(Redirected from Crofters\' Holdings (Scotland) Act, 1886)
The 'Crofters' Holdings (Scotland) Act, 1886' is
Act of the
Parliament of the United Kingdom which created legal definitions of ''crofting parish'' and ''crofter'', granted security of
tenure to crofters and produced the first
Crofters Commission, a land court which ruled on disputes between
landlords and
crofters. The same court ruled on whether
parishes were or were not crofting parishes. In many respects the Act was modelled on the
Irish Land Acts of 1870 and 1881.
The Act specified seven
counties of
Scotland as counties where parishes might be recognised as crofting parishes:
Argyll,
Inverness-shire,
Ross and Cromarty,
Sutherland,
Caithness,
Orkney and
Shetland. Within these counties a crofting parish was a parish where there were year-by-year
tenants of land (tenants without
leases) who were paying less than
£30 a
year in
rent and who had possessed effective common
grazing rights during the 80 years since
24 June 1806.
The Act was largely a result of crofters' agitation which had become well organised and very persistent in
Skye (then in the county of Inverness-shire) and of growing support, throughout the
Highlands, for the
Crofters' Party, which had gained five
Members of Parliament in the
general election of 1885. Agitation took the form of rent strikes (withholding rent payments) and what came to be known as land raids: crofter occupations of land to which crofters believed they should have access for common grazing or for new crofts, but which landlords had given over to
sheep farming and hunting parks (called
deer forests).
The Act itself did not quell the agitation. In particular it was very weak in terms of enabling the Crofters Commission to resolve disputes about access to land. It was enough however to make much more acceptable, politically, the use of
troops in confrontations with agitators.