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A36795 The history of imbanking and drayning of divers fenns and marshes, both in forein parts and in this kingdom, and of the improvements thereby extracted from records, manuscripts, and other authentick testimonies / by William Dugdale. Dugdale, William, Sir, 1605-1686. 1662 (1662) Wing D2481; ESTC R975 640,720 507

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all surrounded Wastes and Commons as also the most of the Commoners for their particular Commons might contract or bargain for part of such Commons Wastes Severals with such person or persons who would undertake the Drayning the Country themselves being not able to do it as the said Act acknowledges and that the same their contract and conveyances thereupon made should be good and available in Law against the Lords of the soyl c. and all other the Commoners therein but not against the said Queen her heirs or successors except such conveyances should be certified into the Chancery in case the said Wastes were of the possessions of the Crown and except the royal assent were obtained thereunto Howbeit upon this Act hapning so neer the latter end of that Queens reign little was done but King Iames shortly after coming to the Crown being a grave and prudent Prince as also of a most noble and publick Spirit and withall highly sensible of the general advantage which thereby would redound to whole Kingdome by his Letters directed to the Commissioners of Sewers for the Isle of Ely and Counties of Norfolk Suffolk Cambridge Huntendon Northampton and Lincolne bearing date at Westminster the xith of Iuly in the second year of his reign encouraged their proceedings therein expressing his readiness to allow a part of his own Lands to be so recovered towards the charge of the work in like proportion that other of his subjects should do and signified to them that he had appointed one Henry Totnall and Iohn Hunt respectively to take view of the said Fenns and to treat and contract with as many Lords and Commoners as they might touching the premisses desiring likewise the said Commissioners to be aiding to the said Henry Totnall and I. Hunt therein The limits of the Commission for the general Drayning attempted A● 1605. The grounds lying between and within any the limits within the Isle of Ely and Country of Marshland and within all the grounds every way between the said Isle and the River of Ouse and between the Countrey of Marshland and the same River of Ouse and the Upland grounds of Norff. Suff. Cambr. and Huntingdon and between all the grounds between the Isle of Ely and the Upland grounds of Huntingdon Northampton shires and within all the grounds aswell of the Washes in Lincolnshire as those between the same washes the Isle of Ely South ea bank great Porsant bank and the River of Welland and within all the grounds between the said River of Welland great Porsant bank South Ea bank and the Upland grounds in the Counties of North. and Linc. and within all the grounds between the River of Welland and the River of Glen or in the borders and confines of the same The particular limits From the Corner of Edw. Skypwith's bank next to Creek lode by the River of Ouse and so by that Bank to Maid lode alias Shiplode and by a Bank on the North side of the said Lode to Calsey-dike and so through a part of Upwell to Lakebridg and from thence by Bishop's dike to Fryday brigge and so Elme leame to Maryes dam and to Tiln●y hyrne and from thence to Hob's house alias Bensted hyrne to Guy hyrne and from thence to Clowes Crosse and so by South Ea bank and through Crouland to the further end thereof towards White house from thence by a new Bank or Banks as intended to be made to the Upland neer Peykirke in Com. Northt From thence by the utmost ring of the Fenns or low ground to the Upland subject to surrounding in the said Counties of Northt and Hunt to Erith and from thence by Over fen Bank to Over hive and from thence by the utmost ring of the Fens or low grounds towards the Upland subject to surrounding in the said County of Cambridge to a Causey leading from Water beche to Clay hive Ferrey and from thence to the utmost ring of the Fenns or low grounds towards the Upland subject to surrounding in the said County of Cambridge unto Upwere and thence by the utmost ring of the Fens or low grounds towards the Upland subject to surrounding in the said Counties of Cambridge Suff. and Norff. to Stoke Causey and by it and the utmost ring of the Fenns and low grounds towards the lands subject to surrounding in the said County of Norff. to another Bank of the said Edm. Skipwith's by Stoke River and by the said Bank of Helgay Causey and from thence by the utmost ring of the Fenns or low grounds towards the Upland of Helgay and Sotherey subject to surrounding unto Sotherey Calsey and by it to the River of Ouse at Sotherey ferrey and from thence by the said River of Ouse to the said Corner of the said Mr Edw. Skipwith's Bank In order therefore to this great work direction was given to one Mr. Richard Atkins of Outwelle a person whose observations in these fenny grounds were very notable to make search with an Augar of xi foot long on the skirts of the New Leame from Guy hirne to Stanground stafe to find the soil there of at eight foot deep whereupon he began so to do on the second of April and found the first place on the North side 2 3 4 and 5. all Moor. 6. At mile and half Tree Moor 7 8. All Moor. 9. In the Leame Moor 10. On the North side Moor In Knarlake Moor at eleven foot deep 12. On the South side against Knarlake all Moor. 13. In the Leame Moor. 14. On the North side all Moor to 8. foot 15. In the Leame Moor 9. foot deep 16. By Lords dikes end black Moor mixt with earth 17. In the Leame the like 18. On the North side the like 19. On the South side Lipny holt against the Hill mixt Earth 20. Westward a furlong black Moor mixt 21. The like 22. 23. Against Easttree mixt Moor. 24. Nigh Cotes Moor on both sides 25. Against Cotes all Moor Above Cotes on the North Moor by Basually hill 26. At Stonhil doles Moor. 27. Against Calves Croft South Bassa gravel North Moor. 28. Between the Leame and the Lake against the Mills Moor. 29. Between Great Hill and Stone hill gravell Moor mixt 30. Between Stone hill gravell and Eastlong Lotts all Clay aloft and gravell at 2. foot 8. inches 31. More Westwards in the River Gravel and silt at 4 foot 32. On the North side At North Ee gravell the like 33. At North Long-lotts all Clay aloft 34. 35. By Bradley fen Clay and mixt Earth aloft about 3 foot 36. By Bradley fen to the Leames end such like above but rank Moor all the way under The Searches made from Erith bridge to Plawlis were At Erith bridg within Lx pole of the Bridg at the first Ham there at 2 foot and 2 foot and a half Clay But after under the same at 8 and 9 and 10 foot and upwards is all red Moor and so from thence
Hue aud Cry as also for blood shed within his said Lordship at all times of the year After this viz. in the same third year of the said King Henry the sixth William Babyngton Sir Iohn Colvyll and Sir Henry Rocheforth Knights Will. Paston Tho. Derham and Iohn Mannyng were constituted Commissioners to view the Banks Sewers Ditches Bridges and Causeys betwixt UUalpole and Tilney and to determine all things therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm as also to take so many Diggers and Labourers upon competent wages as they should think necessary for that service in regard of the great expedition which through the decay of those works was then required Several other Commissions were afterwards issued out in this Kings reign to the like purpose scil in 8 H. 6. to Sir Henry Rochefort and Sir Robert Clyftone Knights William Pastone William Goodrede Thomas Derham Simon Fyncham and Thomas Shuldham for all those Banks Sewers c. in the Towns of Upp●welle Outwelle and Enemethe betwixt the River which goth from Wellynhee to the Priory of Mullycourt and the River which passeth from Enemethe unto the said Priory and to proceed therein as abovesaid In 22 H. 6. to Sir Thomas Scales Kt. William Yelverton Hugh Prior of Wirmegay Thomas Trusbut Iohn Fyncham Thomas Salesbury William Willy and Raphe Geytone for those throughout the whole Province of Marshland and the parts adjacent from Marham to Wigenhale and to do all things therein according to the Laws and Customes of Romeney Marsh. The like Commission had the said Sir Thomas Scales William Yelvertone Thomas Trusbut William Eweyn and Thomas Salisbury in 30 H. 6. So also had Iohn Earl of Oxford Iohn Viscount Beaumont Iohn Heydone Iohn Fyncham and Iohn Bekyswell for all those betwixt the waters of W●lle and the water which leadeth from Welle to Salterys lode and Wygenhale In 21 H. 7 the said Bank called the new Pokedike was totally measured and then found to contain in length from the house of Iohn Pye at Salters lode unto the house of Iohn Bekeswell at Northdelf xviij furlongs and xxvij perches the repair thereof belonging as followeth viz. To the Tenants of the Lord Bardolf xxij perches To the Town of Wigenhale three furlongs xviij foot and four inches To the Towns of Tilney Islington and Clenchwardon three furlongs xviij foot and four inches To Tirington three furlongs xviij foot and four inches To Walpole three furlongs xviij foot and four inches To UUalton and Emneth three furlongs xviij foot and four inches To Walsoken three furlongs xviij foot and four inches To Iohn Bekyswell opposite to his house at North delf xv perches And from Northdelf to Mullycourt it contained in length xiiij furlongs and seven perches whereof the repair belonged as followeth viz. To Walsoken two furlongs xv perches five foot and four inches To UUalton and Emneth two furlongs xv perches five foot and four inches To Terington two furlongs xv perches five foot and four inches To Tilney with Islington and Clenchwarton two furlongs xv foot and four inches To Wigenhale two furlongs xv perches five foot and four inches Memorandum that upon the seventh day of Iuly 21 H. 7. every Acre of ground in Marshland was assessed at four inches for the maintenance of the said Bank But notwithstanding this care taken for repair thereof such was the wickednesse of some people that they divers times made breaches in sundry parts of it insomuch as complaint being made in Parliament Aº 22 H. 8. this ensuing Act was thereupon made WHereas before this time divers evill disposed personnes of their perverse and evill dispositions maliciously at divers and sundry times have cut cast down and broken up divers parts of the Dike called new Powdich in Marshland in the County of Norff. and the Broken dyke otherwise called Oldfield dyke by Marshland in the Isle of Ely in the County of Cambridge By reason whereof aswell by the great aboundance of the Salt water as also by the course of the Fresh water entring and coming into and by the said part of the said Ditches so broken and cast down the grounds and Pastures within the Countie of Marshland in the County aforesaid have bene divers and many times drowned and surrounded with the water aforesaid so that no profit thereof might be taken by the owners and occupyers of the said ground And the Inhabitants within the said Marshland and the Levell of the same many and sundry times have been not only put to importunate chardges and expenses to their extreme damage and costs but also to their grete undoings having lost much of their Cattel and Beasts then being and depasturing upon and within Marshland aforesaid to their grete damage and losse and to the grete decay of the Common welthe of the Country adjoyning to the same And also by reason of the same waters much people have bene drowned in their beds within their houses and have lost the most port of their goods being within the same For reformation whereof it is ordayned enacted and established by the King our Sovereign Lord by the assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in the present Parliament assembled and by the authority of the same that every such perverse and malicious cutting down and breaking up of any part or parts of the said Dikes or of any other Banks being parcell of the Rinde or uttermost part of the said Country of Mershland at every time and times hereafter from henceforth by any person or personnes committed and done otherwise than in working upon the said Banks and Dikes for the repairing fortifying and amending of the same to be taken reputed and adjudged Felony and that the offenders and doers of the same and every of them be adjudged and reputed Felons And that the Iustices of Peace of the said Counties of Norfolk and Cambridge in the said Isle at every of their Sessions within the said Isle and Counties to be kept by the authority aforesaid have full power to cause enquiry to be made after every such offence so at any time in form aforesaid hereafter to be committed and done and to award the like processe against every of the said offenders with like judgement and execution of the same if they or any of them be thereof found guilty by verdict or otherwise as the said Iustices have used and accustomed to do upon other Felonies being Felony at the common Law Which Statute was in 5 Edw. 6. by an Act of Parliament then largely made for the repeal of divers Treasons and Felonies cleerly repealed and made void But in 2 3 Ph. M. it was again revived In which year there were these ensuing Ordinances made upon the eighth day of April by the chief Inhabitants of this whole Country of Marshland and Town of Wigenhale touching the Old Powdike and Broken dike 1 That the said old Pow diche be sufficiently made
Earth digg'd out of it she brought to the Banks of the River● the brims whereof she strengthened with stones in such places where the weight of the said Banks did oppresse them These two works viz. the turning of the River into that winding posture and the making that Drayn she did first to the end that the said River by the many bendings thereof might glide more gently next that the passages of Ships towards Babylon might be crooked and lastly that by those Navigations the long Turnings of the Chanel might be sustained CAP. II. GREECE I Next come to those works of this kind as were performed by the Grecians wh●reof I shall give instance in Thessalie and Acarnania The first of these is said to have been antiently a Lake being on every side inclosed with Mountains For on the East it hath the Hills Peleon and Ossa mutually joyning at their descent to the North Olympus to the West Pindas and to the South Othris The Valley betwixt these Hills is Thessalie Among other Rivers that flow into it these five are the chiefest Peneus Apidanus Onochonus Enipeus and Pamisus which running from the Hills incompassing this Country meet in the Plain and become one stream which at one passage and that but narrow issueth into the Sea from the confluence of these waters Peneus continueth the name It is reported that in old time when as yet there was no out-let these Rivers and the Lake Bebeis besides were not called as at present although they did run no less than now but running made all Thessalie a Sea The Thessalians themselves say that Neptune made that passage by which Peneus floweth into the Sea For the Greeks ascribe all beneficial inventions to their Gods And Herodotus taketh it to be the effect of an Earthquake But no man can deny it to be a very remarkable work of Drayning And that it is now a place of extraordinary pleasantness I shall refer my reader to the Map of Tempe in Ortelius his Parergon Of Acarnania this is observable that where Achelous a River of that Country runs into the Sea it hath already made continent one half of the Islands called Echinades and that the Fable goes that Hercules here encountring with Achelous who is said to have transformed himself into a Bull because of the roaring noise of the River broke off one of his Horns and gave it to Oeneus in pledge of his marriage with Deianeira his daughter They which collect truth out of Fables say that Hercules who was generally beneficial for Oeneus his Father in Law 's sake restrained the exorbitant overflowings of this River with Banks and Trenches and drayned a great part of the adjacent Country and that this was the Cornucopia which the Poets made to be the emblem of Plenty CAP. V. Of the ROMANS THAT the Roman works of this nature were not a few and those very eminent I shall next make manifest by their drains in the Pompeian Marshes the Fossa Mariana the improvements about Placentia and Gallia Cisalpina the restraint of the River Tiber in it's overflowings and the exsiccation of the great Fucine Lake in Italy Sect. 1. The Pompein Marshes In the year 593 when L. Anicius Gallus M. Cornelius Cethegus were Consuls the Senate being in Counsel conc●rning the Provinces because there seemed not sufficient use against the Enemy for the ordinary forces of both the Consuls which are 4 Legions besides the Auxiliaries socii there was a motion made concerning the improvement of a great level of waste land lying under water about xl miles from Rome in Latium Which businesse was entertained with great approbation for like as it is esteemed a most high commondation for a private man to be called a good Hus●andman by the Consuls So doth the Senate now think that they should deserve the praise of good Husbands for the commonwealth if in this opportunity of leisure they could gain such a quantity of rich Land to Italy which is the greatest part mountainous and barren Neither is this imployment thought too mean for the Legions though consisting of Free men For the Roman and Italian Infantry as well accustomed to the Spade and Basket as to the Sword and Buckler use to be their own Pioners in their dayly intrenchments Neither work they for their own safety only in time of danger but for the common good also in time of security The Consuls Ao. 566. had herein given a president who lest their Souldiers should be idle imployed them in making of High-wayes hereupon it was decreed that one Consul should attend the Enemy in Gallia and the other undertake the drayning of the Pompeine Marshes All the Country which lyes Eastward of Rome between the River Tiber and Campania is now united under the name of Latium and in it that place which lyeth towards the Sea beneath the row of Hills which reach from Belitre to Terracina is the largest It is denominate from Suessa Pometia antiently a rich City and metropolitan of the Volsi but now scarce extant The maritime parts of this Vale for a great extent are drowned not so much through any inundation of the Sea whose Tides are here but small as by reason the waters of Amasenus and Ufens the bigger River having not their passages sufficienttly open into the Sea diffuse themselvs over those spacious low grounds up towards Sulmo Setia This tract is therefore cal'd the Pomentin or Pomptin Fens having been in such manner surrounded beyond all memory For Homer describing the arival of Ulysses at the Circean promontory calls it an Island in regard of these waters on the one side and the Sea on the other The which Island sayes Theophrastus had about ten miles of circuit But in his time he wrote about twenty years after Appius had been Cen●or the Rivers by casting up earth had joyned it to the continent So as I do not perceive that hitherto either before the Romans were Lords of the soyl or since there had been any order taken for the winning of this ground from the Water But now by order of the Senate the Pomptin Fens are laid dry by Cornelius Cethegus the Consul to whom that Province fell and they are made good ground The Country people allured therefore with the richnesse of the soyl setled themselves here in such abundance that there was said to be not long after this time for I cannot understand it of any former three and twenty Towns in this place it being a land capable of many thousand Hus●andmen But in after times whilst the state distracted with civil Faction negl●cted the maintenance of the Works the waters again by degrees gained upon the Land so as Iulius Caesar had an intention not only to have drayned the Fenns anew but to have brought the Appian way through them Whether Augus●us did any thing to them may be doubted for in Vespasians time they
