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Thank you to John Everson for contributing this picture
| Cyril Baker | Ned Baker | Billy Potter | Billy Baker | E Phillips | Will Thorndyke | Eric William Last | Charles Potter | Jim Canham | Les Hubbard | Henry Plowman | Fred Everson | Jim Everson | Jack Blake | Alfred Butcher | Walter Mutimer | Charles Fulcher |

Thank you to Maurice Damant for contributing this picture
The changing face of farming | |
| These pictures depict what appears to have been an important moment in the farming history of Occold. The top picture hung in Denis Potter's butchers shop in Eye for many years. It reminds me of the sea of cloth caps which filled the bar of the Beaky at lunchtime 25 years ago. Does this sale of six traction engines, one of those new fangled tractors, and the threshing machines mark a complete change in farming practice at Church Farm. Certainly by the 1950’s it was a chicken farm with ‘Last’s Chicks’ being sent to all corners of the country & today it contains the Hull’s pedigree dairy herd. Farming, of one sort or another, was, until the 1970’s, the major employer in Occold (or Acholt) and had been at least since the days that the powerful Frere and Henman families held these lands 500 years earlier. Fifty years earlier than these 1947 pictures the Havers family of Redlingfield Road had been the local steam traction machine operators. Around 30 years after the pictures combine harvesters were blocking ‘The Street’, as they were repaired at The Forge to the annoyance of passing motorists. An early traffic calming measure? | Modern industrialised farming, depending upon machinery and synthetic manures (fertilisers), was in large measure invented in Suffolk. The threshing machines mentioned by Luke were horse powered and introduced by Garretts of Leiston in 1806. The steam threshing machine not being introduced until 1840 (Garretts again!). At about the same time Edward Packard, the local pharmacist for Saxmundham, perfected manufacture of phosphate fertiliser from coprolite nodules dug from marl pits on Suffolk farms. He joined with others in opening plants in Ipswich, Bramford Stowmarket and Thetford under the name of Fison, Packard & Prentice. Coupled with scientific breeding, improved transport and drainage this produced a quantum leap in farm productivity but was obtained with a greatly diminished labour force. It is typical of these ongoing changes that more people are now employed in Occold measuring and evaluating the residues of agricultural chemicals and their environmental effects than are employed in agriculture itself. Andy Andrews |
What we would like to know..... |
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See the associated article, Threshing, Ploughing and Steam Engines by Percy Kerry
Where are they now? |
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This page was last updated on 29 March 2007 at 10:45