Oral history interviews with farmers on what motivated them to adopt innovations and change their farming methods over the period 1935 – 1985. Farmers were selected from those that had participated in the Farm Management Survey in that period. Interviews discussed agricultural and technical change, in order to shed light on how and when changes on individual farms were brought about. As the world enters a period of growing concern over food security, it is important to learn lessons from agricultural history. The UK from the 1940s to the 1970s underwent a far reaching transformation of its farming industry. Much of the technical innovation associated with this was already available in pre-war years. Moreover, some of the cost-price pressures on agriculture that limited productivity in the 1930s were equally present post-war. Why then were there such changes in agriculture in the post-war period? Using evidence from the farm field books of the Farm Management Survey, this research will look at changes in productivity and technical innovation. This will be combined with oral history interviews with farmers, or their successors, who participated in the FMS in the 1950s and 1960s. Research Objectives: To conduct a survey of agricultural change in SW England, identifying how and when outputs changed on a sample of farms from 1935 to 1985. To use FMS fieldbooks to provide detailed information on inputs to shed light on how and when changes on individual farms were brought about. To examine through oral history interviews what motivated farmers to adopt innovations and change their farming methods?
Interviews. An associated dataset of Farm Management Survey data is available via Related resources.