said course of that water when need required to make their Ordinances and Laws for preservation of the said Marshes so that alwayes on both parts of that Water-course they should abide by the Ordinances and considerations of the said Iurats as to the prejudice or more safeguard of any mans land notwithstanding any custome whatsoever Saving alwayes the tenour of the King's Charter granted to the Commonality of Romney Marsh and the Ordinance of Henry de Bathe ever to remain in full power and strength Not long after this there hapned certain differences be●wixt the Master of the Hospital called God's house in Dover and certain of his Tenants within the Mannours of Hunychilde and Estbrigge in Romenale marsh touching some Banks and Water-gangs upon the Sea coast which the said Master alledged that his said Tenants for the antient demesnes belonging to him in those Mannours as often as need required should at their proper costs repair and maintain against the violence of the Sea and inundations of the Fresh waters For the hearing and determining of which controversies according to the Law and Custome of the said Marsh Iohn de Lovet Robert de Septvaus Master Thomas de Gudinton and Henry de Appletrefeld were by the King assigned Whereupon the parties so at difference weighing all circumstances touching the same put themselves upon the Inquisition of the Country But the taking thereof in regard that the said Master refused that any persons residing in the said Marsh should be admitted thereof and the said Tenants not being content with any Foreiners was delaid to the great damage of those parts as by complaint the King was informed To put therefore a speedy end to the businesse the said King by his Letters Patents dated at Tydeswell xxiiij Sept. constituted Stephan de Pencestre then Constable of Dover-Castle Henry de Appletrefeld and Bertram de Tancrey his Justices for to make farther enquiry thereof But what was done therein I have not seen About four years afterwards the said King Edward the first taking great care for the defence and preservation of this Marsh by his Letters patents bearing date at Westminster xx April in the xviijth year of his reign wherein he hath this observable expression viz. quod cum nos ratione dignitatis regiae per juramentum astricti sumus ad providendum salvationi Regni nostri circumquaque i. e. in respect of his royal dignity and that he was obliged by Oath to provide for the safeguard of his Kingdome round about assigned H. de Apeldrefeld and Bertram de Tancrey to oversee the Banks and Ditches upon the Sea coasts and parts adjacent in the County of Kent which by reason of the roughnesse of the Sea were in many places broken and to enquire through whose default that damage had hapned As also of all those that held lands and tenements in those parts and had or might have safeguard and defence any manner of way by the said Banks and Ditches and to distrain them for the quantity of their said Lands or number of Acres or Carucates according to the portion that they held together with the Bayliffs of Liberties and others of those parts for the repair of the said Banks and Ditches in necessary places as often and where there should be need so that no Land-holder rich or poor of what estate dignity or condition soever he was in case he had defence and preservation any manner of way by the same Banks of Ditches were he within Liberties or without should have favour in any kind Commanding them moreover that in the execution of that businesse they should behave themselves with such fidelity and discretion that aswell the Inhabitants of those places as their lands might be preserved from the like perils and casually worse any Custome through favour by whomsoever it had been introduced notwithstanding And what they should do and ordain therein to certifie the said King thereof under their Seals and the Seals of xxiiij aswell Knights as other honest and lawful men distinctly and plainly And for their better accomplishment of that businesse directed his Precept to the Shireeve of Kent appointing him that at certain dayes and places of which he was to give them notice he should cause to come before the same King's Justices such and so many honest and lawful men of his Bayliwick by whom the truth in the premisses might be the better known and enquired into By virtue also of which Mandate the said Shireeve had command to bring before the said Justices at that time the xxiiij Jurats of Romene Marsh and all the Lords of the Towns therein and such and so many honest and lawful men of all of the maritime parts in his Bayliwick by whom the truth in the premisses might likewise be the better known and enquired of and to do farther what should be ordained in the premisses Which Commissioners came accordingly as also the said xxiiij Jurats together with the Commonality of this Marsh and alleged that K. Henry the Father of the said King Edward by his Charter granted to them certain Liberties in their Lands within the same Marsh and required that those their Liberties might be preserved and nothing accepted or ordained in prejudice of them producing the Charter of the said King Henry in which was recorded the Ordinance of Henry de Bathe And farther declared their approbation of the said Ordinance with the additions thereto in such manner and form as they had before done in the xvith year of this King's reign before Iohn de Lovetot and the said Henry de Apeldrefeld then the Kings Justices as I have at large already shewed whereunto for avoiding repetition I refer my Reader Adding moreover by common agreement to those wholsome Ordinances these ensuing Constitutions viz. 1. That through all other maritime places in the said County lyable to the danger of the Sea the River of Thames or any other water wherein the Marsh Law had not formerly been established and used and that divers perils through defect of Banks and Water-gangs had there hapned Lest therefore for the future the like or worse might accrue 2. That in every Hundred and Town aswell by the Sea coast as bordering on the Thames and other waters in which the Marsh lands are subject to inundation there be chosen and sworn xij or six lawful men according to the largeness of the Hundreds or Towns who have lands in danger of the Sea the Thames other waters Which men to be assigned keepers of the Banks and Water-gangs in the Hundreds Towns aforesaid who upon their Oath shall keep safe the said● Banks and Water-gangs and when and as often as need requireth repair them As also shall in respect of the raging of the Sea raise the said Banks higher by four foot at the least than formerly they were and make them of thickness answerable to that height 3. For the reparation of which Banks and Water-gangs when need
his Heirs and Successors and in all other Courts and places whatsoever Which said Bayliff and Jurats to be elected in like manner and form as also exercise their Offices and be displaced from them as heretofore it was wont and accustomed to be in the said Marsh. And moreover that the said Bayliff Jurats and Commonalty and their Successors shall have a certain Court before them the said Bayliff and Jurats of the said Marsh for the time being at some certain convenient place within the same to be held from three weeks to three weeks for ever And have full power and authority to hear and determine in the said Court by Bills of complaint therein all and singular Pleas of Debts Accompts Covenants Contracts Trespasses by force and Arms or otherwise in contempt of the said King or his Heirs with many other Liberties and Privileges of which for brevity I omit the rehearsal referring my Reader to the Record it self if he desire to be farther informed therein And likewise the said King for himself and his Heirs then granted to the said Bayliff Jurats and Commonalty and their successors that they shall from time to time have power to make reasoable Ordinances and Constitutions of good credit and consonant to reason for the common good of the said Marsh as also for the sound and wholsome Government thereof and for the common profit of the Inhabitants and residents therein to make use of them and put them in execution within the bounds and limits thereof And likewise to change them and every of them for ever as they shall see best And that the said Bayliff Jurats and Commonalty and their successors for the necessities and profits relating to the said Marsh shall amongst themselves assess and levy Taxes and lay impositions upon the Goods Lands Tenements and Merchandizes of the Inhabitants and residents being within the bounds and limits of the said Marsh and otherwise as it shall seem best to them without the let● or impediment of the said King or his heirs or his or their Justices or other their Officers whatsoever And moreover granted to the said Bayliffs Jurats and Commonalty and their successors that none of them or of their heirs and successors thenceforth should be put or impanelled in any Assizes Juries Recognitions Attaints or any other Inquisitions whatsoever out of the bounds and limits of the said Marsh nor to be compelled to go out of those bounds or limits to travail on any Juries Inquisitions Assizes Recognitions Attaints or matters whatsoever though they concern the said King or his Heirs Nor that any of them shall be made an Assessor Taxer or Collector of Tenths Fifteens or any parcell thereof or of any other Chardge Subsidy Tallage c. whatsoever CAP XII HAving now done with Romney marsh I come to East Kent in which the first thing observable wherewith I have met is that the K. Edw. the first by his Letters Patents bearing date at Westminster xvio Maii in the thirteenth year of his reign making mention that he had granted license to his Barons of Sandwich for the digging of a certain Trench over the lands lying betwixt Gestlinge and Stonflete and from Stonflete to the said Town of Sandwich to the intent that the passage of the water called Northbroke which was at Gestling should be diverted so that it might run to Sandwich for the perpetual commodity of that Town and his Barons thereof he the said King assigned Solomon de Rochester and Roger de Norwode to enquire by the Oaths of honest and lawful men of the County of Kent in what place the said Trench and over whose lands and to the least damage of the said Landholders it might be most fitly made As also to provide and take care that the same Trench and turning of the said water should be so done that the owners of those Lands over which it was to passe might be satisfied for the hurt they should receive thereby before the work was begun About three years after the said King directing his Precept dated at Tuttebury the xvijth day of November in the 16th year of his reign unto Edmund de Passele Iohn de Ifelde and Stephan de la Dane and therein expressing that by reason of the defect in repair and support of the Banks Ditches c. on the Sea-coasts and adjacent Lands lying in the parts of East-Kent very great damage through the violence of the Sea and overflowing of the fresh waters had hapned and that greater would ensue unlesse some speedy remedy were applyed for prevention thereof he constituted the said Edmund Iohn and Stephan his Justices to supervise and take care thereof By virtue of which Precept the Shireeve of Kent was commanded to bring before the said Justices at a certain day and place xxiiij aswell Knights as other honest and lawful men of the Vicinage of Monketone and Menstre in the Isle of Thanet and to enquire of the premisses At which day he accordingly returned his Writ and brought before them Iohn Fryday Roger Belringer and others who being sworn to take view of the defects in those Banks Ditches Gutters and Sewers in the Marshes of Monketone and Menstre and to certifie unto the said Justices through whose default those damages had hapned they answered that they knew not except it were by the boysterousnesse of the Sea and the flouds of fresh waters And being asked when the said Banks and Ditches were so destroyed and who ought and had wont to repair them They said upon their Oaths that when the Sea-bank was new made all the men that had lands lying within the danger of inundation whether they were neer or remote and who had preservation by the same Bank did contribute according to the proportion of what they held for a certain time to the making and reparation thereof And after the making and first repair of the same those then who had lands adjacent thereto did at their own costs repair the same defects which afterwards hapned and not any others And having perused the Ordinances of Sir Henry de Bathe Iohn de Lovetot and other Justices their associates which were approved and confirmed by the King in which Ordinances it was expresly contained that all persons having Lands or Tenements or common of Pasture or Fishing or that had defence and preservation in any sort or might have by the Banks Ditches Gutters Sewers c. in those Marish grounds ought to contribute according to the quantity of their said Lands and Tenements either by number of Acres or by Carucates according to the proportion of their said tenure not only to the new making of the said Banks Ditches c. but to their repair and support as often and whensover need should require Whereupon it seemed meet to the said Justices that not only they who had grounds lying neer to those Banks but also they who held lands situate within the before-specified Marshes of Monketone and Menstre whether neer
course of time when they issued out viz. To Robert de Setvans William de Hastings and William Maufe in 27 E. 1. To Henry de Appletrefeld Robert de Setvans and others in 28 E. 1. In 30 E. 1. to Lu●as atte Gate Robert de Setvans Will. Maufe and William Colebrand In 31 E. 1. to Robert Paulyn Robert de Septem Vannis Will. de Hastings and Lucas atte Gate In 32 E. 1. to VVill. de Echingham Robert de Passeleye and Henry VVardeden As also to Iohn de Buran VVilliam Maufe and Lucas atte Gate In 34 E. 1. to Iohn Malemeyns Lucas atte Gate and Robert Paulyn for those Banks Ditches c. in the Marshes of Pychardesbroke and Kechenhammebroke and elswhere in the said Counties In 35 E. 1. to VVill. Pyrot Iohn Malemeyns Iohn de Gosehale and Henry de Bugthorpe In 1 E. 2. to Iohn Malemeyns Lucas atte Gate and Robert Paulyn for the Banks c. in the Marshes of Mayhamme and Losenhamme In 7 E. 2. to Iohn Malemeyns of Stoke Robert de Echynghamme and Mathew de Knelle for those on both sides the River of Newendene betwixt Mathew and Bodihamme bridge In 10 E. 2. to Robert de Bardelby and Edmund de Passele for those in the Marshes betwixt the Redehulle and the Town of Roberts-Brigge on each side the River Lymene In 14 E. 2. to Iohn de Ifeld Iohn Malemaynes of Hoo and Richard de Echi●ham for those in the Marshes betwixt the Town of Apuldre and Roberts-Brigge on each side of the said River of Lymene In 17 E. 2. to Stephan de Cobham Iohn Filoll VVill. de Robertsbrigge for the same So also to VVill. de Echyngham Robert Bataill and VVilliam de Robertsbrigge About the beginning of E. 3. time it being found by an Inquisition taken before VVill. Truslell then the King's E●ca●tor on this side Trent that the Chanel of a certain River running betwixt the Lands of Geffrey de Knelle and Isabell Aucher between a certain place called Knellesflete in the confines of these Counties and the Town of Robertsbrigge in Sussex was so much enlarged by the flowing of the Sea-tides into it that six hundred and fifty acres of land part belonging to the said Geffrey and part to others were thereby totally drowned and consumed And that a certain Causey which is the common high way lying betwixt the Land of Iohn de la Gate in the said County of Sussex and the bridge of Newendon as also the said bridge were broken and demolished by those tides and moreover that divers lands in the said parts would in a short time be drowned and destroyed except a speedy remedy were had And likewise that it would not be to the damage or prejudice of the said King or any other if he did grant license to the said Geffrey and Isabell and to other persons having lands contiguous to those places to exclude the said tides and to raise a Bank at Knellesflete aforesaid betwixt the lands of the said Geff. Isabell in that place to resist the said tides for preservation of the lands way bridge aforesaid to the end that the antient course of that River might be preserved by sufficient Gutters placed in that Bank And that unlesse it were by such an exclusion of the Tides by making of such a Bank that the said Lands way and bridge could not be in safeguard The King therefore being careful in all respects to provide for the defence of this his Realm as was fit granted license to the said Geffrey and Isabell as also to all those who were like to have advantage by that exclusion that they should raise a certain Bank at Knellesflete before-mentioned for that purpose and to make sufficient Gutters therein for the issuing out of the said fresh water and to repair the same Banks and Sluces being so made when and as often as ne●d should require In 10 E. 3. VVill. de Robertsbrigge VVill. de Recolvere Ioceline de Gatele and Robert Bataille were constituted Commissioners to oversee the making of certain Sluces Banks and Gutt●rs for the safeguard of the lands of divers Tenants in the Towns of Wightresham Idene and Pesemershe and to assesse all such as had lands in those parts which were to take benefit thereby for the performance of that work according to the proportion of what they held About the same time upon another Inquisition taken it being certified that by the ebbing and flowing of the tides into a certain stream of fresh water running betwixt the Lands of the before-specified Geffrey de Knelle and Isabell Aucher between Knelleflete above-mentioned and the said Town of Robertsbrigge six hundred and fifty Acres of Land belonging to the said Geffrey and others were drowned the King thereupon granted the like license to the said Geffrey and Isabell to raise a certain Bank at Knellesflete to restrain those Tides as also to make Sluces and sufficient Gutters for evacuation of the said fresh water so that the antient course thereof might be preserved And afterwards did appoint Roger de Bavent Roger de Hegham Thomas de Lincolne and Will. de Northo to oversee the making of that Sluce and raising of the said Bank and ●o ordain assessments and to distrain all such as by the said Inquisition should be thought needful to contribute to the chardge of that work according to the proportion of their holding which Banks Gutters and Sluce being accordingly made and the said King informed that they were grown to decay did by his Letters Patents bearing date at the Tower of London on the 8th day of Ianuary in the said tenth year of his reign constitute Will. de Orlauston Thomas de Gillingham Stephan de Padiham and Iohn de Betenham to take view of them and to provide for their repair But in 22 E. 3. there being a Petition presented to the King on the behalf of Iames de Echingham and on the morrow after the Feast of S. Hillarie exhibited before the said King and his Councel in his Parliament then held at Westminster importing that those Lands might have been preserved by the repair of the old Banks on the verge of that River and that the Bank made by virtue of the said King's Letters Patents before mentioned which thwarted the said stream was raised aswell to the damage of the said King as of him the said Iames forasmuch as thereby such ships and Boats which had used to passe with victual and other things from divers places in these Counties of Kent and Sussex unto his Mannour of Echingham through this Chanel were then hindred as also to the destruction of his Market Town of Salehurst situate upon the said River and of his Market there which by the course of that water had been supported and out of which the said Iames and his Ancestors had used to receive Toll and many
