The Economic History Review

The wages and employment of female day‐labourers in English agriculture, 1740–18501

Volume 57 Issue 4
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Pages: 664-690Authors: JOYCE BURNETTE
Published online: November 22, 2005DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-0289.2004.00292.x

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Using a new sample of farm accounts from 84 farms throughout England, this article provides measures of regional variation and changes over time in female wages and employment in agriculture. Female wages were not fixed, but changed over time and responded to high demand for female labour. The female-male wage ratio fell between 1750 and 1850, except in the industrial north west. In 1851 approximately 19 per cent of agricultural day-labourers were female. In the industrial north west, opportunities for factory employment reduced the supply of females to agriculture, but elsewhere the relative demand for female labour in agriculture declined.

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