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The Rhubarb Triangle

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Early history
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Rhubarb is a native plant of Mongolia and is believed
to have arrived in Italy in the 15th or 16th century. Large quantities
were taken to China on the Silk Road, and it has been recorded that this
road could have been known as the Rhubarb Road! A Yorkshireman, Sir
Matthew Lister, introduced edible garden rhubarb into England from Italy
around 1620. At first it was appreciated for its medicinal qualities,
but from the 1780's the chopped stalks began to be used as a substitute
for gooseberries in pies. In the late 1870's, Joseph Whitwell erected
forcing sheds, where it was grown in the dark, and after that the
expansion of the rhubarb industry was very rapid.
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The
Rhubarb
Triangle
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The soil in this area was of a type that suited the
species. Cheap coal from the local coal mines was available to heat the
forcing sheds as were large quantities of horse manure and 'night soil'
from the urban areas. This resulted in the area of land between Leeds,
Wakefield and Morley becoming known as the Rhubarb Triangle and over 95%
of the forced rhubarb grown in England came from this district. Around
1900, the area was famous throughout Europe for the quality of its early
rhubarb, which reached London markets in time for Christmas when it
commanded a very high price. Large quantities were also purchased by
agents for the French market in Paris. Most of the growing and forcing
was done by many hundreds of small family farmers. It was only in later
years that some growers expanded and owned many thousands of roots and
extensive forcing sheds.
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The Rhubarb
Special

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Around the 1870's, the railway companies were
transporting large amounts of rhubarb, especially to the London Covent
Garden and Spitalfields Markets, and began to run a train with express
status to carry nothing but rhubarb. The train was run by the Great
Northern Railway Company and left Ardsley
station every weekday night during the forced rhubarb season
from just before Christmas until Easter. It ran every year until the
1961-2 winter when a rail strike caused the growers to seek alternative
means of transport to get the very perishable commodity to their
markets.
From that time, road transport began to take over,
being more flexible as the pattern of marketing had changed and London
no longer had the monopoly of the trade. At its peak, the Rhubarb
Special was taking over 200 tons of rhubarb every day from Yorkshire to
London.
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A period
of growth
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From the 1900's to 1939, the rhubarb industry
continued to expand, covering an area of about 30 square miles (20,000
acres). The long, low, felt-covered sheds were a common feature of this
area, as were the railway wagons which went round the farms collecting
the recycled wooden orange-boxes of rhubarb each afternoon. Cardboard
boxes came in later years.
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Effects of
WWII
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Fuel shortages and rationing during the 1939-45 war
brought changes to this unique local industry, as it became difficult to
heat the sheds. Cinders from the dustbins collected by the Refuse
Department were used to overcome the fuel shortage, and after the war
oil fired boilers became the norm. In this period, forced rhubarb was
regarded as a luxury and didn't figure very highly in the Government's
plans, but even so its price was controlled at the equivalent of 4.5p
per lb wholesale and 5p per lb retail. A 'Black Market' in rhubarb
developed with extra payments being made over and above the controlled
price throughout the war.
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Green-top jam

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Rhubarb was allowed to grow for 2 to 3 years and not
harvested, so that the roots could gain strength before being taken into
the forcing sheds. An official of the Government Food Office, which was
responsible for feeding the nation, saw all the rhubarb being allowed to
die back and rot in the fields as a waste of potential food, having no
knowledge of the rhubarb industry. So orders were given that this
green-top rhubarb had to be harvested and was sent to a local jam
factory where it was made into pulp, enhanced with a variety of
different flavours and made into various 'seedless' jams. This policy
continued throughout the War years, but the rhubarb roots that had been
pulled as green-top could not be forced, and this resulted in a
reduction in the amount of forced rhubarb that could be produced in
winter.
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Decline of
the
industry
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Reduction also resulted from the greater variety of
fruits available from abroad as people's tastes altered and prices of
the new fruits fell. In the late 1960's and early 1970's, many small
fields which had been used to grow rhubarb were sold for building
houses, as they were very close to urban areas. Statistics show that in
1966 there were 1022 acres of rhubarb in this district, but by 1980 this
had fallen to 422 acres, and since then it has fallen even further. In
the Rhubarb Triangle there are now only around 10 growers of this unique
vegetable which is served as a dessert.
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