upon their Oaths that the common Watercourse betwixt Asheburnehamesmyll and Batesford to Godyngeshavene was so obstructed by sand mud grasse and other filth that three thousand seven hundred eighty and three Acres of land were by this stoppage of the course of the fresh waters drowned that it would be necessary profitable for the safeguard restoration of those lands that the common current from Morespicheswalle to the Mark dyke were newly clensed which contained six furlongs by estimation and might be scoured for xij Marks Which Chanel all the Landholders as well above Borham bregge as Rokland Morhale Hoo Ladyland Cralle and of the Land of Christian atte Mershe ought to make clense and scour And they also said that the current from Markdyke to Pevenese bridge contained in length xiij furlongs which being then likewise filled with mud and sand by the ebbing and flowing of the tides might be clensed and scoured according to their estimation for xll. And that there was need of a new Sluse at the said Pevenese bridge in length xx foot in bredth xiiij and in height four foot which might be made for xl. by estimation to the scouring of which Chanel and making the Sluce all the Land-holders above Borham bregge in Brodewyshe and Cornbroke ought to make full contribution and the Land-holders above Tonleghebregge to Condennesbregge half contribution according to the proportion of their lands And likewise all the Landholders on the South side of Morespicheswalle half contribution according to the quantity of their said lands And that all the Land-holders in the marsh of Mankesye Bestenovere Marchalls Bakers and Wykham to contribute for the purposes abovesaid a fourth part for this present occasion but not to be claimed as a due in time to come And they farther said that it would be necessary and profitable for all the Land-holders aforesaid and for the security of Pevense Haven that all the Banks on the other side upon the Saltes from Morespicheswalle to the Sea should be broken and taken away without any impediment of the Tenants of those Banks And they said moreover that if the said Port of Pevenese had not been stopt up with mud and sand by the ebbing and flowing of the Tides so that the fresh water from the said Sluse could not have it's course then would it have been needfull that the said Sluce should be pulled up and set down anew at Wyldemershe betwixt the Sluce of Hoo and the Sluce of Mankeseye and that a new Sewer should be made from the said Sluce so placed anew through the midst of the Lands of Iohn Aske unto the Kokyr of Mankesye allowing for the Land of the said Iohn Aske according to the Law Custome of Romene marsh Also they said that it would be necessary and beneficial for the Abbot and Covent of Begham for his lands at Roklond that they and their successors have one little Sewer with a bolt fastned under the common Water-course into the Brook of Hoo for evacuation of the dead water arising from rain and springs in the said grounds of Roklond and this to be made at their own proper chardges And the said Abbot and his successors to maintain the said VVater-course from that bolt called Morespicheswalle at their own proper chardges And if the said current through the increase of the water should go out of it's course by the neglect of the said Abbot or his successors that then it might be lawful for the Tenants of Hoo to shut up the said bolt untill he the said Abbot and his successors did make full satisfaction to the said Tenants of Hoo for their losses therby occasioned And the said Jurors did likewise affirm that it would be necessary to have one Bayliff one Collector one Expenditor and other Skawers of the most sufficient land-holders who might have power to do all things therein according to the Law and Custome of Romene marsh and to make new Ordinances of Pevense marsh and to return them into the Chancery to be exemplified with the said Kings great Seal so that if the said Sewers or Floudgates should be so repaired they might have benefit and full safety thereby And that in case a proper remedy were not the sooner had therein an inestimable losse would be like to happen within a very short time VVhereupon there was a Precept issued out both to the Constable of Dovor Castle or his Lieutenant and to the Shireeve of Sussex that both of them should give warning to all and every the land-holders of the Tenements within those Towns to appear before the said Commissioners at Marchalleswalle neer the ......... of Pevense upon the Thursday being the Eve of S. Margaret the Virgin then next ensuing to shew what they could say for themselves why they ought not to be chardged with the performance of those repairs according to the proportion of their holding and form of the said Inquisition and to do and undergo what the Kings Court should further appoint in that behalf And accordingly Iohn Colbrond was elected to the O●fi●e of B●yliff and sworn to act according to the Custome of the Marsh And Richard Palmere to the Office of Collector and Expenditor and sworn as aforesaid And Thomas Colbrond William Bulke and others to the Office of Skawers and sworn likewise to undergo that Office according to the Law and Custome of the said Marsh. At which day the said Lieutenant to the Constable of Dovor Castle made his return to the before-specified Prior of Michesham and his Fellow Justices that he did summon Iohn Aske Robert Redyng with divers others to appear before them and likewise the Abbot of Begham But the said Iohn Aske and many others appeared not But Iohn Wodelond and some others who did appear were ready to contribute to those repairs c. In 8 H. 4. Sir Iohn Dalingrugge Knight George Ballard Stephan Bettenhamme Will. Snayth Henry Horne and others were constituted Commissioners for the view and repair of the Banks upon the Sea-coast from a certain place called Blakwose in Kent unto Rye in this County and the coasts of the water called Apoldreflete from the Sea to Bodihamme on both sides the said water which at that time were much broken with the Tides And to perform all things therein according to the Law and Custome of England and the Custome of Romeney Marsh. And the next year following the same Sir Iohn Dalingregge Sir Iohn Pelham Knight Robert Oxenbrigge Iohn Hall the elder and Iohn Hall the younger had the like Commission for the Banks upon the Sea-coast betwixt Hastynges and Boxle within the Parishes and Towns of Wyltyng Holyngton Boxle Crowherst Hastynges and Bulwerhythe and to transact all things therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm In 2 H. 5. upon an Inquisition taken before Thomas Erpyngham Constable of Dovor Castle Will. Brenchesle Robert Oxenbrigge and others for the view and repair of the Banks betwixt Farleghe in
of Sewers wherewith I have met in our publick Records is in 32 E. 1. which was directed to Robert de Clare Gilbert de Bere and Master Gereberd who were thereby assigned to view and take order for the repair of the Banks Ditches Gutters and Sewers in Brentmershe Pederham Wringemershe and Saltmershe and to clense the Gutters Chanels in such sort as that the streams as well of the fresh water as salt might have thenceforth their right and antient course in all those places In 2 E. 2. Matthew de Furneaus and Will. de Burne were constituted Commissioners in like sort for all the Banks c. in general both upon the Sea-coasts and elswhere in this County The like Commission in 4 E 2. had Iohn Randolf Iohn the Son of Tho. de Beauchamp Will. de Burn. So also in 9 E. 2. had Iohn de Meryet Richard de Rodeneye and Iohn de Clivedone In which year likewise Iohn Randolf Will. de Harden Iohn de Westcote and Richard de Rodney were appointed to enquire of the breach of the Banks and Ditches of Iohn de Goddeleigh Dean of Wells in the lands belonging to his Deanery at Merk in this County which very antiently in the time of his Pred●cessors had been raised for the preservation of the lands of the same Deanery Modesse Wodmore and Bydesham against the power of the fresh waters which descended by a certain Chanel in the said Town of Merk towards the Sea And also of certain Sluces of the said Dean in his said Town of Merk built for the evacuation of water in floud times which S●uses were then broken down by Philip de Columbers Robert de Brente Iohn his Brother and others The like Commission was then directed to the said Iohn Randolf and the rest to enquire of the breach of the Banks c● of Iohn Bishop of Bathe and Welles in the lands of his Bishoprick at Blakeford neer Merke before-specified Many other Commissions for the view and repair of the Sea-banks and others in this County were afterwards granted to several persons viz. in 10 E. 2. to Iohn de Beauchamp Will. de Burne and Iohn de Fosse In 18 E. 2. to Iohn Randolf Elias de Godele and the said Iohn de Fosse In 19 E. 2. to Iohn de Clyvedon Hugh de Langelond and Elias de Godele In 20 E. 2. to Iohn de Mohun and Iohn Randolf In 3 E. 3. to Iohn Inge Hugh de Langlond and Peter Coleswayn for those Banks betwixt Bristoll and Muchaney In 14 E. 3. to Richard Lovel Henry Power and Roger de la Walle for those in Brentmershe betwixt the Town of Stert and Burcle in length and Wollavyngton and Hegh brugge now called High bridge in bredth In 17 E. 3. to Richard Lovel Iohn Inge Iohn de Mere and Henry Power for those betwixt Bristoll and Dunstere and the parts adjacent So also in 22 E. 3. to Iohn Inge Iohn de Clyvedon Henry Power and Adam Bret. In 25 E. 3. to Sir Iohn de Clyvedon Sir Iohn de Seintlo Knights Iohn de Somerton and Nicholas de Ledrede for the Banks in divers parts of this County In 32 E. 3. upon a pleading occasioned by an Indictment against the Dean of Welles and Richard de Cogan and their Tenants for the not scouring the Watercourse neer Hakmede and Holimede and against the Dean alone for two Sluses called Netherpound and Southerpound and for a Floud-gate called Hakewere they were then acquitted In the same year Mathew de Clivedon Sir Iohn de Clivedon Knight Sir Walter de Paveley Knight and others were assigned to view and repair the Banks c. betwixt Bristoll and Taunton and betwixt Bruton and Severne In 34 E. 3. Sir Richard de Acton Sir Iohn de S. Lo Knights and others had the like assignation for the Banks betwixt Bristoll Martok and Taunton and betwixt Bruton and Severne In 36 E. 3. Sir Richard de Diton Knight Walter de Aldebury Sir Iohn de Seintlo Knight Mathew de Clivedon and others had the like for those at Bristoll Mertok and Taunton as also at Welyngton Dunsterre Bruton and Severne So also in 1 R. 2. had Sir Richard Acton Knight Henry Percehay Sir Iohn de la Mare Knight Sir Iohn L'orly Knight Robert Syddenham Robert Cheddre and Iohn Panet In 2 R. 2. Sir Iames de Audeley Knight Lord of Hely Sir Will. Botreaux Knight Sir Henry Percehay Knight Sir Richard Acton Knight Walter Clopton and others were constituted Commissioners for the view and repair of the banks c. in Brentmershe and Wryngemershe and in other places upon the Sea-coast and water of Severne betwixt Bristoll and Dunsterre After this divers Commissions for the Banks Ditches c. in general throughout this County were issed out viz. in 5 R. 2. to Sir Maurice Wyth Sir Will. de Bonvile Sir Iohn Weyland Knights Richard de Sydenham and Iohn Manyngford And in the same year to the before-specified Sir Iames de Audeley Sir Guy de Bryan Sir Will. Cogan Sir Iohn Trivet Sir Iohn Rodeney and Sir Iohn de la Mare Knights Iohn Cary Will. Cary Iohn Domere and Iohn Barre By virtue of which Commission the said Sir Guy de Brien Sir Will. Cogan Sir Iohn Tryvet Sir Iohn Rodeneye and Sir Iohn de la Mare Knights Iohn Cary Iohn Domere and Iohn Baree met at Bridgwater on Monday next after the Feast day of S. Margaret the Virgin where the Shireeve of the County having received the said Kings Precept to that purpose caused xij honest and lawful men within his liberty to appear viz. Iohn Ivethorn Iohn Eyr c. who did upon their Oaths present that there was a certain bank called Southlake Wall lying betwixt the Path and Tutte yate trees in Weston by which divers Watercourses called Runes were obstructed by the Abbot of Glastonbury and his Tenants insomuch as the said water overflowed and drowned the Meadows and Pastures of many men to the damage of the whole Country and that the said Abbot and his Tenants ought to reform the same And they also said that there were in the River of Peret two VVeres called Tappyng Weres whereby the course of the water was straitned which ought to be amended and removed by the Abbot of Glastonbury and Bishop of Winchester And that there was a certain pleck of Osiars at Tutte yate in Weston appropriated by the said Abbot and his Tenants by which the water course was straitned and stopt to the damage of the Country and that it ought to be amended and totally removed by the said Abbot and his Tenants Whereupon the said Abbot and his Tenants constituted Iohn Panes and Iohn Fitelton their Attorneys to answer to this chardge By another Inquisition taken at that time before the said Justices upon the Oaths of Iohn Strache and others
was amended at the time of the presentment made and long before as the said Abbot and his Tenants of UUythies had also pleaded And as to the Trees growing athwart the River at Monketon they said that they did grow above those Mills ●here boats never came nor ought of right to come as the said Abbot had also pleaded And touching the pleck of Osiars they said that the same nusance was amended and totally removed as the Tenants of the said Abbot had also pleaded And as to the ground in Monketon appropriated by the said Abbot his Servants and Tenants by planting of VVillows and other Trees thereon they likewise said that the said nusance was also amended and totally taken away as the said Abbot had alleged Upon all which considerations it was determined that the said Abbot and his Tenants and Servants excepting the before-specified amerciaments should be dischardged In 11 R. 2. there was another general Commission directed to the Abbot of Glastonbury Nicholas de Audley Guy de Brienne and others for the view and repair of all the banks Ditches c. in this County In 2 H. 4. Sir Peter Courtney Sir Humfrey Stafford Sir William Bonville Sir Thomas Brooke Knights Iohn Strech and Iohn Manyngford were appointed to view and repair the banks c. at Bristoll Mertok Taunton Yevelchestre Welyngton Dunsterre Bruton and Severne and in all places betwixt Bristoll and Dunsterre and betvvixt Bruton and Severne to do all things therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm In 6 H. 4. the Master of S. Marks House in Bristoll was dischardged from the repair of the Bridges scouring of the Ditches and making of Sluses in the Towns and places of Powlet Combwich Pyriton Huntspill and betvvixt Blakbrig and Purytonbrugg as also from the clensing the Chanell called Hyburne and likewise that which goeth from the Town of Cork running to Hyburne betwixt the Mannour of Stokeland which belonged to the said Master and the Mannour of Wyke which was the Lord Poynings And likewise for the Sluce of Thele for shutting out the Sea-water and moreover for the stone bridge in the VVarth of Wyke In 5 H. 5. Sir Will. Botreaux Knight Thomas Chaucer and Richard Chedder Esquires Iohn Stourton William Sparow and Iohn Gregori of Bruton were assigned to view and repair the banks betvvixt the Cities of Bathe and Bristol and from Yilcestre Lamport Briggewater and Taunton and to proceed therein according to the Custome of the Marsh and the Law and Custome of this Realm The like assignation in 2 H. 6. had N. Bishop of Bathe and Welles Sir Will. Botreaux Sir Thomas Stowell Knights William Westbury Iohn Warre Iohn Stourton and Iohn Beaf for the banks in Brentmershe Wryngemershe and Pouldon and to do all things therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm As also to take so many Labourers upon competent wages to be imployed therein as should be requisite in regard of the great necessity of expediting the vvork So also the next year following vvere Sir Thomas Broke Knight Richard Cheddre Esquire Iohn Marchant and William Newetone for those betwixt Yevelchestre Burneham and Welles and to act therein and imprest Labourers as aforesaid And in 33 H. 6. Sir Thomas Seymour Knight Robert Warre Esquire Alexander Hody Roger Fitz Iames Iohn Sidenham junior Iohn Porter and William Bodesham had the like appointment for the banks c. betvvixt the Town of Langeport-Estoner on the East side and the Town of Thurlokeston on the West as also betvvixt the Tovvn of Cory-Malet on the South part and the Tovvn of Briggewater on the North and to make Lavvs and Ordinances therein and to proceed in all things touching the same according to the Lavv and Custome of Romeney Marsh. And in 3 E. 4. Richard Chokke Sir Theobald Gorges and Sir Walter Rodeney Knights Iohn Fitz Iames senior and Robert Stowell Esquire had the like for the Banks c. from Ryngwelle to Haylake Yoo thence to Shestrygge Yoo thence to Colestoke and thence to Blakstake in the See and to proceed therein as abovesaid Thus much for the Commissions I next come to the Watercourses of Brent marsh and who did antiently repair them The Lord of Bageworthe ought to repair the Chanel from Blakelake unto the Sea And the Lord of Bitesham that from Winesbrugge to the Sea Philip the Son of Corbin that from Winesbrugge to Blakelake Hugh the Son of Auger and the same Philip from Hengestes mere to the Sea The second course from Hengestesmere to the Sea the same Hugh the son of Auger and the third course from Hengestesmere to the Sea Raph de Seinbarbe From the mouth of Mere to the Sea the Church of Glastonbury and from another part from Blakeswelleshevede to the Sea the Church of Glastonbury From Schipperide to Wakefen the Dean of Welles and so from Wakefen to the Land of Robert de Ewyas Lord of Hewisch and from Brodecrofte to the Mill of Geffrey Lord of Burham From Thipride to Baggepole the Dean of Welles and Lord of Blakeforde Also from Baggepole to Watebrok the said Lord of Blakeforde From Wathebrok the Dean of Welles upon his own Land and Robert de Countvile also for as far as his Land extended After him the Lord of Alnodestone beyond Aldodestone were beyond Wereham Bagerde superior and inferior to the Sea So also from Bethepulle unto the Land of Chalftone and from Ewendone and Chalftone unto Cosingtone and from Cosingtone to Honispel and thence to the Sea Sedgmore There is also in this County a large Fenny plain which being covered with water for the most part of the VVinter and in Summer affordeth nothing but Rushes Reeds and Sedge hath thence the name of Sedgmoore Over this level there is a fair Causey of stones and gravel from Somerton to Bridgwater about eight miles in length antiently made by one of the Abbots of Glastonbury as tradition saith which still bearing his name is called Graylock's fosse I do not find from the authority of any Records or other credible testimony that there was ever any endeavour used for the improvement of this Moor by drayning till of late dayes that King Iames of blessed memory making title to the soyl resolved to do it But as in most other places there be a perverse generation of people who of themselves are not content to sit still but will hinder others that would promote such laudable works for the publick good so was it here for divers there were that made opposition thereto But after a Bill exhibited in the Exchequer those opponents and the rest of the owners of the adjacent Lordships commoning with their Cattel upon this Moor discerning that they could make no justifiable claim to the soyl offer'd to assign unto the King four thousand Acres in lieu of his right thereto and to lay out the residue being nine thousand five hundred twenty and two Acres unto those their
