During
the first half of the twentieth century, the Cumberland Pig was
immensely popular with local farmers. Its floppy ears, flat face and
smooth silky coat distinguished it from other, lesser breeds. It was
a source of the legendary Cumberland Ham and provided the distinctive
flavour to Cumberland Sausage.
Almost
all the farms would keep at least one pig. Slaughtered at the
‘back-end’ of the year, it would provide the farmer’s own
family with a supply of good tasty ham and bacon through the winter.
There might even be enough left to send a few sides of bacon to the
local market!
The
county’s biggest pig farms were around Carlisle, Penrith and along
the Eden Valley but Kirkbride was also an important area for pig
farming. Thomas Wills of Angerton House there was a well-known
breeder.
In
1915, he attended a meeting of farmers in the King’s Arms Inn at
Wigton. The meeting was convened by Mr T. B. Schofield, the
government’s local livestock officer and Mr Steel, the Wigton vet.
Mr Schofield told the meeting that his department were spending
hundreds of pounds each year buying boars. These were then made
available to small farmers for breeding purposes. However, the
Cumberland Pig did not qualify for the scheme although the farmers
were anxious to use it. The problem was that there was no ‘Pedigree
System’ and so the breed was not officially recognised.
Gate Mary Bred by Mrs H.M. Boyns, Hatton Lodge, Soulby, Kirkby Stephen.Second Prize Winner at Yorkshire Agricultural Show. |
The
meeting resolved to form a Cumberland Pig Breeders Association and to
establish a ‘Herd Book’ which would register all pure-bred
Cumberlands and so make them eligible for the government’s breeding
programme.
The
farmers present at the meeting pledged £75 to get things going and
appointed a council to oversee operations. Over the next few years,
more than one hundred farms signed up for the Herd Book.
Tom
Wills of Angerton House served as a council member for the new
association along with his neighbour Joseph Robinson of Wampool Farm.
J. Carr of Whitrigg House, The Graham brothers of Whitriglees and
Greenspot, and J. Mark of Angerton were also registered breeders. The
Lowthers, Liddles, Nichols and Robinsons were other families from
Kirkbride who appeared regularly in the Herd Book.
From the 1929 Herd Book |
John
Routledge of Old Silloth Farm was a very successful breeder of
Cumberland Pigs. In 1921, he showed a boar which won the Breeders’
Association Show at Penrith and was then sold for 90 guineas. In
1923, he sold a champion sow for 81 guineas. His best breeding sow
was ‘Seabreeze of Old Silloth’ whose litter of eleven six-month
old piglets was sold for 320 guineas. John was vice-chairman of the
Holm Cultram Agricultural Society.
He
died in January 1924 when he chocked, ironically on a piece of pork,
while dining with friends at the Criffel Hotel. His widow, Margaret,
continued to breed the pigs for many more years.
Janet II
Bred by Mrs Carleton Couper, Carleton Hall, Penrith. Second Prize Winner at Royal Lancashire Show. |
SOME
OTHER LOCAL FARMERS WHO BRED CUMBERLAND PIGS.
T J Armstrong
of Doucie Farm, Calvo.
P R Foster of
Allonby
Thomas Hodgson
of Mawbray Farm
J Hornsby of
Holme Lea, Silloth
W Penrice of
Park House, Silloth
John Slack,
Holme Low, Silloth
A
sad end to the story . . .
In
1955, the government’s Advisory Committee on Pig Production
produced a report which indicated that housewives were then demanding
a leaner type of meat. They recommended that farmers should
concentrate on only three breeds: the Large White, the Welsh and the
Landrace. The breeding stock of the Cumberland began to decline and,
even before the report was published, there were only three breeding
boars registered in the county.
The
last individual, a sow belonging to a Mr Thirwell of Bothel Craggs
died in 1960 and the breed became extinct.
In
2008, a Penrith animal conservation centre "recreated" the
Cumberland pig based on DNA analysis and selective breeding. Farmers
who had worked with the last surviving originals agreed that the new
pig was a good match in appearance. After years of selective
breeding, a sow was born with a 99.6% DNA match for the Cumberland.
However, it proved infertile.
Sources:
Cumberland News & Wigton Advertiser, 16/10/1915
Wigton Advertiser 26/1/1924
Cumberland Pig Herd Books. (Local Collection, Carlisle Library)
Wikipedia
Cumberland News & Wigton Advertiser, 16/10/1915
Wigton Advertiser 26/1/1924
Cumberland Pig Herd Books. (Local Collection, Carlisle Library)
Wikipedia