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Unfree Labor, Apprenticeship and the Rise of the Victorian Hull Fishing Industry: An Example of the Importance of Law and the Local State in British Economic Change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 July 2006

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Abstract

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Within the last decade there has been considerable renewed attention on the importance of British master and servant law in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as a means of labor discipline and control. This article argues for further analyses of how the law was used within local contexts and specific industries and calls for increased focus on the role of the local state in labor relations. It argues that unfree labor played an important role in the development of some industries, and challenges claims of the demise of apprenticeship in later nineteenth-century England. Through an analysis of the Hull fish trawling industry in 1864–1875 it demonstrates that the exploitation of apprentice labor, and the control of fishing apprentices through punitive master–servant prosecutions were vital to the expansion of the trade.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2006 Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis

Footnotes

Support for this research has been generously provided by the American Council for Learned Societies and Smith College. Previous versions of this paper have been presented at the annual meetings of the Social Science History Association in 2003 and the American Sociological Association in 2004. My thanks to James Jaffe, Anne Knowles, Robb Robinson, David Starkey, Robert Steinfeld, Laura Tabili, Charles Tilly, Martin Wilcox and the anonymous reviewers for the IRSH for their comments and suggestions. In addition, I am greatly indebted to Martin Taylor and the staff at the Hull City Archives for their insights and hard work on my behalf.