that Margerie the VVidow of Robert de Botheby of Rihill conspiring cunningly to supplant him in his right caused the same trench in the said Kings absence from England to be stopt up and his Tenants of that Mannour who were at the making thereof to be impleaded by divers VVrits as trespassers to the said Margerie alleging that they had broken the Banks of a certain Sewer at Rihill aforesaid so that the water thereof by that breach did drown her lands that she could have no profit by them And that certain VVrits of Nisi prius for to take Inquisition upon the premisses were granted to the said Richard and VVilliam by which in case they should be taken or that there should be such proceedings therein he the said King might easily receive prejudice and disherison especially if thereby his said Tenants should be convicted of those trespasses for then it would appear that he had no right to make that trench Therefore the said King being desirous by all wayes he could to prevent such damage and disherison commanded the before-specified Richard and William that they should wholly supersede the taking of any such Inquisitions by virtue of his said VVrit of Nisi prius In 17 E. 3. Sir Thomas Ughtred Sir Gerard de Useflet and Sir Will. de Kednesse Knights Iohn de Bekingham and Iohn de Langeton were assigned to view the banks betwixt Turnbrigg neer Rouclif and the antient course of the River of Done in the parts of Merskland as also those upon the Rivers of Ayre Use and Done thereabouts which were then much broken by the flouds of fresh waters and to take order for the repair of them In the same year upon a Petition exhibited to the King in Parliament by the Inhabitants of Merskland in this County and they of ●xholme in Lincolnshire shewing that whereas King Edward the second at the sute of them the said Inhabitants suggesting that the River of Done which is the division betwixt the said Counties where the course of the water had wont to be aswell for the passage of ships from the town of Doncastre unto the River of Trent as for the drayning of the adjacent lands was obstructed by the Sea-tides and thereupon gave Commission to Iohn de Donecaster and others to clear the same and reduce it to it 's antient course VVhich Commissioners did accordingly cause a trench of xvi foot and one grain of Barly in bredth to be thereupon digged at the chardge of the men of those parts from a certain place called Crulleflet hill unto Denmyn and did thereby reduce that stream into it's antient course And that since the said trench so digg'd there were bridges floud-gates and divers other obstructions made anew in the said stream so that it had not sufficient bredth but that the passage of ships was hindred and the adjacent grounds overflowed he therefore constituted Roger de Newmarsh Thomas de Levelannor Iohn de Ludington and Iohn de Rednesse his Commissioners to remove those obstructions In the same year upon information by the Inhabitants of Rykhale Skipwith Eskrik Styvelyngflet Duffeld and Bardelby that the banks of a certain Sewer which passeth from the River of Ouse unto Rikhale were so low and ruinous at Rikhale that by the flowing of the Ouse entring that Sewer and going over the banks thereof divers lands and Meadows of the said Inhabitants of those places as also a certain Road-way which goeth from Hoveden to Yorke and another which commeth from Selby to Yorke through want of repair of those banks and raising them higher were many times overflowed so that the before-specified Inhabitants for many years past had lost the benefit of their said lands the King therefore assigned Will. Basset Sir Will. de Rednesse Knight Robert de Haldanby and Iohn de Bekyngham his Commissioners to enquire thereof and to redresse the same By virtue of which Commission they the said Robert and Iohn sate at Rikhale upon Friday being the Feast of the decollation of S. Iohn Baptist in the year abovesaid before whom Henry de Moreby and his Fellow Jurors being impanelled and sworn did present upon their Oaths that there was a certain Sewer at Ryhkale called Rykhaleflete in the land of the Bishop of Duresme and the Prebendary of the Prebend of Rykhale by which the waters that descended from the Fields of Eskrik Skipwith and Rikhall fell into the River of Ouse and had done so time out of mind and that the banks of the said Sewer and those lying near thereto upon the said River were so low and the same Sewer by the frequent ebbing and flowing of the Ouse so worn away and enlarged in regard that the course of that River from Rikhale towards the Sea was then more straightned than formerly by banks upon the verge thereof newly made for the safeguard of the Country in divers places which causing it in Floud-times to rise higher than usually did by it's entrance of that Sewer over those banks drown much land meadow wood and pasture belonging to the Inhabitants of Rikhale Skipwith Eskrik and Thurgramby so that they often lost their benefit of those lands through the want of repair and raising the banks of the same Sewer viz. of the Bishop of Dure●me his Lands about Lxiiij Acres of the Lands belonging to the Prebendary of Rikhale and his Tenants about an hundred Acres of the land of Iohn de Manesergh about xxx Acres of the lands belonging to the Abby of S. Marie in Yorke lying in Escrik Park about Lx Acres of the lands pertaining to Sir Raphe de Lascels Avice la Constable Nicholas Damory the Prioresse of Thikheve and her Tenants about Cxx Acres of the lands of Edmund de Averenges and Iohn de Skipwith about Cxx Acres And they also said that the Road-way which leadeth from Hoveden to Yorke as also that High way from Selby to Yorke were by reason of that overflowing of the water entring by the said Sewer so often drowned that no man could passe them And that one Will. le Mareschall by reason of the said overflowing was drowned in that Road betwivt Seleby and Yorke the year before and so likewise was one Walter Redhed at another time in a place called Welebrig overflowed in such sort by the said water And being asked through whose neglect it was that those banks were not repaired and who ought to repair them they answered that the Prebendary of the Prebend of Rikhale had in times past a certain Mill which stood in the said Sewer in a place called Rikhaldrun for his own private commodity and a pool raised to a certain height upon which pool was a Causey for the passage of Carts and Waines and under that pool a Sluse six foot in bredth for evacuation of the water descending from the before-specified fields by which Causey and Sluse the tides of Ouse coming up the same Sewer and flowing over the banks thereof entring the said pool were
in the VVapentakes of Mauley and Coryngham and in the Soke of Kirketone in the said County of Lincolne and in the Soke or Hundred of Bas●tlawe in this County And to make Statutes and Ordinances therein consonant to the Laws of this Realm and the Laws and Customes of Romeney marsh and to do all other things touching the same according to the Law of this Realm and the said Customes of Romeney marsh As also to imprest so many Labourers upon competent wages to be imployed in the said work as should be needfull considering the great and urgent necessity for the speedy accomplishment thereof The like Commission in 14 E. 4. had Thomas Bishop of Lincolne Will. Lord Hastyngs Sir Iohn Scrope of Bolton Knight Sir Robert Markham Knight Iohn Stanhope Gervase Clifton Robert Willughby Thomas Molineux Thomas Nevill and Iohn Metheley for the view and repair of the Banks and Sewers● from Broughton-Sulny unto the River of Devene in this County and from Feldyke in Bingham unto the said River of Devene as also by and about the same River from the County of Leicester beyond Kilvyngton unto the River of Trent in this County And to proceed therein as abovesaid So also in 22 E. 4. had the same Archbishop and most of the before-mentioned persons But farther touching the Fens in this County I have not seen other than what a Law of Sewers made at Stockwith 14 Aug. 5 Caroli mentioneth which is that whereas Iohn Lyens and other Dutch men had undertaken to the King and his privy Council to drayn the Carrs and Marshes in the Lordship of Hatfield in the County of Yorke Axholme in the County of Lincolne and other great Carrs in this County of Notingham and had made divers great Rivers and drayns to that purpose it was decreed that for the better conveying away of the waters one Sluce should be erected on Bikersdyke within the Parish of Misterton at a place lying over the bridge called Bleesford bridge and to make a cut over the common grounds called Bleesford to Mifterton firm grounds And that whereas the said Iohn and his Participants became undertakers for the drayning of certain Carr grounds in Everton in this County of Notingham in consideration thereof they were to have to them and their heirs and assignes for ever five hundred Acres of land laid out from Everton inclosures all along by Gryngeley bank side unto the Tofte Carr banke or New bank to be set out by Surveyors chosen on each part CAP. XXVII BEing now come into Lincolnshire I shall first begin with the Isle of Arholme which for many ages hath been a Fenny tract and for the most part covered with waters but more antiently not so for originally it was a woody Country and not at all annoyed with those inundations of the Rivers that passed through it as is most evident by the great numbers of Oak Firr and other Trees which have been of late frequently found in the Moor upon making of sundry Ditches and Chanels for the drayning thereof the Oak Trees lying somewhat above three foot in depth and neer their roots which do still stand as they growed viz. in firm earth below the Moor and the bodies for the most part North VVest from the roots not cut down with Axes but burnt asunder somewhat neer the ground as the ends of them being coaled do manifest Of which sort there are multitudes and of an extraordinary bignesse viz. five yards in compasse and sixteen yards long and some smaller of a greater length with good quantities of Akorns neer them and of small Nuts so many that there have been found no lesse than two pecks together in some places But the Firr Trees do lye a foot or eighteen inches deeper of which kind there are more than of any other many of them being above xxx yards in length Nay in the year 1653. there was a Firr pole taken up by one Robert Browne of Haxey of xxxvi yards long besides the top lying neer the root which stood likewise as it grew having been burnt and not hewed down which tree bore at the bottome ten inches square and at the top eight About xx years since also in the Moors at Thurne neer five foot in depth was sound a Ladder of Firr of a large substance with about xl staves which were thirty three inches asunder but so rotten that it could not be gotten up whole And in Haxey Carr at the like depth a Hedge with stakes and bindings The truth is that there are so great a number of Trees thus overgrown with the Moor through a long time of stagnation by the fresh waters in these parts that the Inhabitants have for the space of divers years last past taken up at least two thousand Cart Loads in a y●ar As to the time when this woody Level which extends it self into Dikes mersh and Hatfield Chase in Yorkeshire became first thus overflowed I can say nothing there being not any memorial thereof transmitted to us from the light of History or Records but that it hath been so for divers hundreds of years the depth of the Moor doth sufficiently manifest which could not in a few Ages grow to that thicknesse it is of Howbeit as to the occasion thereof I may rationally conclude it to have been through the muddinesse of the constant tides which flowing up Humbre into Trent did in time leave so much silt to obstruct the currents of Idle Done and other Rivers that having not their free passages as formerly they flowed back and overwhelmed that flat Country with water insomuch as the high ground became an Island as it is still we see called and a place so defencible in respect of the spacious●esse and depth of the waters environing it that Roger Lord Moubray an eminent Baron of this Realm in K. Henry the second 's time and then Lord thereof adhering to young Henry upon his ●ebellion in those dayes repaired hither and fortified an old Castle which had been long ruinous for reducing whereof to the Kings obedience the Lincolnshire men having no other accesse thereto transported themselves by shipping in the year 1174 20 H. 2. So likewise in 50 H. 3. after the battail of Evesham wherein the rebellious Barons were discomfited some of them fled hither as to a place of security for the reasons above expressed But after that time it was not long ere the Inhabitants of these parts imitating the good Husbandry of those in other Countryes who had by banking and drayning made good improvements in such Fenny places did begin to do the like here For in 1 E. 3. I find that Robert de Notingham and Roger de Newmarch were constituted Commissioners to view and repair those Banks and Ditches as had been made to that purpose which were then grown to some decay So also were Iohn Darcy of the Park Roger de Newmarch and Iohn de Crosholme Several other Commissions there were
of April 1656. to the Lord Fienes then one of the Commissioners of the great Seal the Lord Lambert Major General Desborough the Lord Lisle and the Lord Strickland for so they were then called or any three of them to consider of the said Petition and report their opinion therein to the Council The said Lords therefore requested Major General Whalley to call both parties before him and to examine the whole matter set forth in the before-specified Petition and make report thereof unto the said Committee which he did accordingly manifesting from sufficient Testimony the guilt of those Ryotors in all the outrages before expressed VVhereupon the Council of State by their Letters dated at Whitehall 21º Augusti 1656. and directed to the said Major General Whalley recommended the redresse thereof to his care and to that end desired him to improve his endeavour upon all occasions to prevent any farther Ryots and misdemeanors in those places and in order thereto to punish such their scandalous disobedience according to his instructions and not to suffer the said Inhabitants to keep by them any Arms or other Instruments for their future acting of the like and moreover to appoint some of his Regiment to be effectually aiding and assisting to the Shireeves of the respective Counties within his association or the Deputies and Collectors of the Court of Sewers for the putting in execution from time to time the Decrees processe and Orders of any the Courts at Westminster or of the Commissioners of Sewers to the end that the improvers just Rights might be restored according to Law and the said Strangers have the peaceable exercise of their Religion in the place designed for the publick meetings to that purpose CAP. XXVIII FRom Axholme I come next to those Marshes upon the River of Ankolme lying in the Northwest part of this County concerning which the first mention that I have seen in Record is in 16 E. 1. the King then directing his VVrit of Ad quod dampnum to the Shireeve of this County to enquire whether it would be hurtful to him or any other if the course of that water then obstructed from a place called Bishop's Brigge to the River of Humbre were opened so that the current of the same might be reduced into it's due and antient Chanel VVhereupon a Jury being impanelled accordingly and sworn did say upon their Oaths that it would not be to the damage of the said King nor of any other but rather for the common benefit of the whole County of Lincolne if the course of that River obstructed in part in divers places from Bishop's Brigge to the River of Humbre were open And they farther said that by this means not only the Meadows and Pastures would be drayned but that Ships and Boats laden with Corn and other things might then more commodiously passe with Corn and other things from the said River Humbre into the parts of Lindsey than they at that time could do and as they had done formerly VVhereupon about two years following the King did constitute Gilbert de Thorntone Iohn Dive and Raphe Paynell his Commissioners to cause that Chanel to be so scoured and clensed The like Commission had the said Gilbert and Raphe in 23 E. 1. And in 6 E. 2. the King being informed that the Chanel of the said River of Ancolme from Bishop's Brigge to the Bridge at Feryby which ought and had wont to be fourty foot broad was then grown so narrow for fault of clensing and scouring that in some places it extended not to three foot in bredth so that a great part of the adjacent lands were thereby frequently overflowed and drowned and that men and Cattel passing over Glaunford brigg in the time of such Flouds were seldome out of danger he assigned the said Raphe Paynell and Henry Bajocis to enquire the truth thereof and to cause redresse therein to be made Divers other Commissions also do I find to the same purpose viz. in 3. E. 3. to Iohn de Heselarton Peter de Ludington Simon de Grimesby and Richard de Navilton for the clensing thereof from Glaunford brigge before-specified to the River of Humbre And likewise for the scouring of certain Sewers betwixt Elsham and Feriby for default whereof the Lands thereabouts were overflowed In 19 E 3. to Richard Byroun Will. Disny Will. de Hardesbull Will. Darcy Iohn de Arches and Roger de Nevill for the clensing of those Sewers betwixt Bishop's Brigge and Feryby brigg In 23 E. 3. to Iohn de Hothum of Bondeby junior Richard Paynell Will. de Skipwith Iohn de Arches Raphe de Redford and Iohn Cokand for scouring the said Chanel from Glaunford brigge to the River of Humbre to the bredth of xl foot as it ought and wont to be as also of the Sewers betwixt Elsham and Feriby and to make enquiry concerning certain new Sewers made from the said Town of Elsham to Feryby by some of the Inhabitants of those parts by their own authority which had occasioned much overflowing of the waters thereabouts In 36 E. 3. to Raphe Paynell William Bray Will. Wascelyn and Raphe de Redford for the same purpose In 39 E. 3. to Will. Drax William Wascelyn and Will. Darcy for clensing thereof betwixt Bishops brigge and Humbre So likewise in 40 E. 3. to Iohn de Boys Thomas de Fulnetby Raphe de Redford William Wascelyn and others And in 15 R. 2. to Sir Philip le Despenser Sir Philip Darcy and Sir Henry Retford Knights Iohn Poucher Will. Crosby Gerard Sothill Rob. Tirwhit and Will. de Garton for the view and repair of the Banks betwixt the Town of West-Rasyn and the River of Humbre then broken in divers places through the force of the Tides and flouds of fresh waters descending down the Chanel of Ancolme Upon a pleading in 4 H. 4. it was found that the Presentment made in the Shireeves turn at Castre against the Abbot of Roche that he ought to repair and clense the Chanel of Ankholme was insufficient in regard it did not specifie that the said water did overflow the Banks thereof to the damage of the neighbouring Villages neither specially nor generally And also because that the said Shireeve did amerce the same Abbot in xll. which amerciament ought to be affered by four or two of the Jurors In 6 H. 5. Rob. Tirwhit Will. Ludington Richard Haunsard Thomas Handley Walt. Talboys Iohn Talboys Thomas Enderby Richard Hawe Iohn Veer and Rob. Feryby were appointed to view and repair the Banks and Sewers upon the said River of Ankholme from Bishops brigge to the water of Humbre and the interjacent places And to proceed therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm And in 22 E. 4. Will. Tirwhit Esquire Robert Shefeld Thomas Moigne Iohn Moigne Thomas Hanserd Esquire and Iohn Barde had the like appointment And to make fit
