Product Description
A Social History of English Foxhunting, 1753-1885
This landmark book provides a clear understanding of the ways in which landed society functioned, and of the assumptions that governed it. The work emphasizes the strength of older pre-industrial assumptions and relationships as it moves through the railway age, concluding with the Great Depression of Agriculture when hunting changed irrevocably.
In the years between the mid-18th century and the British agricultural depression of the 1880s fox-hunting assumed a key cultural role. it was transformed from the private, informal recreation of a few country squires to a highly organised, extremely influential public institution.
It never ceased to be viewed as a sport – paradoxically, both of the aristocracy and of the people – and it took on a significance out of all proportion to its role as a mere sport. Hunting and the chase became, in the words both of hunting and non-hunting people, a full, legitimate feature of rural society, one that could affect the lives of everyone in the society.
The author is Emeritus Professor of History, Macalester College, Saint Paul, Minnesota.


Reminiscences of the Wensleydale Hounds 





