This month my latest academic journal paper was published in Urban History, “The Scottish urban hierarchy and its interaction with the print trade and venues for reading, as revealed by an 1820s trade directory”. This paper was published initially online, but with a print copy to follow. It has been published on open access, so is freely available online for all to read. Which I’m really pleased about.
The research followed a small part of my PhD research into Scottish reading habits circa 1750-1820. But the Pigot’s research in this paper was almost totally new, and done after that PhD. Very happily for me it combined my book/reading history PhD research with my earlier postgraduate training (taught MPhil degree) as an urban historian, and also my experiences as a research assistant working on Bob Harris’s Scottish small towns project. The research also drew on skills from my many years as a genealogist, long familiar with trade directories and their use for researching people, occupational history and place.
My past training and experience had familiarised me with historical debates about Scottish urban history in the long eighteenth century, including how Scotland compared with England (the latter notably documented by Peter Borsay in his groundbreaking The English Urban Renaissance book), but also questions about the speed and chronology of cultural development in Scottish towns, and how things varied between larger cities and smaller communities. My theory was that an early Scotland-wide trade directory, full of rich qualitative as well as quantitative information, could provide useful new perspectives on Scottish urbanisation as well as the state of the print trade and venues for reading.
When I started this research I was already very ill and severely disabled from a progressive neurological disease which I’ve lived with since 1994, and which relapsed hugely in 2004, preventing further research assistant work on the Scottish small towns project. But I did get that history PhD in spite of it! It was essential, however, that any further research could be done from home.
Fortunately digitised PDF copies of the Pigot’s 1825 directory for Scotland are available, that I could read on my laptop, and pore over, page by page. This was one of the earliest Scotland-wide trade directories, and was perfect for me to study for this research project.
My research process was initially to go through the directory in detail, page by page. Cities and towns had qualitative information about venues for reading in their opening descriptive sections, so I’d copy this out. And then I’d go through the trade directory’s lengthy lists of occupations, noting references to booksellers, printers and publishers. I’d also sometimes find libraries listed in those sections.
This gave me a mass of data to work with, which I analysed in three main stages, looking at printers, booksellers and libraries. There’s a strong Scottish tradition at this time for public and subscription libraries, far more so than in England at the same time where circulating libraries were more prominent. It was helpful to see if the directory supported this, as well as how much library provision varied by type of place. The directory could give me a snapshot view of the Scottish print trade, and revealed a surprisingly rich and complex picture.
As well as Scotland-wide content the paper included a couple of more local case studies, both of an individual town (Perth) and secondly looking at a network of towns in a small local geographical area (the Scottish Borders). A core part of the paper, that I’m hugely grateful that the journal editors agreed to include, was a hefty table of towns and villages, showing how many printers, booksellers, circulating libraries, public or subscription libraries, and reading or newspaper room each town had at this time according to Pigot’s.
The paper was in an extremely long state of gestation. I wish that I’d finished it sooner, but then I am really ill. Huge thanks to my former boss and PhD supervisor Bob Harris for looking through an early draft and making helpful comments. I was flexible about where I submitted the paper, but really wanted to aim it at Urban History, and that was the only journal that I sent it to. And it was accepted by them after a revise and resubmit offer.
Huge thanks to the journal editor Shane Ewen, as well as the two anonymous peer reviewers, who made extremely incisive and constructive suggestions for revisions, which helped turn the piece into a much stronger paper. Academic peer review can be a gruelling process, but overall I was filled with gratitude to my reviewers, who were tough but fair, and ultimately extremely helpful. Thank you.
The paper has been published under gold open access terms, thanks to an agreement between Dundee University (where I hold an ongoing honorary research fellowship) and Cambridge University Press. I am extremely grateful that it has been published via open access. I hope that it may be of interest to many interested in Scottish urban, social, cultural and reading histories in this period.