of the Fishing had set up And that Henry Earl of Northumberland of right ought to repair the same Sewer from the Clowes to the Southdykehyrne by reason that he held the Fishing there in severalty as belonging to his Mannour of Thorpe And that the Lords of Bullingbroke and Dalby or their Fermours ought to clense the said Sewer from Southdike hirne unto the Eas ende because they had the fishing there in severalty And they likewise presented that there was a fourth Sewer called Theviscrik beginning in the Mosses of Friskenay at VVilliam Barnagates and extending it self to the Eas end where the four streams do meet and that it ought to be in bredth ten foot and dept five but was then also obstructed by a certain Were which the Fermours of the fishing had made and ought to be repaired by the said Town of Friskenay And that the Sewer called Eas end where the four streams meet ought to be in bredth fourty foot and in depth fourteen to the Sea and repaired by the Soke of Bullingbroke as often as need should require And they farther presented that it would be requisite that a new pair of Floud-gates should be made at the Damme in bredth xij foot and depth according to the discretion of skilful persons And that all the Towns within the Soke of VVapentake of Bolingbroke as also the towns of Wrangle Leake Leverton Benington Butterwick Freston and Tofte ought of right to repair maintain open and shut those Floud-gates at proper times on their own costs and chardges for ever excepting in Timber Iron VVork and also VVages of Carpenters And to the end that all discord betwixt those Towns touching the repair of the said Floud-gates might for the time to come be prevented it was then accorded by and between them with the common assent aswell of the said Duke of Lancaster's Counsel the Lord of Willughby and Abbot of Revesby as of all other Lords and Inhabitants or their Free-holders dwelling in those Towns in form following viz. that every of the said Townsmen should then at the first levy and collect for the said repair the fourth part of such a summ as the same Town had antiently been assessed at to a Fifteen granted and payable to the King by the Commons of England VVhich said summ so levyed to be delivered unto two discreet men to be chosen by four throughout all those Towns who should be obliged from year to year as followeth First two of the Soke of Bullingbroke at the next Court of the Duke of Lancaste● at Bullingbroke before Michaelmasse yearly to be held before the Steward or his Deputy there And two other of the Towns within the Wapentake of Skirbeck above named to be chosen from year to year at the said Duke's Court next before Michaelmasse at Wrangle before the Steward thereof or his Deputy which four so to be elected to be aswell of the Tenants of the said Lord as of the Tenants of any other Lords according to discretion And they to meet at Waynflete twice every year viz. once within a month after Easter and Michaelmasse and then to oversee those floud-gates and all the Sewers aforesaid and if any defect should be found in them then to cause them to be repaired and amended with all speed according as in their discretions they should think most meet And that at such their meeting after Easter the said two so elected for those disbursements as aforesaid to render their Account before the said four touching those common repairs and expences And in 17 R. 2. to Sir Philip Tilney Knight Iohn de Crosby Iohn de Rocheford of Boston Iohn Laund of Pynchebek Thomas de Tofte and Iohn Waleys for those betwixt Hildyke and Bolyngbroke and to hear and determine all things therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm and the Custome of Romeney marsh as also to take up so many Labourers upon competent wages as they should think needfull for that work considering the necessity of expedition therein In 19 R. 2. there was a Presentment made in the Kings Bench in Easter term which was then held at Lincolne by the Jurors of divers VVape●takes in this County that the Marshes of Est Fenne and Westfenne as also divers Lands Meadows and Pastures lying in the towns of Leek Wrangel Fr●fkeneye and Waynflete betwixt the waters of Wythom and Waynflete were drowned by a great ●undation of water so that all the Inhabitants of those towns and of the Soke and VVapentake of Bolingbroke did wholly lose the benefit of their lands and Marshes there through the defect of a certain floud-gate at Waynflete which was so narrow that the course of the waters passing that way could not go to the Sea and that the town of Waynflete ought to repair that floud-gate as antiently they had wont to do And the said Jurors farther alleged that the same floud-gate was not of bredth and depth sufficient to convey the said water to the Sea and that it would be necessary to have another floud-gate new erected near unto the same of xviij foot in bredth and that the towns of Leek Wranghill Friskeney and Waynflete together with the Soke and VVapentake of Bolingbroke as also all th●se which had Common of Pasture in the said Marshes ought to contribute to the making thereof And that when is should be made then the said town of Waynflete to repair and maintain it at their own proper costs untill it should be necessary to make it anew excepting timber and Iron And they said moreover that except this were done both the Marshes lands meadows and Pastures aforesaid and Commons in those towns Soke and wapentake before-specified would wholly be lost And they also said that there was a certain Sewer from Hasend at UUaynflete unto the said Floud-gates wherein the Duke of Lancaster and the Lord of Dalby had fishing who in respect thereof ought to repair and clense the same The Shireeve thereof had command to summon all those Towns to answer this their neglect The next year following the Towns of Dunham Scothorne Reres●y and Staynton being presented for neglecting to repair the Sewer called Fen dyke which extends it self from the town of UUelton to Langwath and not denying but that they ought to maintain the same were each of them amerc'd at xld. In the same year the Inhabitants of Wytherin Scrubby UUodethorpe Malteby Besby Hamby Markeby Billesby Alford UUelle Salby Thoresthorpe Riggesby and Aby being presented for not repairing the Sewer called the South g●ist lying betwixt Malberthorpe and Trusthorpe which extends it self from a place called Axiltrehirne to the Sea and by which all the course of the water of those towns had used of right to run to the Sea for the safeguard of the said Towns which said Sewers together with the Gote called UUall-gote was then stopt up did put themselves upon the Country the Shireeve therefore had command to summon a Jury
County did exhibit a Presentment in the Court of Kings Bench importing that this Chanel called Fossedike extending it self from the River of Trent at Torksey unto the City of Lincolne having been antiently open and full of water so that ships and boats laden with Victual and other vendible Commodities did use to passe to and from Notingham Yorke Kingston upon Hull and sundry other places and Counties by the said River of Trent and so by this Chanel to Lincolne and from Lincolne to Boston to the great benefit of the said City of Lincolne and advantage of all Tradesmen passing that way as also of the whole Country adjacent was then choakt up for want of clensing and repair And that the Prior of Torkesey and town of Torksey with the members thereof the Prioresse of Fosse Iohn Bishop of Lincolne Gilb. Earl of Angos his Tenants Sir Raphe Daubney Knight and his Tenants the Abbot of Newsum Iohn Frunell ● the Tenants of the lands of Gilbert de Bridshull the Tenants of the lands of Hugh de Normanton of Saxelbie the Lady Katherine Swinford Iohn Brett of Thornhagh in the County of Notingham Sir Raphe Painell Knight and all other the Lords of the Towns lying on each side the said Chanell and their Ancestors whose Lordships lay on either side and abutting on the same every man according to the proportion lying against his own Lordship did and ought to clense and repair the said Chanel And they said moreover that it had been so choakt up and obstructed for above thirty years then last past to the great damage of the King as also of the whole Country and City aforesaid Notwithstanding which Presentment the King issued out a Commission the very next ensuing year unto Sir Michael de la Pole Knight Mr Geffrey le Scrope and Iohn de Stafford Clerk to enquire touching the obstruction thereof But I make a question whether it was thereupon clensed for in 8 R. 2. which was about nine years after I find that Iohn Duke of Lancaster Iohn Bishop of Lincolne Henry Percy Earl of Northumberland Sir Michael de la Pole Knight Sir Philip Darcy Knight and others were appointed by the said King to cause it to be repaired and scoured so that ships and boats might have a clear passage through it as antiently they had used CAP. XXXI The Marshes on Withom ON the South side of this Province lyeth the River of Witham extending it self from the Suburb of Lincolne to Boston by which stream great Vessels have antiently come up from Boston to that City as the Inhabitants thereof do by tradition affirm and as may seem by large ribs of them which within memory have been there dig'd up But the descent of this stream from the said City to the Sea is so little that the water having a slow passage cannot keep it wide and deep enough either for navigation or drayning of the adjacent Marshes without the frequent helps of digging and clearing the same the mud and weeds increasing so much therein I shall therefore in the next place take notice of what I have met with tending to that purpose as also of it's course above that City whereof the first mention that I find is in 6 E. 3. Henry de Fienton Will. Dysney and Thomas de Sibthorpe being then constituted the Kings Commissioners for the viewing thereo● betwixt the Town of Bekingham and the City of Lincolne it being turned out of it's right Chanel in sundry places and so obstructed with sand mud and plantation of Trees as also by Floud-gates Sluses Mills Causeys and Ditches that the course of the same being hindred caused frequent inundations to the lands adjacent After this viz. in 37 E. 3. there was a Presentment exhibited to Iohn de Repynghale and H. Asty then the said Kings Commissioners of Sewers sitting at Newerk upon Monday next after the Feast of S. Laurence for the view of the said River of Withom and removing all obstructions and impediments wherby the free current thereof from the Town of Claypole unto the said City of Lincolne was hindred VVhich Presentment being made by the Jurors for the Wapentakes of Boby and Graffow importeth that the East Mill at Bracebrigge belonging to the Knights Hospitalars of S. Iohn of Ierusalem in England standing in the right course of that River did obstruct the current thereof to the great damage of the said King and the Country and that this was through the default of those Knights Hospitalars And they farther said that the same River then had not sufficient depth nor bredth from the Sheep-cote belonging to the Prior of S. Katherines unto the bridge at Bracebrigge and that the said Knights Hospitalars had certain Floud-gates ther● which did turn the right course of that River out of it's proper Chanel whereupon the Shireeve of Lincolnshire was commanded to summon the Prior of the said Hospital of S. Iohn of Ierusalem to appear before those Commissioners at Newerk the Wednesday next after the Feast of the Assumption of the blessed Virgin then next ensuing to answer to these particulars Who appearing accordingly did allege that he and his Predecessors had been seized of the said Mill time out of mind as in the right of their House and that the said Mill then stood as it had antiently used to do without that that either he or his Predecessors had built any new Mill there and that this he was ready to justifie And as to the Floud-gates he said that it was erected there time out of mind with this Order viz. that the Gates thereof should be yearly removed from the Feast day of S. Elene in the month of May unto the Feast day of the Exaltation of the Holy Crosse but that after that day untill the Feast of S. Elene they should stand in their places And if the said River of Withom should happen upon any occasion to be so much raised as to be above a certain stake standing on the South side of the said Floudgates then the same Gates to be removed untill the water should abate to the height of that stake which said stake had been there made and placed for a gage time out of mind without that that any Floud-gates were raised higher than that stake or that the same Floud-gates ought to be removed The businesse therefore being come to this issue the said Commissioners sitting at Carleton in Moreland on Friday next after the Feast of S. Iohn Baptist in the year abovesaid it was found by a verdict of the Jurors that the said Prior of S. Iohns and his Predecessors were not seized of the said Mill and Floud-gates time out of mind as had been before alleged but that they were erected there after that time though not by the said Prior therefore it was decreed that the said Mill and Floud-gates should be removed and the Shireeve of Lincolnshire had command to remove them accordingly and to make certificate of his doings
them But within the s●ace of two years following they were all thrown down again and the stones carried away by the men of Kesteven Whereupon a Commission was granted and sate at Donington on Thursday next after S. Matthew's day in 17 R. 2. by Robert Lord Willughby and others to make enquiry and to punish the offenders sundry whereof were therefore hang'd some bani●hed and some fined in great sums and command given for erecting new Cross●s of stone at the chardge of these men of Kesteven In 10 H. 4. Iohn Earl of Somerset brother to the King Will. Lord Roos Robert de Tame Iohn de Holand de Welysthorpe with others were constituted Commissioners for the view and repair of all the Banks Ditches c. both upon the seacoast and elsewhere within this province of Kesteven and to proceed therein according to the law and custome of the Marsh there before that time used and the law and custome of this Realm In 7 H. 5. there was a Pr●sentment exhibited against the town of Brunne with the hamlets of Dyke and Calthorp and against the Town of Morton and Hermethorpe for turning the fresh waters towards the North which ought to run Eastwards into the Sea But notwithstanding the boundaries betwixt these Provinces of Kesteven and Holand so set forth as hath been said I find that Margaret Countess of Richmund and Derby being Lady of Deping in 16 H. 7. did then procure a new Commission directed unto Robert Lord Willoughby Thomas Lord Rosse Thomas Lord Fitzwalter George Lord Hastings Iohn Lord Fitz Warren Sir Robert Dimock Sir George Taylboys Edward Stanley Christopher Willoughby and Reginald Bury Knights to hear and determine the controversy between the Inhabitants of the parts abovesaid Which was accordingly done by these Jurors viz. Sir Robert Hussey Knight Sir Iohn Digby Knight Sir Iohn Thimelby Knight Thomas Dimock Richard Thimelby Richard Harington Will. Ermin● Will. Mounson Iohn B●ssy George As●●●y Robert Tirwhit Richard Cecill Iohn B●ll● William Fitzwilliam Iohn Fol●ingham Will. Leigh Thomas Desney Richard Grantham Edward Askew George Mackwo●th Thomas Billesby Will. Thorold Will. Enderby and Iohn Walcot Esquires CAP. XLIII HAving now done with what concerns the Province of Kesteven alone I come to it and Holand joyntly whereof the first mention that I have met with is of the afforestation made by King Henry the first in these parts which continued not long for it appears that King Richard the first about the beginning of his reign by his Charter to the Monastery of Spaldyng of the Towns of Spalding and Hinchebec with the lands waters and Marshes to them belonging did acquit the Inhabitants of those places from all duties belonging to the Forest as also of Harts and Hindes with all other wild beasts and of all Forest Customes and exactions which had used to be there do ●e or required so that no Forester or any other might thereupon vex or disquiet them And moreover gave them License to make Banks and Ditches to inclose their Lands and Marshes as also to build Houses and exercise tillage as they themselves should think fit within these particular metes and bounds viz. betwixt the river of Wailand and Chelebeche in length and from Midfen dic which is the division betwixt these two Provinces of Kesteven and Holand and Gudramesend which is the boundary as far as Saltene in bredth