Topping the Glaisdale Agricultural Library Sale at Tennants Auctioneers on 30th September was Leonard Mascall’s The First Booke of Cattel, which sold for £6,200 (all figures, excluding buyer’s premium), far surpassing its estimate. Mascall’s text was a foundational resource in the field of husbandry and was amongst a fine selection of Mascall books on offer in the sale, all of which sold handsomely. Mascall, born in Kent in 1589, wrote extensively in the fields of animal husbandry and fishing and served at one period as clerk of the kitchen in the household of Mathew Parker, the Archbishop of Canterbury.
On all accounts, the sale of Glaisdale farmer Martin Henry Burtt’s extraordinary private library of antiquarian agricultural books was a triumph. The high results reflect Burtt’s incredible aptitude and knowledge as a book collector; as well as his keen sense of custodianship, preservation, and curation of the history of agriculture in the 16th to 18th centuries – periods spanning the transition from an era when it was considered dubious to attempt to improve on God’s Creation to the advent of the Age of Reason with its huge rise in literacy, invention, experimentation, and applied rationality. Burtt’s collection mirrors his high standing in the farming community where he served as Deputy National Chairman of the National Farmers’ Union under Sir Ben Gill.