1885 was 9,052,000 and their total liabilities 107,882,595. Education. Notices of the existence of schools in the principal Elemen towns occur as early as the 13th century. They were under the ary supervision of the chancellor of each diocese and were chiefly schools devoted to studies preparatory for the church. Previous to the Reformation schools for general education were attached to many religious houses. In the First Book of Discipline, 1560, a com- prehensive scheme of general education was propounded, but neither this proposal nor an Act passed in 1616 by the privy council for the establishment of a school in every parish was carried into effect ; and the system of parochial schools which prevailed till the. passing of the Education Act of 1872 really dates from the Act of "William and Mary in 1696 providing for the maintenance of a school in every parish at the cost of the heritors. The various religious secessions in Scotland led to the founding of a large number of denominational and subscription schools, and at the Disruption in 1843 the Free Church made provision for the supply of secular education as well as religious instruction to its adherents. The Education Act of 1872 abolished the old management of the parish schools, and provided for the creation of districts under the manage- ment of school boards elected for three years by the ratepayers, male and female. These boards have the power to levy rates for the maintenance and erection of schools for primary instruction, elect the teachers, and enforce the clause in regard to compulsory attendance. The maintenance of schools is also aided by a Govern- ment grant, and the salary of the teacher is paid partly by school fees and partly by a grant dependent upon the result of the examina- tion of the scholars by the Government inspector, the school board having the power, however, to make their own terms with the teacher. Denominational schools are permitted to receive a Govern- ment grant. The following table (XXII.) shows the proportion of persons in the receipt of education in Scotland in 1861, 1871, and 1881 : Year. Population at different Ages. Persons in Receipt of Education. Percentages to the Population at each Age. 0-5 years. 5-15 years. 15 and above. Total. 0-5 years. 5-15 years. 15 and above. Total. 0-5 years. 5-15 years. 15 and above. Total. 1861 iK7i 1881 417,259 455,620 510,591 685,912 776,871 855,015 1,959,123 2,127,527 2,369,967 3,052,294 3,360,018 8,735,573 8,666 10,025 14,152 430,888 541,995 675,314 19,002 22,101 30,638 467,056 574,121 720,099 2-08 2-19 2-77 64-05 69-77 78-98 0-96 1-04 1-29 18-88 17-09 19-28 Particulars in regard to schools under school board management e given in the following table (XXIII.) : are given 1 Total Ex- penditure. Number of Scholars. School Places. Schools In- spected. a g !}i** lilll jjf{ Certificated Teachers. Assistant Teachers. Pupil Teachers. 1875 1884 551,140 938,223 314,164 458,121 391,538 655,672 2730 3131 1 15 9i 2 1 5} 12,958 61,429 8811 6220 129 1012 4262 3629 All the training colleges for teachers in board schools are connected with religious denominations three with the Established Church, Second- three with the Free Church, and one with the Episcopal Church, ary As early as the 14th century some of the burghs had grammar- schools, schools partly under the control of the magistrates. In 1496 an Act was passed enjoining the attendance at the schools of the eldest sons of barons and freeholders until " they be founded in perfect Latin, and thereafter to remain at the schools of arts and law " (where ecclesiastics were trained). The grammar or burgh schools enjoyed a monopoly of teaching certain branches, and private schools were frequently prohibited as interfering with their rights. Grammar-schools were chiefly devoted to instruction in Latin, and the course usually extended to five years. According to the report of the education commissioners, the number of burgh schools in 1867 was twenty-six. By the Act of 1872 their management was transferred to the school board, but they were excluded from parti- cipation in the school fund, and no provision was made for their inspection. The Act of 1878 authorized certain grants of money, and contained certain provisions for inspection, which, however, have been practically inoperative. The Educational Endowments Act of 1882 provides for a more -comprehensive scheme for the