and Hasmanespade as the said river of Wailand coming from Crouland descendeth to the Sea From this deafforestation abovemention●d I shall descend to King Henry the third's reign in whose time I find that there was a Precept directed to the Shireeve touching the partition of Hauthuntre-Fen by the consent of those that had right therein whereby the said King gave special command that each Town might have their due proportion thereof assigned to them but in the first place that a Perambulation should be made by the Oath of xij lawful and discreet Knights betwixt it and the Fen called Fenting fen viz. in length from the Town of Swinefheved to a little rivulet called Barkesmere and so from the Marsh of Stevening as Barkesmere goeth betwixt the said Fen called Hauthundrefen and the Marsh of Hale unto the river of Kime and so in length by the said river of Kime to Dockesdike and from thence by the water Wuna to certain land of Boston And that so soon as the said Petambulation should be th●s accomplisht then to make partition of the before mentioned Fen by the Oaths of those Knights in such sort as each Town might have an assignation of their particular share to dispose and make improvement of the same according to their own best liking After this viz. in 44 H. 3. the King then directing his Precept to the Shireeve of this County whereby taking notice that not only the Landholders in those parts but himself had suffered inestimable damage by the overflo●ing of the Sea and likewise of the fresh waters through the default in rep●ir of the Banks Ditches Gutters Bridges and Sewers in the lands which lately belonged to William Longespe in these parts of Kesteven and Holand he commanded the said Shireeve for●hwith to distrain all such Landholders who had safeguard by those Banks and Ditches and ought to repair them according to the proportion of their lands to the end that they might be speedily repaired in such sort as they ought and had used to be And in 23 E. 1. Adam de Crokedayk and W. Inge were constituted Commissioners to view the Banks Ditches and Sewers in these Provinces and to see that the currents of fresh waters in the Marshes thereof might have their due and antient passages as they had wont to have In 9 E. 2. Lambert de Trekyngham Roger de Coppeldyk and Robert de Malberthorp being then constituted the King's Justices of Sewers for these parts sat at Boston upon the Tuesday next after the feast of the Exaltation of the holy Cross there to make enquiry by the Oaths of good and lawful men what persons of this County of Lincolne had used to repair and maintain the Banks Ditches Gutters and Sewers within the fens of Kesteven and Holand and other places thereabouts as also the floudgates by which the fresh waters that had used to run from the parts of Kesteven into the said Fens were hindred from so doing and by whom the said waters were turned out of their right and due courses as also in what sort Whereupon Sir Will. d' Autre Knight Iohn de Holand and several other persons of quality being sworn did upon their Oaths present That the Town of Danington ought and had used to repair the Causey of Holand with little Bridges and Ditches on each part of the same from the said Town of Donington to the new Ditch And from the said Ditch unto the Chapel of S. Saviours the Prior of S. Saviours to perform the like repair there being at that time great defects
Crouland bridge to Wodelademouth the River of Weland is the fence thereto having the before-specified Isle on the East part of it● and the Fen called Goggeslound on the West And from Wodelademouth to the common Sewer of Asendik the said River of Weland is the limit thereof having the said Isle on the South part and Spa●ding fen on the North. And from the said Sewer to Aswiktost doth the water of Asendik bound it having the same Isle on the South par● and the Fens of Spalding Weston and Multon on the North. Moreover of the Fens lying opposite to the said Isle on the West side these were then the limits viz. from Namans land hirne to Finset thence to Groines thence to Folwardstaking thence Northwards to the stream of Weland where South lake enters thereinto and so passing over the said River of Weland and ascending to Aspath thence Northwards to Werwerlake and so by Harinholt to Mengarlake thence to Oggot otherwise called Dedmans lake and so by Apinholt and Wodelake Eastwards to Wodelademouth which is the boundary of the Isle on that side towards the North as Namans land hirne is towards the South Howbeit the Common of Pasture for Cattel extendeth farther than the before-specified bounds of those Fens Southwards even to the lands belonging to the Monks of Medeshamsted now Peterborough and towards the West of the Lands of the Monks of S. Pega now Peakirke in the South fens of Weland and in the North fens towards the West to the Town of Deping ● Northwards to Spaldeling The other boundary is by Edred King of great Britaine thus described in the year of Christs Incarnation DCCCCxlviij viz. from the triangular Bridge at Crouland by the River of Weland towards Spalding unto As●ndike where Asendik falleth into the River of UUeland on the North part of a certain Crosse of stone there erected by Abbot Turketill and so upwards to the East by Asendick to Aswicktost Thence to Shepishee on the East side of the same Isle and so to Tedwarthar and there entring South Ee to Naman land hirne where the said Abbot Turketill set up another Crosse of stone six perches distant from South Ee the division of the Counties of Lincolne and Cambridge being in that water and the said Crosse being distant from the River of Nene five perches VVestwards And so along the said River of Nene as it runneth to the before-specified Bridge at Crouland VVhereunto belonged likewise the several fishing aswell in all the waters invironing the said Isle as in the Pools and Fens within the Precincts thereof together with the Marshes and woods of Alderlound situate VVestwards and opposite thereto all which were annexed to the County of Lincolne according to these subsequent boundaries viz. from Naman land hirne by the River of Nene westwards to Finset where there is a Cross of stone set up near the River Thence to Grinis thence to Folwardstaking and thence to Southlake where it falleth into Weland And so passing over the said River of Weland and beginning at Kenulphston near the stream over against Southlake where Kenulph the first Abbot of this Monastery fixed a Crosse of stone for the limit betwixt Crouland and Deping And thence tending Northwards near Aspath unto Werwarlake and so to Harinholt and then up by Mengarlake and Lurtlake where the bounds of Holand and Kestevene are Thence to Oggot and so to Apinholt otherwise called Wodelade where the same UUodelade falleth into UUeland VVhich ample possessions though they yielded not much profit in regard so great a quantity of them lay then for the most part under water yet can it not be denyed but that upon the invasion of those Pagan Danes in the time of Beorred King of Mercia they hapned to be their chiefest refuge the lives of most of the Monks of this Abby being then secured by means of these spacious Fenns in the reeds and thickets whereof they hid themselves to avoid the cruelties of those barbarous people whilst the rest of their Covent were murthered and the Abby burnt VVhich Monks so preserved and after that woful masacre returning again contented themselvs with such habitations as the ruines there left would afford them Nor had they better untill the time of King Edred that Turketill then his Chancellour taking to heart those their sufferings procured that King to rebuild it and not only so but out of his singular devotion to God and affection to this place giving six goodly Mannours thereto and causing himself to be shorn a Monk became afterwards Abbot there Whereupon through the munificence of that good King and the bounty of the said Turketill being thus restored to it 's former splendor there was no good means unattempted that might conduce to the bettering and improving of the lands thereto belonging for the most advantage as may seem by those endeavors of Abbot Egelric in the times of King Edward the elder and King Edgar who plowed up a large proportion of them for Corn which could not have been done without the help of drayning I presume for saith Ingulphus Fecit etiam in annis sicciatis culturam in suis paludibus c. In dry years he tilled the Fens in four places at the four corners of them and for three or four of years had the increase of an hundred fold of what seed soever he sowed Amongst which that Fen at Tedwarthar was the most fruitfull the Monastery being so much enricht by these plentifull crops that the whole Country thereabouts was supplyed therewith and a multitude of poor people resorting thither for that respect Crouland became a large Town The same Ingulphus who was Abbot here in the Norman Conquerers time saith that in his days they had not any such Tenants residing here at Crouland as upon their other Lands no man delighting to inhabit here any longer than he was necessitated so to do insomuch as those who in time of warr betook themselves hither for security as great numbers of rich and poor from the neighbouring Countries did afterwards returned back to their particular homes none continuing here but their own domestique family with their wives and children● to whom he did let to ferm a great proportion of the Marshes and Meadows belonging to this Abby for certain annual Rents and other services For without Boats there was not then any accesse thereto there being no path farther than to the gate of the Monastery But notwithstanding that the lands and possessions of this Abby were through the great bounty of several Kings and others given thereto with divers ample privileges and immunities and not only so but with fearful curses pronounc'd by those pious Donours against such as should violate any of their grants neverthelesse it appears that the Inhabitants of Holand bordering on the North-side of Crouland having drayned their own Marshes and converted them to good and fertile arable land whereof each Town had their proper portion wanting
pasturage for their Cattel took advantage of a false rumour then spread of King Henry the second 's death it being the xxxv and last year of his Reign and he then beyond Sea and bearing themselves not a little on their strength and wealth thought that they might oppresse the poor Monks of Crouland without any controul Whereupon Gerard de Bamvill Fulke d'Oiri Thomas de Multon the elder and Conan son of Helyas who were much displeased with the said Monks of Crouland for other respects associating to themselves Richard de Flet and Walter with many others came to Nicholas then Prior of Spalding and moved him to be their Leader and to augment the number all the chief men of Ellow Wapentake some few excepted conspiring with them sometimes had their meetings in the Prior of Spalding's Barn at UUestone and sometimes in the Church at Holbeche When therefore the Abbot of Crouland according to Custome kept up his Marshes as every year he had used to do about Rogation week and to the end that his Hay might have the better growth caused Proclamation to be made upon the Bridge at Spalding that the men of Holand and others should keep their Cattel from coming thereinto they not only refused so to do but drove in many more than they had formerly done Whereupon the Abbots servants impounding them the men of Holand grew very angry and having set a day viz. the Feast of Nereus and Achilleius they then came into the said Marsh of Crouland all armed as it had been to battail to the number of above three thousand Whereof the Abbot having notice he forthwith accompanied with a few of his own Family met them at the Bank called Asendic which is the boundary of Crouland Fen and earnestly intreated peace with them for he feared that they had a purpose to destroy the Abby and to that end were so come together But they answered him scornfully and passing through the midst of the Fen shared it among themselves according to the situation of their Towns And having so done pitched Tents and made huts on every side the Abby wherein they placed guards of armed men to keep each part thereof And likewise digg'd turf cut down a great part of the wood and Aldergroves of Crouland and burnt them depastured their Meadows and carryed away the Hay with divers other violences by the space of xv days the Abbot and Monks with their servants being all this while shut up so that they durst scarce go out of their Church dores In this lamentable condition therefore they resolved to make complaint to the Kings Justices and to that end dispatch'd a messenger to Geffrey Fitz Piers then dwelling at Clive in Northamptonshire who hearing of these great outrages sent six Knights from Northampton to be better informed thereof Which Knights coming first on the East side of the Abby there found the Tent of Sutton men who were Tenants to Geffrey de Canvill and had all sorts of weapons with them and said that they were there by their Masters command So likewise did all the rest answer the Tent of Spalding men being the last But the Abbot himself being most sensible of these high oppressions got out privately and made all the haste he could to London where he represented to Hubert Walter substitute to Ranulph de Glanvill the Kings Chief Justice then beyond Sea with the King and to his fellow Judges these great injuries and abuses shewing them the Kings Charter which setteth forth the bounds of those their Fens VVho thereupon much compassionating the said Abbot and his Monks sent forthwith in the Kings name to the said Geffrey fitz Piers and required him that he should call before him the Prior of Spalding and all those men of Holand and to do the said Abbot right upon them whereof these Riotors hearing they presently burnt their Cabbins and went to their own homes At the summons therefore of the before-mentioned Geffrey fitz Piers the said Prior of Spalding and the other Delinquents met him at Deping to which place the said Geffrey brought many eminent persons with him upon the Friday in Whitson Week where the Abbot of Crouland chardged them with the breach of the Kings Peace and all the violence and wrong before-specified There were likewise seven particular men who stood up and on the said Abbots behalf laid to the chardge of seven of the principal offenders that each of them had damnified the Abbot to the value of xx Marks Whereupon some of them were sent to Prison to Northampton some to Rokingham and some to other places The particulars touching this sute for it lasted five years would be too much trouble to rehearse but at length the Abbot prevailed and recovered the possession of those Marshes the businesse being determined in the year MCXCxiij 5 R. 1. But though this sute had then an end the Prior of Spalding renewed his former claim yet in the end they came to an amicable agreement by a Fine levyed betwixt them in 18 H. 3. whereby it was concluded that neither the one nor the other should impound any Cattel of them the said Abbot and Prior or their Tenants of Crowland Spalding Pinchber Langtoft Baston and Deping depasturing within the Fens of the said towns nor take in any strangers Cattel into those Fens About this time Will. de Albinci a great man in these parts challenged right of Common in divers of these Fens Whereupon by a fine levyed at Lincolne in 24 H. 3. betwixt the then Abbot of Crouland and Prior of Spalding and the said William it was determined that he the said William and his Heirs should have Common of Pasture for all manner of Cattel belonging to himself and all his Tenants of Uffington Caswike and Tallington in the Fens of Crouland Spalding Pinchbec Langtoft and Baston In ..... H. 3. there was a Presentment exhibited to the Justices Itinerant at Lincolne by the Jurors for the Wapentake of Ellowe setting forth that there was two courses of water in the common River of Croyland the one nearer and the other more remote And that the nearer current was the right Chanell and of sufficient depth wherein they that did go with Barges and Boats might well passe too and fro but that the Abbot of Croyland had by planting willows thereon so obstructed straitghned the said course of that stream that Boats and Barges could not passe as formerly they had But it was afterwards adjudged both by the said Jurors and likewise by the Justices Itinerants for this County who passed that way to view the same that the current of the said water was much more proper and commodious in the place where then it went than there where the Jurors presented the default to be provided that it might continue as wide and deep as it then was and that it might be straight and not bending as the old one was and therefore they concluded and ordered that it
