Agricultural Intelligence.
Potato Disease – Public Meeting at Enniskillen.
1a.
Tuesday last, at twelve o’clock, there was a public meeting held in the Court House of Enniskillen, convened by the Earl of Erne, Lieutenant of the county, for the purpose of considering the state of the potato crop, with the object of applying the best remedies for the preservation of the present sound part of the crop, and immediately converting the partially diseased into wholesome food. The noble Earl and a committee of gentlemen had sat the previous day (the fair of the town), in the Grand Jury Room, to receive the information of gentlemen and farmers, as to the extent of the failure in their respective localities, that his lordship and the committee might thereby be enabled to lay properly authenticated information before the meeting. The meeting was attended by a large number of the landed proprietors, merchants of the town, and farmers of the county.
...Lord Erne having taken the chair, addressed the meeting at some length, and was followed by Dr. Halpin, of Cavan, who spoke as follows: - My Lord and Gentlemen, I have for a considerable time been engaged in the investigation of the state of the potato crop, not only as to the cause of the disease which it is now suffering so severely from, but I have also devoted myself to ascertain what are the methods we should employ, that are most likely to prevent the disease from attacking the healthy potato; as also what may be done to prevent the extension of the disease in potatoes that at the present may be but slightly affected. This, I take it, is the great question; for, although it is very desirable that the diseased portion of the crop should be converted into starch, which may hereafter be made available as an article of food, or used in the arts; still I have no hesitation in saying, that, if your efforts are to end here, you will have accomplished very little indeed, towards averting the famine that you so greatly apprehend. I will endeavour to lay before you, as briefly as I can, the actual state of things at the present moment. We are not without advisers in this crisis. Government, fully alive to the welfare of the people, have taken such steps as they thought most advisable to ascertain the true state of the fact, and this knowledge attained, they would then feel most confidence in proposing remedial measures; for this purpose they appointed three commissioners, whose instructions were to inquire into this subject in all its bearings, report upon it to Government, and give such instructions as they thought most likely to avert impending danger. These men, Professors Kane, Playfair, and Lindley, have acquired in their respective walks in science, a more than European celebrity. They have already issued three reports. The first report...is dated 24th October. The moment I cast my eye over it, I perceived that the greater part of the advice it contained was calculated to do irreparable mischief; and yet there was sufficient in it to divest me of alarm on the subject, for the most dangerous part of it was so palpably dangerous that no practical man would be misled by it, and the least dangerous was utterly impracticable. I addressed a letter to the Lord Lieutenant, (Evening Mail, 29th October), in which I stated my charges firmly, but respectfully, and I then announced to him a plan which I had devised, by the adoption of which I had strong reason to hope the progressing disease of the potato crop would be checked. A means of procuring through ventilation through all the potato pits in the country by means at once simple, easy of accomplishment, and so cheap that the poorest cottier in the land could avail himself of it. His Lordship referred my letter to the Commissioners to report on it, and, as a matter of course, their report was, as I expected it would be, adverse to my plan of ventilation. What did they say to my charge of “having given advice that, if acted upon, would be productive of an incalculable deal of mischief?” Not one word. They had told the people that, in the event of a continuance of fine weather, they recommend that the potatoes be allowed to remain in the ground for the present; but, if wet weather intervene, they should be dug without delay!!! This is advice No. 1, from gentlemen who tell you in the same report that moisture hastens the spread of the disease – that dryness arrests it. The same number of the Mail that contains the report with which they honoured my plan of a ventilating pit (Oct. 31), contains another report from them, in which they reiterate their instructions concerning dryness, and not satisfied with their former directions on this head,