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The iron industry also grew up at an early date in the North-East because all of the basic raw materials were available locally.
The collapse of the coalfield industry came with the gradual exhaustion of the Cleveland ores towards the end of the nineteenth century. It then became necessary to import large quantities of ore and this favoured sites near the coast, such as those on Teesside.
Among the major traditional industries of the North-East, shipbuilding alone was a finishing industry, i.e. an industry which produced finished goods rather than materials for other industries.
Tyneside was so dependent on shipbuilding, ship repairing, marine engineering and associated industries that the district suffered considerably during the world economic crisis of the 1930s.
In the 1950s there was some revival in shipbuilding, but another decline followed in the 1970s. New industries have been attracted to the area, especially around the Tyne and the Wear. They included electrical engineering and engineering associated with construction work for the production of North Sea oil.
Decline in the two basic industries, coal mining and shipbuilding, led to a shrinkage in the population of Newcastle. Yet the city with a population of over 200,000 is still the principal centre of the North-East.
To the south of the Tyne estuary is Sunderland (196,000), standing at the mouth of the river Wear. As a seaport and as an industrial town its development has been similar to that of Newcastle.
Teesside, which includes six towns, (382,000) is an industrial area where the decline in the traditional industries has been less marked than in the rest of the North-East. This area recently formed the new county of Cleveland, therefore it may be also called the Cleveland area. It is one of the leading iron and steel manufacturing areas in Britain. Middlesbrough (149,000), the chief town, was merely a small village at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Iron works, later steel works, were established at Middlesbrough. Shipbuilding also developed. In the 1960s the production of local ore closed altogether, but imported supplies were easily obtained through the port. Shipbuilding has virtually disappeared today but the other early industry — iron and steel has actually expanded, benefiting from the continued availability of good quality local coking coal and from a coastal location, which allows iron ore to be imported cheaply, particularly from Sweden. As a result Teesside produces nearly three million tonnes of steel a year.
Furthermore, the chemical industry which grew up during the nineteenth century, making use of local salt deposits, has also expanded rapidly.
Hartlepool, just north of Teesside has seen similar industrial changes. Shipbuilding has disappeared, and engineering is now the main industry. Coal exports have also ended, but imports of timber and wood pulp have much increased. As seaports, Teesside and Hartlepool together rank high in the country in tonnage handled, largely due to oil and iron ore imports.
Unfortunately the benefits of new industrial developments to the region are less than may first appear. Unemployment remains high and people continue to move out of the North-East to the South or the Midlands. In short, the problem of the 'Two Nations' remains.
Industrial development in the North-West is less extensive than in the NorthEast. It is mainly concentrated in the Whitehaven — Workington area and in the Furness district around Barrow. The occurrence of coal and iron ore near Whitehaven and Workington gave rise to an important iron and steel industry, as well as to engineering. Whitehaven has a chemical industry.
The iron and steel industry also developed at Barrow-in-Furness (75,000), partly because of the availability of coking coal, but also on account of the presence nearby of iron ore. At Barrow-in-Furness shipbuilding developed from iron and steel production. Formerly Barrow built both naval and merchant ships (including oil tankers), but in recent times has specialized in submarines for the Royal Navy; engineering is an important associated industry.
Abundance of water, due to the heavy rainfall, is one of the chief natural resources of the region. This was an important factor in building a nuclear power station, which requires plenty of water for cooling. Moreover, the remoteness of the region was another contributing factor. At Calder Hall, near the Cumbrian coast the first nuclear power station was built in Britain in 1956, which supplied necessary electricity for the industry of the region.
Agriculture in the North-West is strictly affected by environmental factors, i.e. the relief and climate. The Lake District has the highest mountains in England. Rainfall is heavy. The village of Seathwaite is said to be 'the wettest place in England' with a mean annual rainfall of 3,300 mm. It stands at the western foot of the mountain called the Old Man of Goniston. The region is sparsely populated, and sheep rearing is the main occupation of the farmers.
Arable farming is more or less limited to valley bottoms.
Most of the people of the North-East live in the main industrial areas, around the estuaries of the Tyne, Wear and Tees, whereas Northumberland and Durham are mainly rural counties and are sparsely populated. The farms here are noted for both their sheep and their cattle. On this side of the Pennines the farmers raise far more beef cattle than dairy cattle, and also bring in Irish cattle for fattening on their farms. This is in contrast to the farmers on the west side of the Pennines, where dairying predominates.
Wales
Wales is a predominantly mountainous country, with large areas of land over six hundred metres in height, and, for the past two hundred years, these upland areas have lost population. South Wales is the main area of industrial activity, because it was coal that first gave life to industry. The nineteenth century saw a tenfold increase in the population of the South Wales coalfield region. Largescale expansion of coal mining did not take place till the second half of the nineteenth century. Merchant navies, railways and steel works all required increasing amounts of coal. On the coast Cardiff and Newport handled the coal that came down by the valley railways.