Gutters formerly there were then obstructed and the bridges decayed by means of a certain controversie which had long been betwixt Iohn de Britaine Earl of Richmund and Robert de Grelly touching the metes and bounds of that Fen and through the default of those who ought to have repaired those Sewers Ditches c. the King therefore appointed Iohn Beke and N. Stapleton to enquire thereof c. VVhat was done therein I find not but the next year following the King by the advice of his Justices commanded Iohn Beke N. de Stapilton and Roger Loveday to enquire who ought to repair the Bridge called Peccebrig and the two Bridges in Spalding who finding by Inquisition that the Abbot of Croyland the Prior of Spalding and all men holding lands in Spalding were obliged to the repair of them according to the proportion of land which they held in the said Town so that every acre were assessed alike summoned the Prior of Spalding and all the Free-holders in Spalding to come before them who all of them excepting the Abbot of Crouland appeared and consented for themselves their successors and heirs to repair and maintain those Bridges according to the quantity of their lands that they had there provided that the said Abbot would do the like for his And because the said Abbot absented himself and refused command was given to the Shireeve that he should summon him to appear before the Commissioners before-specified at Boston upon the Eve of S. Laurence At which time he accordingly came and in the presence of Raphe de Hengham I. de Metingham W. de Burenton and Roger de Leicestre agreed for himself and his s●ccessors to do as the said Prior had done viz. that they with the consent of the Free-holders of Spalding would repair and maintain those Bridges according to the proportion of their lands in that Town so that every Acre should be assessed alike of the demesnes aswell new as old and of the Villenages And that if any shops or stalls should be built upon the said Bridges all the benefit arising by them should redound to the repair and maintenance of the same In 12 E. 1. Iohn de Wigetost having commenc'd a sute against Iohn the son of Osbert de Swyneheved and divers others for making of Ditches in the said Fen called Haute hundre fen Swyneheved Wyktost Sotterton Algerkirk Kirketon Fraunkton Wyberton and Skyrbek so that he could not drive his Cattel to the said Fen desired license to withdraw his sute which was granted About two years after after this there was a great inundation in these parts at which time the most of Boston was drowned and the Monastery of Spalding suffered much loss The King therefore having advertisement that excessive damage had befallen this Province by the want in repair of the Causey called Holand Causey and by the decay of the Banks Ditches and Sewers in these parts gave special command to Iohn de Vaux and his fellow Justices itinerant in this County of Lincolne that they should search their Rolls and send unto him aswel such Inquisitions as had been made by them touching the repair of that Causey Banks Ditches c. as those which were taken by Martin de Littelbury and his associates Gilbert de Preston and his as also of other Justices itinerant in this County in the time of King Henry the third Who did accordingly which Inquisitions so transmitted as aforesaid did then remain in the custody of Sir Raphe de Hengham upon a certain file of Records of the xxth year of this Kings reign Upon perusal whereof by the Justices of the Common pleas they thought not fit to proceed to judgement nor to cause any distresses to be made because it did not appear by what had been done therein that any of the parties consented thereto but rather that th●y were taken in their absence for which respect they deemed it necessary that all such persons as were concern'd in that businesse should appear in Court that the matter might be argued and determined in their presence And because they thought that it would be too much trouble and inconvenience for so great a number of people to appear before the King wheresoever he might then be in this Realm and therefore that it might be better to have the same ●iscussed in these parts the said King did by the advice of those his Justic●s itinerant direct his precept unto Iohn Beek Nicholas de Stapilton and Roger Loveday that they should enquire who ought to repair those Banks Ditches and Bridges and to distrain them thereto Who accordingly making Inquisition first concerning the bridge called Pekkebrig and then of the two bridges in Spaldyng and finding that the Abbot of Crouland the Prior of Spalding and all the Land-hol●ers in Spalding were obliged to those repairs according to the proportion of land which each man had in that Town so that every acre were alike did th●reupon summon the said Prior of Spalding and the whole number of the free-holders in that Town All which excepting the said Abbot appeared and agreed for themselves their successors and heirs to repair and maintain those Bridges according to the quantity of their lands in that Town though the said Abbot would not consent thereto for his portion And because the said Abbot did absent himself and refused the Shireeve had command to give him special summons to appear at Boston upon the Eve of S. Laurence at which tune he came thither before the said Commissioners● and in their presence as also in the presence of Raphe de Hengham I. de Metingham W. de Brumpton and Roger de Leycestre accorded for himself and his successors that they with the assistance of the Inhabitants of Spalding would repair and maintain the said Bridges according to the proportion of land which each of them had in that Town so that every acre might be assessed alike of the demesnes aswell old as new and of those held in Villenage and that if any shops or stalls should be built or planted upon those bridges all the profit arising thereby to be imployed in their repair In 15 E. 1. W. de Carleton and Will. de Candlesby were constituted Commissioners to enquire through whose default the Sea-banks in this Province were in decay and so consequently broken by the violence of the tides to the great damage of the Inhabitants much of their low grounds being thereby drowned And by an Inquisition taken at Scoft near Trokenhou before Simon de Ellesworth and his fellow Justices upon Monday next after the feast of the Epiphany in the xxiith year of the reign of the said K. Ed. the first it was found that the Towns of Tid and Sutton in this Province of Hoiland in Lincolnshire and of Tid Neuton and Leverington in the County of Cambridge could not be preserved except the fresh water of Scoft neer Trokenhou were restrained unto the bredth of four foot and
of Crabhous with some lands belonging thereto all being then waste and in the nature of a Fen But afterwards the Inhabitants of that place and of divers other came and with drayning and banking won as much thereof by their industry as they could And that they might the more securely enjoy the same were conten● to be Tenants for it unto such great men of whom they held their other lands and upon this occasion by a common consent amongst them● was the old Podike first raised about the year MCCxxiij 7 H. 3. Nor was a great part of this Country any other than a Marsh about that time for by that Precept to the Shireeve of Norfolk for giving unto Hubert de Burgo then Justice of England the like possession thereof as he had in King Iohn's time when he went into Poictou for the servi●e of that King it was so called and bounded with the Towns of Wigenhale Welle Hagebeche Tilney and Tirington which I take to be little lesse than half Marshland all which was soon after restored to the Church of Ely as having a better interest to it than this great man But notwithstanding the said Bank called Podike so made as hath been said it seems that the Marshland men had no cleer title to the whole soil whereon it was erected Will. Bardolfe at that time Lord oi the Mannors of Stow Wimbotesham and Dounham Lordships lying on the other side of the Ouse chalenging some right therein for in 35 H. 3. they came to an agreement with him by a Fine levyed before the Justices itinerant at Norwich in the xv of S. Martin the principal parties to the said Fine being the then Bishop of Ely the Prior of Lewes the Abbots of Ramsey Dereham and S. Edmundsbu●y Thomas de Ingaldesthorp and Will. de Shouldham By which Fine the said Will. Bardolf quitted all his title in the whole Marsh called West fen through which the same bank extended unto the said Bishop Prior Abbots c. and their successors for ever And they to him and his heirs the before-specified old bank viz. Podike and an Cxx acres of marsh with the appurtenances lying in the said West fen within the same bank Northwards containing xij furlongs in bredth About three years after the Sea-banks of this Province wanting repair the Shireeve of Norfolk was required to distrain all those persons in the Lete of Clenchwarton and West Len who were Tenants of such lands as ought to repair those Banks in such sort as they had wont to be repaired for repelling the inundations of the Sea and fresh waters which Tenants to have afterwards allowance for the same from their Landlords What was then done therein I find not but within four years ensuing it appears that the Inhabitants of this Country had exceeding great losse by the breach both of the Sea-banks and those which should have kept off the fresh waters insomuch as the King being advertised thereof commanded the Shireeve of Norfolk that he should forthwith distrain all the Land-holders who might have benefit thereby to repair and maintain those Banks and Ditches according to the proportion of their said lands lying within the bounds of them And the next year following upon more damage hapning by a new inundation of the Sea through the breach of those Banks towards Wisbeche within the liberties of the Bishop of Ely having required the said Bishop to distrain all his Tenants within this Province of Mershland and elswhere within his said liberties who had defence and safeguard thereby according to the quantity of their lands lying within the said Banks to repair and maintain them as they ought and had used to do he sent his Precept to the Shiree●e of Cambridgshire thereby chardging him that after the said Bishop had so distrained his said Tenants as abovesaid he the said Shireeve should not d●liver any Cattel so taken by way of distresse without the Kings special command In 16 E. 1. Will. de Carleton and Will. de Middilton were constituted Commissioners to enquire of certain breaches in the Banks of Robert de Scales in the Hawe and Ilsington in this Province and to distrain all those who ought to repair them The like Commission had they the next year ensuing for the view and repair of the Banks in Tilney and Ilsington then broken by the raging of the Sea So also in 18 E. 1. had the said Will. de Carleton and Will. de Pageham for the banks called Pokediche Siwellediche Fendiche and Gildangordiche then broken by flouds in divers places In 21 E. 1. the Inhabitants of this Country made a grievous complaint to the King importing that whereas the bank called Pokediche was antiently made and had till that time been maintained by them for the safeguard and preservation of those parts against flouds of water certain Malefactors having a purpose to do them mischief had made a hole in the said bank and did by force and arms hinder those that would have stopt it by reason whereof aswell the tides from the Sea as the fresh wat●rs overflowed the Pastures lying within the precincts thereof the said King therefore being very sensible of this great injury assigned Peter de Campania Thomas de Hacford and Adam de Shropham to enquire by the Oaths of honest and lawfull men of this County who they were that did make this breach and to hear and determine of that trespasse And the said King being informed that in case the fresh waters coming by Utwell could have their course to the Sea in such sort as that they might not mix with the waters running in Mershland this Country of Mershland by that severing of them would be much amended he commanded the said Commissioners that they should forthwith go to the Town of Utwelle and there take order that the said fresh waters so descending that way should have their due and antient course to the Sea as formerly so that this Country of Marshland might have it's Drayn to the Sea by the same out-fall The next year following the King directing his Commission to Simon de Elysworth and Thomas de Hageford to enquire touching the defects in repair of the Bank called Pokediche as also of other Banks and Sewers in this County the Jurats for the Hundred of Frethbrigge by virtue of the said Commission did upon their Oaths present that through the default of the Town of Wigenhale in making and repairing of their Ditches above the Podyke great losses had hapned in those dayes to these parts of Mershland so that the lands of divers men were drowned by the inundations both from the Sea and fresh waters And they also said that the said Pokedyke could not be sufficiently repaired before the Feast of the Nativity of S. Iohn Baptist for the safeguard thereof and of the Country in regard that certain men of Wigenhale had divers lands lying adjacent to the same B●nk
to be the charge of certain other lands of a C. Acres in Stowe on the North side of the Old Pow diche which is wholly in defect 16 All which Bank from Salters lode to the decayed messuage of North delf ought to be five foot above the Fen and in bredth in the bottom xviij foot and in bredth in the top xij foot And from the said Northdelf house to Mully court the said Bank ought to be in height vi foot and in bredth in the bottom xviij foot and in the top xij foot 17 And that the menure for the repair making of the same Bank ought to be taken on the South side xij foot from the foot of the same Bank saving in the time of great need and not on the North side of the same Bank but in the winter time and when for the inundation of the water it cannot be taken on the South side and then C. foot from the foot of the same Bank But because there is no punishment contained in the said Decrees for such offenders as take their menure within xij foot of the said Bank on the South side thereof whereby the foot of the said Bank in divers places is very sore diminished and the Lands and Tenements within the Salvation aforesaid much the more in peril wherefore we find it reasonable that it be now decreed that every person that shall take any menure on the South side of the said Bank within twelve foot of the said Bank except in time of great necessity shall lose and forfeit for every Rod so taken and decayed as aforesaid xs. the moytie to the finder of the same the other moytie to the Queens Majesty But notwithstanding all this care and cost so outragious were the storms and tempests which did beat upon these Sea-banks that on Monday and Tuesday the second and third of October in the year 1570. 12 Eliz. they made several breaches in them whereby all Marshland together with the Town of Wigenhale was overflowed with Salt water so that from old Lynne unto Magdalen bridge there were not left ten Rods of the ●aid Bank firm and whole to the extraordinary damage of all the Country How these breaches were made up I have not seen nor any thing else considerable touching these parts untill 39 Eliz. that there was complaint made at a Se●sion of Sewers then held at Beaupre Hall that in regard of the neglect of keeping the water in Rightforth lode within the Crests of the same the grounds on the North part of the said lode were in time of great inundations overflown which occasioned the Tenants thereof for avoiding of the water to cut the old Pow dike and to issue the said water into Marshland Fen to the great surrounding of the same and extraordinary losse to the Inhabitants and Commoners there It was therefore ordained and decreed by the said Commissioners that if any person or persons whatsoever should thenceforth attempt to cut the said Bank in any part thereof to the intent aforesaid or should lay any Pipe or Sluse for the waters to fall through the same other than such as were already laid should lose and forfeit to the said Queen her heirs and successors xxl. to be levyed of the Goods and Chatels of every such person upon every such default After this divers years there hapued a mighty tide upon the first day of April 1607. 5 Iac. which broke Catts banke and drowned Clenchwarton On the xvth of which month there was another Survey made of the before-specified New Pow dike together with an Agistment thereof by one Mr. Richard Atkins of Outwell which was performed very exactly by the Rod of xvi foot and an half of strict measure according to the number of perches charged upon every Town and began at the stone erected upon the said Bank neer Mullicourt corner by Saltham lake the number of perches from Mullicourt to Northdelf Close being there found to be CCCCxlix according to the large Hundred which perfectly agreed with the Books and Rolls of the Country From whence the repair of the said Bank on the South part and opposite to the said Northdelfe Close was assigned to the heirs of Sir Francis Gawdey Knight for the whole length thereof as antiently it had been And from that place it went on more towards the East from the East corner of the before-specified Close neer the Ditch unto a stone fixed nigh Salters lode which is the chardge belonging to Stow-Bardolf for those Lands called the Hundred Acres but this part was measured by the Rod of xvij foot and so accorded perfectly with the just number of perches antiently assigned to each Town of Marshland All which being done there were special Merestones set up by the said Richard Atkins which had peculiar names graved upon them by the consent of the Inhabitants and did distinguish the several proportions of the said Bank charged upon each Town And thence for the Hundred acres of Stow aforesaid unto the Ditch which compasseth the Tenement at Salters lode were xxiij perches and ten foot according to the said Rod. At which time it was agreed betwixt the Dyke-Reeves who were then in office that the proportion of the said Bank charged upon UUest Lynne should be transposed and agisted aswell above as below with Tilney and UUigenhale where the said Bank was more secure in regard that the Inhabitants of the said Town of Lynne had been found so negligent in repairing and maintaining their parts thereof And it was then also finally concluded betwixt the principal Guardians of the said Bank that this new survey assignation of parts should continue in force for ever and all formerly made in regard they were so confused to be utterly void The next year following on the xvith of August viz. 6 Iac. An. 1608 it was by a Law of Sewers decreed that a new Drayn or Lode should be made and maintained from the end of Chancelours lode unto Tylney Smethe on the South side of the Bank to the Fen-ward of the aforesaid antient Sewer which Drayn to be xij foot in bredth and four or five foot in depth Likewise that a Sluse or Gole should be made at the North end of Chancelour's lode to convey the waters of the Fen into the common Sewer And it was then also decreed that the Land-holders on the South side of Wisebeche should from that time forward ●ew and passe the water out of those their Lands lying on the said South side of Wisebeche between the River of Wisebeche on the North and Ingham field Halfpeny field and Spitt●e field on the South and Gold banke on the West containing by estimation eleven hundred Acres of ground every year from the xxv of March untill the first of November by a Pipe of xviij inches square under the little River of Wis●beche at a place called New common into Enemeth field and so into Walsoken drayn and so to the Smethe
