Q.
The origin of Chesterton's famous "3 acres and a cow" slogan, please.
- Mike
A.
The slogan "three acres and a cow" dates back to the 1880's and
was usually associated with Jesse Collings, a Devonshire MP and
radical agrarian who promoted small holdings and land allocations.
Collings became known derisively as "Three Acres and a Cow Collings."
The coining of the actual phrase has long been attributed to Joseph
Chamberlain, a Cabinet Minister in the 1880's who promoted land
reform. However, the American Chesterton Society has recently learned
that the quotation was first used by Eli Hamshire, a rustic philosopher
who lived in the village of Ewhurst in Surrey, England. Hamshire
used the phrase in letters written to Chamberlain and Collings in
the early 1880's. He was the author of two short books, and he actually
farmed three acres as had his father before him. An account of his
life can be found in the book, Three Acres and a Cow: The Life
and Works of Eli Hamshire, written by David Stemp, the great-great-grandson
of Hamshire.
The phrase continued to be associated with the "Back to the Land"
movement after the turn of the century, and eventually with Chesterton's
Distributists in the 1920's. .
- The "Quotemeister"
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