British Timber Imports 1861-1906
Michael Williams (2003) uses data from Arthur Lower (1973) to confirm Sven-Erik Åström’s (1970) conclusion that mid-nineteenth century British North American timber exports to Britain were only a temporary “episode” in the long term dominance of the British timber market by Northern Europe. William’s charts use Lower’s data from 1790 to 1870 suggest a significant decline in British North American exports by the start of the 1870s. However, British import statistics from the Nineteenth Century and Twentieth Century House of Commons Sessional Papers confirm British North America and later Canada (without Newfoundland) remained major exporters of fir through to the early twentieth century. British North America did drop behind Sweden and Russia to become the third leading exporter to the United Kingdom in 1886, and they remained third through to 1906. The end of the tariffs do appear to have helped Northern European exporters after the 1860s, but this did not cause a collapse in exports from British North America.
Click the expand button in the bottom right to see the full sized visualization.
The data comes from an annual series of documents with titles that begin with ‘Annual Statement of the Trade and Navigation of the United Kingdom’ until 1870 and the ‘Annual Statement of Trade of United Kingdom’ through to the twentieth century. The visualizations combines the hewn and sawn fir timber.
Åström, Sven-Erik. “English Timber Imports from Northern Europe in the Eighteenth Century.” Scandinavian Economic History Review 18, no. 1 (January 1, 1970): 12–32. https://doi.org/10.1080/03585522.1970.10415590.
Lower, Arthur R. M. Great Britain’s Woodyard: British America and the Timber Trade, 1763-1867. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1973.
Williams, Michael. Deforesting the Earth : From Prehistory to Global Crisis. University of Chicago Press, 2003.
andrewdsmith
I’m looking at the trade data you have visualised here. Did you use the Excel file I created as part of the Empire Timber project or did you independently go back to the trade stats in the parliamentary papers and enter them into a machine-readable format?
Jim Clifford
Andrew, I have a database of all British imports in these years. If I used someone else’s data, I would have attributed it.