By the 1930s coal exports were already declining, causing economic depression and unemployment. The overseas trade disappeared in World War II, and only partly and temporarily revived in peace time. Important consumers were now turning to oil, and the reduced demand led to the closure of many pits and again unemployment. From about 200 pits at the end of World War II the number was reduced to less than 50. The number of working miners fell by about two-thirds, and the industry lost its position as the leading employer in South Wales. All this has created immense social problems, particularly in the valleys where the dependence on mining was greatest. One of the best known mining valleys is the Rhondda, its population, however, is steadily falling due to coal production decline.
Like coal mining, the iron and steel industry is long established in the south. For much of the nineteenth century, South Wales was the leading producer in Britain. The prosperity was based on the availability of basic raw materials — coking coal and iron ore. As the iron ores were exhausted, and foreign ores had to be imported, the iron and steel works were moved to sites near the coast. A major integrated steel works is situated at Port Talbot, where a new harbour was opened in 1970 to accommodate the largest ore carriers. However, by the end of the 1970s the steel industry faced widespread recession and steel production was drastically reduced.
Other metal industries in South Wales, notably the manufacture of tinplate, are in the Swansea district. South Wales is an important centre for the manufacture of non-ferrous metals. Its main centre is Swansea. Industrial recession has also affected this industry. Efforts have been made to attract new engineering industries, however, they haven't solved the serious social problems caused by the decline of the traditional industries.
Cardiff (280,000) is the largest city in industrial South Wales, and is also the national capital and main business centre. It rose to importance with the coal mining and iron industries. Today the cargoes it handles are mainly imports, to be distributed throughout South Wales. On imported grain flour milling developed as well as other food processing.
Swansea and Newport shared coal exports too. However, later they suffered the same decline like Cardiff.
The main port of Wales today is Milford Hayen (situated in the very southwest) because of its oil tanker traffic. It is one of the leading oil terminals of Britain. Refineries grew up on opposite shores and Milford Haven became an important refining centre. A pipeline takes petroleum to a refinery near Swansea.
North Wales is mountainous. In the north-west is the district known as Snowdonia, where the Snowdonia National Park is situated and where Snowdon, the highest peak in Wales (1085 m), towers over its mountain group. Sheep raising is the main occupation of the population.
In addition to the river valleys and the narrow coastal plain, North Wales has some lowland areas, including those on the island of Anglesey. At these lower altitudes the climate is much more favourable. Here the farmers concentrate on cattle rather than sheep. They raise both dairy and beef cattle, the former providing milk for English industrial districts as well as the towns of North Wales. Oats and root crops are grown here mainly for fodder.
Despite the small coalfield, industrialization has had little effect on North Wales. Recently two nuclear power stations were built: one in North Wales, the other in Anglesey. They both supply power to the national grid system.
Tourism is mainly concentrated in the northern coastal strip. On Holy Island, which lies off the coast of Anglesey, is Holyhead, terminus of road and rail routes from London and chief ferry port, for services to the Irish republic — via Dun Laoghaire (pronounced Dunleary), near Dublin.
In general, Wales, which is a national outlying region of Great Britain, faces serious social and economic problems, caused by the depression of its traditional industries. Unemployment remains high and the future of many miners and steel workers remains very uncertain.
Scotland
Scotland due to its physical features which influence the development of the economy is divided into 3 parts: the Scottish Highlands which occupy the vast, complicated mountain area in the northern part of the country, the Southern Uplands which cover the smaller and lower hill area in the south and the Central Lowlands occupying the wide rift valley which separates the other two areas. The first two areas are sparsely populated, while the Central Lowlands occupying about 15 per cent of Scotland's territory contain about 80 per cent of its people. The Central Lowlands best situated for population settlement are the industrial heart of Scotland, while the Glasgow region is the dominating focus of industrial activity. Here the opening up of the Central Coalfield and the growth of Glasgow as a port provided a strong industrial base and, by the end of the nineteenth century, the area was one of the major industrial centres of Britain, with important coal, steel, shipbuilding and engineering industries. The twentieth century has seen increasing problems in these industries and there has been a movement of population from the old established areas to new centres.
Mining reached its peak at the beginning of the twentieth century when the collieries of the lowlands employed one hundred and fifty thousand men and produced forty-two million tonnes of coal. Today the labour force is twenty thousand and production is less than eight million tonnes. The effects of this decline have been most severe in the Central Coalfield. The loss of jobs has been enormous. In recent years opencast sites have contributed heavily to the Scottish output. The main complex is situated on the north side of the Forth estuary opposite Grangemouth.
The iron industry grew up on the coalfield to the south-east of Glasgow where coking coal and iron ore occurred. These iron ores were quickly exhausted and the industry came to depend on ores imported through Glasgow. At present steelmaking is concentrated at two large integrated plants situated at Motherwell to the south-east of Glasgow. However, the future of these works is no longer certain.
Scottish steel has long been used chiefly by the heavy industries of the Glasgow area, where shipbuilding has been paramount. For a time Clydeside was the most famous shipbuilding district in the world. Shipyards extended along both banks of the Clyde estuary for about 30 km.
