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ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BRITAIN
 
  More than 5000 entries on the history, culture and life of Britain (published in 1993 by Macmillan, now out of print)

 
More than 5000 entries on the history, culture and life of Britain (published in 1993 by Macmillan, now out of print)
allotments

Patches of ground, each a quarter of an acre (0.1ha) in size, which can be rented from a local authority. The idea of providing land on which poor families could grow their own vegetables goes back several centuries, but in the late 19C it became a statutory obligation on local authorities to make such plots available – a process culminating in the Allotments Act of 1908. The number of allotments rose in World War I from 600,000 to 1.5 million, and there was a similar temporary increase in World War II. Allotments in urban districts have become increasingly important, being used in recent decades largely as a leisure activity.
 








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