The countryside Ten rural walks through Britain and its hidden history of empire

Corinne Fowler

Book - 2024

"Ten walks through idyllic scenery reveal the countryside's forgotten links to transatlantic slavery and colonialism-a work of accessible history that will transform our understanding of British landscapes and heritage.The green fields, rugged highlands,and rolling hills of England, Scotland, and Wales are commonly associated with adventure, romance, and seclusion as well as literary figures like Jane Austen and William Wordsworth. But in reality, many of these rural places-with their country houses, lakes, and shorelines-were profoundly changed by British colonial activity. Even hamlets and villages were affected by distant colonial events. Taking ten country walks, author Corinne Fowler explores the unique colonial dimensions of... British agriculture, copper-mining, landownership, wool-making, coastal trade, and factory work in cotton mills. One route shows the links between English country houses and Indian colonization. Another explores banking history in Southern England and its link to slavery on Louisianan plantations. Other walks uncover the historical impact of sugar profits on the Scottish isles and 18th-century tobacco imports on an English coastal port. The history of these countryside locations-and the people who lived and worked in them-is closely bound up with colonial rule in far-away continents. Accompanying the author on her walks are a fascinating group of people-artists, musicians, and writers-with strong attachments to the landscapes featured in this book and family links to former British colonies like Barbados and Senegal. These companions illuminate the meaning of colonial history in local settings. Crucially, this is not just a history book but a compassionate reflection on the way we respond to sensitive, shared histories which link people across cultures, generations, and political divides"--

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Subjects
Genres
Travel writing
Guidebooks
Published
New York : Scribner 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Corinne Fowler (author)
Edition
First Scribner hardcover edition
Item Description
"Originally published in Great Britain in 2024 by Allen Lane as Our island stories: country walks through colonial Britain"--title page verso.
Physical Description
xvii, 408 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781668003978
  • Preface
  • Introduction: A Colonial History of the British Countryside
  • 1. The Sugar Walk: Jura and Islay
  • 2. The East India Company Walk: Wordsworth and the Lake District
  • 3. The Tobacco Walk: Whitehaven Coast
  • 4. The Cotton Walk: East Lancashire
  • 5. The Wool Walk: Dolgellau and the Americas
  • 6. An Indian Walk in the Cotswolds
  • 7. The Enclosure Walk: Norfolk and Jamaica
  • 8. The Bankers'Walk: Hampshire and Louisiana
  • 9. The Labourers' Walk: Tolpuddle and British Penal Colonies
  • 10. The Copper Walk: Cornwall, West Africa and the Americas
  • Conclusion: Facing Our Colonial Past
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgements
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Grappling with the historical accuracy of revered spaces is not solely a problem in the U.S. University of Leicester professor Fowler ably shows this through 10 walks in the British countryside with people whose strong bonds to these places are informed by their perspective as descendants of subjects of British colonies in the Caribbean, East Asia, Africa, and North America. Their viewpoints expand the scope of history and show that "exploring the history of Britain's countryside is not incompatible with a love for it." Stately manors and gardens, purchased with profits from slavery and foreign exploitation, increase political and social status, privatize public lands, and sanitize history. Industrialization within Britain due to colonial products like sugar, cotton, and wool, and British copper that made colonization possible, demonstrates how the empire exploited British workers as well. Fowler references anti-slavery themes in literary works of the time, like Jane Austen's Mansfield Park, debunking the idea that reexamining colonial history is mere modern revisionism. In this well-researched and thoughtful history, Fowler's evocative descriptions will engage both armchair and in-person travelers.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

"Colonialism... affected the remotest corners" of Britain's landscape, demonstrates historian and curator Fowler (Green Unpleasant Land) in this revelatory travelogue-cum-exposé. Narrating ten walks through the British countryside, Fowler traces how a global web of slavery, indentured servitude, and resource extraction altered the country's "uplands, shorelines, valleys, lakes, villages and fields." Touring Berkshire, a county outside of London, she delineates changes brought about by East India Company officials who flocked there in the 18th century and spent their fortunes on gardens and landscaping. On Scotland's Isle of Jura, she tracks the flow of wealth from Jamaica to the prominent Campbell family, who used money earned in the trafficking of slaves, sugar, and tobacco to invest in Jura's flax industry and build up the red deer population by way of extensive enclosure. Visiting the Lake District, Fowler reveals that the home where William Wordsworth lived and wrote, with its gorgeous grounds, was underwritten by his brother John's involvement in the opium trade in Asia. The account transfixes throughout, but especially in Fowler's description of the backlash she faces for her research--in 2020, her study of how many of the country's preserved stately manor homes were funded by colonial exploitation became fodder for "culture war"--style attacks. This is a staggering look at some of the less-studied repercussions of colonialism. (June)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A historian of colonialism examines its effects on the quietest corners of rural Britain. Colonialism, writes Fowler, reshaped every inch of the British Isles, "from small Cumbrian ports and Scottish islands to rural Norfolk and the depths of Cornwall." As the subtitle promises, she hits the hiking trails and backroads in the company of scholars, descendants, and activists, turning up evidence of the kind that drives the Tories crazy: Knowing that a country manor was built on the backs of enslaved people can "guilt-trip visitors into feeling ashamed of British history," as one querulous commentator objected. Of course, countless country manors were funded by the slave trade. For example, the island of Jura, Scotland, was an important entrepôt for a sugar trade controlled by members of the Campbell clan, who intermarried with other sugar barons and, living in splendor around Glasgow, organized resistance to reform: "Unsurprisingly, given the money to be made, Glaswegian businesspeople supported the slavery system." Slavery meant that Welsh wool went to make plain cloth with which to clothe the enslaved people on sugar plantations in the Caribbean. Providing pasturage for the textile industry meant enclosing the land, which meant wresting the commons from country people and building walls and fences. Fowler's essays tend to run a touch too long, but she turns in some fascinating tidbits, including the role of William Wordsworth's colonializing brother in paying William's way so that he could write at leisure (and, in the bargain, opening the door to the opium trade, whose fruits William's pals de Quincey and Coleridge so enjoyed); the subtle critique of slavery in Jane Austen's descriptions of the English rural gentry; and the ongoing effects of a new kind of empire, financial and globalist, on Britain's byways and hedgerows. A deftly critical, readable contribution to the historiography of empire. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.