Clydeside also benefited by having pioneered the building of ships. Foreign competition, which drove Britain from first to fourth place among shipbuilding nations, seriously affected Clydeside. In the 1970s, further beset by the economic crisis of capitalism, Clydeside lost its place as the leading shipbuilding area in Britain.
Under the pressure of the working class the shipbuilding and ship repairing industries were nationalized. Some shipyards maintained employment by transferring workers to the construction of equipment for North Sea oil production, such as oil drilling platforms.
Glasgow (715,600) is Scotland's most populous city and third largest in the British Isles. It stands at the lowest bridging point on the river Clyde and has thus become the outstanding market centre for western Scotland, and commercially and industrially dominates Clydeside.
As a seaport it enjoyed a favourable position for trade with North America. Among its early imports were tobacco and cotton, both of which gave rise to local manufactures.
Industrial expansion brought so many people to Glasgow from the rest of Scotland and also from Ireland in search of work that it became a 'millionaire city'. A feature of this period of expansion was the building of tall ugly tenements to house the workers and their families.
When the depression of the 1930s prevented renewal and even repair of buildings, these tenement blocks became slums.
The industrial picture in Glasgow has also changed. Engineering has not shrunk to the same extent as coal mining and shipbuilding. But nowadays practically as many workers are in the service industries as in manufacturing. Of the latter, textile and clothing production has long been important, and carpets are among the woollen goods. Food products, furniture and office equipment are also manufactured. An activity which is extremely important in Scotland's export trade is the blending of Scotch whisky produced in Highland distilleries.
In the New Towns which emerged in the 1960s to the east of Glasgow new engineering industries developed, especially electronics.
Grangemouth in the east, situated at the top of Firth of Forth (22,000) is a fast expanding seaport, chiefly due to its oil refineries and petrochemical industry. This is due to the North Sea oil. In tonnage, the Forth estuary (including Grangemouth) in trade is the sixth largest in Britain.
Edinburgh (438,700) has long been recongized as the capital of Scotland, in spite of being second in size to Glasgow. The latter began to overtake Edinburgh in population with the Industrial Revolution. While Glasgow led the development of heavy industry, Edinburgh remained the country's political and cultural centre.
Within recent years the two cities have shown opposite trends with regard to population. Overcrowded Glasgow has deliberately dispersed people to outer suburbs and the New Towns. Edinburgh, on the other hand, has grown in population.
Several factors have made Edinburgh the outstanding centre of tourism in Scotland. Its picturesque surface features led to its being called 'The Athens of the North'. On the cultural side, a great number of visitors is attracted to the city by the annual Edinburgh International Festival in the late summer.
Manufacturing occupies a smaller proportion of its workers than in Glasgow, but it has a number of important industries, including textile manufacture. It is one of the chief centres of brewing in Britain, an activity which has been stimulated by supplies of locally grown barley. Grain is one of the principal imports, giving rise to flour milling and biscuit manufacture. Other imports are timber and dairy produce. Paper manufacture, printing and publishing are important because Edinburgh is a university city, closely associated with education, as well as administration, banking and insurance.
To the north of the Firth of Forth Dundee (177,000) is situated. It alternates with Aberdeen as the third most populous city in Scotland. Its commercial products used to be summarized as 'jute and jam', but changes have taken place in the local industries. Locally grown flax formerly provided the raw material for a linen industry. Then jute was introduced from India arid Dundee became world famous for its jute industry. Today there has been a change to man-made fibres for the production of fabrics, carpets and other goods. Besides food processing many workers are engaged in engineering, which includes the supply and servicing of North Sea oil rigs.
Standing at the mouth of the Dee Aberdeen (200,000) is by far the most important city in the Highlands. The seas around Scotland are rich in fish and Aberdeen remains an important centre of the fishing industry.
When North Sea oil was exploited from the late 1960s, Aberdeen, because of its position and size, was the obvious choice as centre of the new industry. It quickly became the administration and supply base for the offshore oilfields. Engineering employs a large number of workers, producing, for example, oilfield equipment, and textile and paper manufacturing are traditional industries.
On the basis of local water resources hydro-electric power stations were built in the Highlands.
North Sea oil has affected life on the Orkneys and the Shetland Islands. Oil terminals have been constructed on Orkney (Flotta) and Shetland (Sullom Voe), receiving petroleum by pipeline from the North Sea fields. This has involved the population into new occupations connected with oil production.
The natural conditions pf Scotland have extensively affected agriculture.
Conditions in the Highlands are among the most severe in Britain and this has had important effects on the pattern of farming. This is particularly true of the traditional type of farming — crofting — which is still practised in the remote areas of northern and western Scotland and on the surrounding islands. A croft is a small rented farm which usually covers no more than about 4 ha (hectares). The hard life and poor rewards make more and more crofters abandon their farms and migrate to the lowlands and cities in search of work. Due to this there has been a great decline in crofting and it has virtually disappeared from large areas of the Highlands.
In the eastern part of the region, where there are lowlands with richer soils than the highlands a much greater proportion of the land is tilled. Farming here is best described as mixed. On the arable land oats, turnips and potatoes are cultivated in rotation, and part of the area is improved grassland. Barley is often grown here for the production of malt whisky.