Three acres and a cow was a slogan used by British land reform campaigners of the 1880s, and revived by the distributists of the 1920s. It refers to an ideal land holding for every citizen.

Self-portrait of G. K. Chesterton based on the distributist slogan "Three acres and a cow"

The phrase was invented by Eli Hamshire in letters written to Joseph Chamberlain and Jesse Collings during the early 1880s.[1] Hamshire did, in fact, own 3 acres (1.2 hectares). Collings used the phrase as a slogan for his 1885 land reform campaign, and it became used as part of the political struggle against rural poverty.[2] He became derisively known as "Three Acres and a Cow Collings."

Jesse Collings was caricatured in Vanity Fair as a result of his slogan, "Three acres and a cow," which was the caption of this work.

Chamberlain used the slogan for his own "Radical Programme": he urged the purchase by local authorities of land to provide garden and field allotments for all labourers who might desire them, to be let at fair rents in plots of up to 1 acre (0.40 ha) of arable land and up to 4 acres (1.6 ha) of pasture.[3]

In What's Wrong With the World, G. K. Chesterton used the phrase to summarise his own distributist opinions.[4]

See also edit

  • "Forty acres and a mule", referring to what was granted to some emancipated slaves during the American Civil War.

References edit

  1. ^ American Chesterton Society, "Origin of 3 Acres and a Cow"
  2. ^ A. W. Ashby, "Jesse Collings," in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Vol. 12, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004) 668-669.
  3. ^ Dennis Hardy, Utopian England: Community Experiments 1900-1945. London: Routledge, 2000.
  4. ^ G. K. Chesterton, What's Wrong With the World.