lode and that in consideration thereof the said Land-holders should pay to the Inhabitants of Marshland Cl. And on the xxvi of the same month it was farther decreed that all the rinde Banks within this Country of Marshland towards the Sea should be of the height and scantling hereafter expressed viz. in Terington Walpole West Walton and Emneth in height eight foot above the ordinary Marshtides and in bredth on the top ten foot And that the residue of the rinde Banks in Islington Tilney West Lynne North-Lynne and Clenchwarton to be of such height and bredth as the Dyke-Reeves should think fit As also that Register Books of Parchment be made by the Dyke-reeves in every Town containing the number of Acres of their Lands with the quantity of their Banks Walls VVood-shores and other defences which every of the said Towns are charged to make either to the Sea or otherwise And that whereas the Towns of Terington Tilney and Clenchwarton had In-dikes for their defence against the Salt water in case any sudden breach of the Sea-bank should happen it was decreed that the said In-dikes should be carefully maintained and repaired by those Dyke-Reeves out of the Common Acre-shot ass●ssed within every of the said Towns After this at another Session of Sewers held on the xvijth day of April in the year of our Lord 1610 8 Iac. it being considered that this Country of Marshland was subject to surrounding aswell by downfalls of Rain as by the overflowing of the Sea and fresh waters and was therefore kept drayned by Sewers descending to Knight's-Gole the common out-fall to the great River of Ouse And that the said Gole by the flowing and ebbing of the Sea was then so silted up with sand at divers times especially in Summer that it obstructed the waters in the said Sewers to the utter surrounding of all the Fens and low grounds in the said Country And moreover that the said Gole in former times had been kept and perfected as also the fleet from the same unto the before-specified River by a certain antient pair of Clows placed up higher in the Sewer thereby one appointed for the taking in of the tides and so holding up the water betwe●n a pair of Clows untill the River of Ouse were run low and then forcibly let go for the scouring of Sand out of the said Gole and Fleet And that the setting open of the said Gole and putting down and pulling up the said Clows would be both dangerous and troublesome by reason of the greatnesse and weight of the said Clows made to that purpose It was ordained and decreed that there should in consideration thereof be yearly paid out of every hundred Acres of Land being several within the said Rinde of Marshland which were drayned by the said Gole and had usually paid thereunto the sum of ijd. ob by the owners or occupyers of the said Lands and so after that rate And of every hundred Acres of Land lying on the South side of Wisebeche and Elme Oldfield and Outwell which then were or should be drayned by the said Gole by the owners or occupyers thereof vd. and so after that Rate And whereas the Land-holders of Oldfield in Clme and certain Lands in Outwell on the East side of UUelle river from Emneth unto Beaupre Hall and so to Stoning stile and thence to the old Pow dyke had at divers times drayned their said Lands in Oldfi●ld into Marshland through the out-rinde Bank of Marshland called Broken dyke and so through Emneth into Marshland Fenn as also their Lands in Outwell to the great hurt of the said Country by suffering those waters to run into the said Fen without any perfect Sewer to carry them down in any Gole to the Sea and likewise without paying any Tax Acre-shot or other contribution towards any Drayn Sewer or Gole in Marshland for the same It was then also ordered that the said Lands should not thenceforth be drayned into Marshland Fenn but by and under such conditions here expressed viz. that the Land-holders of Oldfield and Outwell should before the xxiiijth of August then next ensuing give unto the Land-holders of Marshland Cl. viz. the Land-holders of Oldfield Lxxvl. and they of Outwell xxvl. towards the making of a certain lode between Marshland Fenn and Smethe called Shore lode in widenesse xij foot and in depth four or five foot and towards the making of three sufficient Stone-bridges for Carts to passe over the said Lode But it was neither the strength nor height of those their Banks so repaired as aforesaid which could secure them from that dreadfull inundation of the Sea hapning on the first of November in An. 1613. 11 Iac. the memorial whereof I shall here deliver from an Inscription upon the East wall of the South Isle in Wisebeche Church To the immortal praise of God almighty that saveth his people in all adversities be it kept in perpetual memory that on the Feast day of All Saints being the first of November in the year of our Lord 1613. late in the night the Sea broke in through the violence of a North-east wind meeting with a Spring tide and overflowed all Marshland with this Town of Wisebeche both on the North side and the South and almost the whole Hundred round about to the great danger of mens lives and the losse of some besides the exceeding great losse which these Counties sustained through the breach of Banks and spoil of Corn Cattel and Howsing which could not be estimated Which losses with other things of note relating to the said Banks and the particular Towns then surrounded as they were presented upon Oath by the Jurors for the hundred of Frethebridge before the Kings Commissioners sitting at Lynne upon the ixth day of December in the year before-specified I have here likewise thought fit to transcribe The Presentment of the Iury for the Hundred of Frebridge in Marshland made at Kings Lynne 9 Decemb. 11 Jac. An. 1613. 1 Inprimis we present and say c. that there is belonging to the Town of Terington a Sea-dyke containing xiC Rode in length or thereabouts which was in good repair before the first and second day of November last whereof CCCCxx Rode were ruinated by the rage of the Sea that then happened and also one Bridge called St. Iohns bridge was then broken up 2 That there were at that time lost by the rage of the Sea c. 1876 sheep amounting to the sum of Lviij l. and more In great Beasts lost 120 valued at 322 l. In Corn sowed in the Fields 480 acres valued at xxx s. the Acre amounting to 720 l. Hay lost in the fields and barns to the value of CC l. Corn in the barns lost to the value of DCC l. Grasse in the Fields lost to the value of D l. Dwelling houses utterly ruinated and wasted xiij And Cxlii. dwelling houses there impaired to the value of a M l. Bedding and other Houshold-stuff
Jurors then impanelled and sworn viz. that Robert Russel Bayliff to the Abbot of Ramseye Iohn Mayner Walter Halleman and others had forcibly broke down that Dam at Smal lode or Lytle lode and that one Richard Curteys had done the like at Wadyugstowe Whereupon the Shireeve had command to take them all and imprison them untill he should receive farther directions therein In 8 E. 2. the King being informed that the water whereby divers persons of Cambridge Huntendon and Northampton shires passed with Ships and Victual from the parts of Lenne to Welle to the great benefit of all the Country and especially of the Town of Holme situate thereupon was obstructed by certain men dwelling thereabouts he therefore assigned Iohn de Butetort Robert de Maddingle and Walter de Mollesworth to enquire thereof The next ensuing year Geffrey de Colvile Robert de Maddyngle Laurence de Burewelle and Iohn le Corouner were appointed to view the Banks and Sewers upon the Sea-coast lying in Tyd Neuton Leveryngton and Wysebeche as also in some Towns of Marshland and the parts adjacent within the Hundred of Wisebeche which were then in decay and to take order for their repair The like Commission had the said Geffrey Robert and Iohn together with Nich. de Houtone in 9 E. 2. And in 17 E. 2. the King receiving farther information concerning the obstruction of the water of Welstreme at the Town of Welle before-mentioned whereby Merchants and others were hindred from passing with their Ships Boats and other Vessels from the Town of Lenne unto Yakesle Holme and other places lying in the Counties of Huntendon and Norfolk in such sort as they had formerly used to do and as the Commission in 8 E. 2. above-specified importeth constituted Iohn de Mutford Walter de Friskeney and Will. de Gosefeld Commissioners to enquire thereof What they did herein I have not seen but in 3 E. 3. which was not long after there was a Presentment exhibited to the Justices Itinerant sitting at Northampton by the Jurors for several Hundreds in that County importing that whe●eas the course of the River Nene had antiently been directly from Peterborough unto the Len●e in Norfolk by which Corn VVoo and other Commodities were carryed to that Haven and from thence Victuall and other necessaries that about xxviii years then past Walter de Langetone Bishop of Coventre and Lichfield and Treasurer to King Edward the first Grandfather to the then King did for the drayning of his Mannour of Coldham situate in a Fenny Soil by his power and greatnesse cause a Dam to be made at Utwell in the said County of Norfolk with earth and sand so that no navigable Vessells could afterwards passe to and from Lenne as they had wont to do to the great damage of the said King and his people aswell of that County as of Norfolk Cambridge Huntendon and Lincoln shires and that the same stop of those waters from descending to Lenne did cause the Lands Meadows Pastures and Marshes of Burrough fen and Thorney fen with divers others adjoyning to be overflowed and drowned to the damage of the men of that County CCCl. per annum and upwards And that Edmund Peverell son and heir to Robert Peverell Brother and heir of the said Bishop then holding the said Mannour did maintain and continue the before-specified Dam but by what Authority they knew not the Shireeve of Norfolke had command therefore to summon the said Edmund to answer thereto Who appearing in person and being required to say what he could for the keeping up of the said Dam alleged that the before-specified Bishop dying seized of the said Mannour Robert Peverell entred into it as his Brother and heir and that after the said Roberts death he the said Edmund entring as his son and heir found that water so damm'd as hath been observed without that that the said Dam was so made as aforesaid by the same Bishop or that he the said Edmund had continued and supported the same to the common damage c. as had been presented and thereupon did put himself upon the Country and so likewise did Richard Adelburgh who prosecuted for the King And therefore because it seemed expedient to the Court aswell for the King as for his people that there should be a verdict from the Country on that behalf aswell by Jurors of those Counties wherein the damage was assigned as by Jurors of Norfolk in which County the said Dam was alleged to be made command was given to the Shireeves of Cambridge Duntendon Lincoln and Northampton shires likewise that each of them should bring xij honest and lawfull men whereby the truth might be the better known to appear before the King three weeks after Michaelmass At which time came Adam de Fyncham the King's Attorney but the said Edmund though solemnly called appeared not whereupon a verdict was taken against him by default Nor did the Shireeves of any of the before-mentioned Counties make return of their said Precepts therefore new writs were issued out unto them to the same purpose as above-said returnable upon the xvth of S. Hillarie then next following At which time came the said Adam and the Shireeves of Norfolk and Northampton who alleged that the Writs were so long in coming to their hands that they could be nothing therein howbeit the Shireeve of Cambridge and Huntendonshire returned the names of Jurors but the Shireeve of Lincolnshire sent no answer Whereupon the King issued out a Precept to Geffrey le Scrope and his fellow Justices of the Pleas before himself to be holden whereby he signified to them that the Inhabitants of Marshland in Norfolke had complained and the men of Suffolk and Cambridgshire who had Lands neer unto those parts had exhibited a Petition to him the said King and his Council shewing that whereas some parts of Marshland together with a great proportion of those Counties was lost and destroyed by the inundation of the Salt waters as also of the fresh by reason that the said waters and Sewers had not their right course And that King Edward the first passing that way and taking notice thereof did by the advice of his Council assign William Howard and some other to make enquiry touching the premisses who by Inquisitions taken before them found that those parts could not be any other way preserved than by stopping of a certain water called Welle dam And whereas for that respect they did ordain the before-specified obstruction thereof to be made and that afterwards it was presented before him the said Geffrey his fellow Justices itinerant in the County of Northampton by the procurement of some persons for their own particular advantage that the same obstruction was made to their damage Whereupon they caused Edmund Peverell to be impleaded for it and proceeded so far therein as that the said Edmund submitted to an Inquisition thereof which Inquisition being to be taken before
the said King the parties before-specified besought him that whereas that obstruction had been made by the appointment of those Justices he would please to supersede the taking thereof untill the complainants could shew forth their right as they ought to do The said King therefore being willing to do right in the premisses required the Treasurer and Chamberlains of his Exchequer that they should under the Exchequer Seal send unto him the Inquisitions so taken before the said Will. Howard and his associates as aforesaid together with the whole process thereupon upon the xvth of the holy Trinity then next ensuing all which were at that time in the Treasury of the said Exchequer under their Custody And commanded the Shireeves of Norfolk Suffolk and Cambridgshire to make Proclamation within their liberties that every person concerned in the premisses should then and there appear to answer what might be proposed to them if they thought fit and to folicite for further Justice therein And lastly forbad the said Geffrey and his fellow Justices to receive the said Inquisition By virtue of which Precept the Jurors for the Counties of Cambridge and Huntendon were respited untill from the xvth of the holy Trinity following because none of them appeared and therefore the Shireeve was to attach them And because the Shireeves of Norfolk and Northampton returned that their Writs came so late unto them that they could do nothing therein and the Shireeve of Lincolnshire made no return at all therefore other Writs were sent unto them requiring each of them to bring xxiiij honest and lawfull men c. at that time prefixed and in the interim the said King dispatcht his Writ of Certiorare to the Treasurer and Chamberlains of his Exchequer commanding them that they should forthwith send unto him under the Exchequer Seal the said Inquisitions so taken before the before-specified Will. Howard and his associats as aforesaid Which Writ of Certiorare beareth date the xviiith day of February in 5 E. 3. But the said Treasurer and Chamberlains of the Exchequer made return that having sought amongst their Rolls they could not find any such Inquisition Ordinance or Decree touching the obstruction of that water Whereupon the King signified as much to the said Geffrey le Scrope and his associats and not long after issued out a writ to the Shireeve of Norfolk whereby having advertised him of all proceedings in that business he commanded him to make publick Proclamation within his Liberties where he should think fit that all such persons who were concern'd therein should attend the said King at a day and place assigned to make their proposals touching that business if they thought i● meet as also to solicite for further Justice there And to make return of his doings therein a Month after Easter ensuing Which Writ beareth date upon the 18th of February in the year before-mentioned By virtue whereof the said Shireeve of Norfolk viz. Thomas de Hindringham thus answered that he made return of the same Writ to Iohn Bosse of Kenynghale Bayliff of the Bishop of Elye's liberty who said that he did make Proclamation accordingly and found no man gain-saying ot finding fault with that Dam but that the said passage was as commodious as it had wont to be And that he did give notice to all the Noble-men of those parts that they should appear at the same day specified in the writ before the said King to render their reasons if they thought good And the said Shireeve did also give advertisement thereof to Will. de Whetacre Steward of the Liberties for the Town of Lenne who had return and Execution of writs Which William answered that he did cause Proclamation to be made thereof in the full Market of that Town upon Tuesday in Easter week in the same year with advertisement that all those whom the said obstruction might concern should attend the said King likewise at the time before expressed to manifest their reasons in that business The like Writs did the said King send to the Shireeves of Suffolk and Cambridgshire Which Shireeve of Cambridgshire scil Will. le Moigne made return that he did cause the like Proclamation to be made as abovesaid viz. that all those whom the said obstruction did concern should attend the said King upon the xvth of the holy Trinity to set forth their right c. And because that the King received information before the said xvth of the holy Trinity that the before-specified Edmund Peverell dyed and that Elizabeth his Wife did jointly hold the said Mannour with him the said Edmund he issued out another Writ to the said Shireeve of Cambridgshire whereby after recitall of the whole business he required him to summon the said Elizabeth to appear upon the said xvth of the holy Trinity when Inquisition was to be taken thereof to propose what she could touching her right then in question Which Writ beareth date the xijth of May in the year abovesaid And upon the same xv of the holy Trinity the said Shireeve making return of his Writ there came Adam de Fincham the King's Attorney and likewise the Jurors for the said Counties of Norfolk Cambridge Huntendon Lincoln and Northampton But neither did the said Elizabeth nor any of the Marshland Land men nor of the Counties of Norfolk Suffolk and Cambridge having Lands thereabouts make any appearance at all Whereupon the said King sent another Writ to the before specified Geffrey le Scrope his associats requiring them without farther delay to proceed to the taking of the said Inquisition upon the same xv of the holy Trinity Which VVrit bears date the xii of May in the year abovesaid At which time the Jurors for the County of Norfolke impanelled and sworn did say upon their Oaths that Walter de Langton ● sometime Bishop of Coventre and Lichfield did for the Drayning of his Mannour of Coldham about one and thirty years then past cause a stop to be made at Outwell of the before-mentioned water by reason whereof those men who had occasion to go with Ships and other Vessels laden with Goods and Merchandize from Holme Yaxley and other parts thereabouts unto the Port of Bishops Lenne in Norfolk as also such as had a mind to return directly from thence to Peterborough and the parts aforesaid could not passe with their Ships and Vessels as antiently before that stop was so made they had used to do but were forced to go a long way about viz. by Old Wellen hee and Lyttle port which in going to and fro is fifty miles and more whereby Corn Timber Wool Reed Turf Stone and other Commodities were the dearer and so likewise were Fish Herings and other Victuals by reason of that circuit to the damage of the Inhabitants of Norfolke CCl. every year And being asked in whose soyl the said stop was so made at first they answered in the Kings soyl and said that the Common Road passage for ships and Boats had wont to
be there before the said stop was so made and the water likewise cōmon for fishing to all the Neighbourhood And they also said that the borderers on each part thereof were either Tenants to the Abbot of Ramsey the Earl Warren or of Iohn de Bardolf and other Lords And being farther asked whether the said Edmund or Elizabeth did in their times do any thing for the maintenance and keeping up of that Dam they said that after the before-specified Bishop had first made it it did not need any repair or amendment and that the said Robert Peverell Edmund or Elizabeth did not in their times meddle at all therewith And the Jurors for the County of Lincolne impanelled and sworn said upon their Oaths that the Chanel called South Edyke beginning at Crouland and extending it self to Tyd in that County through which the fresh waters descending from the Fens and Up-Countries used to pass unto the Sea by raising the crest thereof no more than two foot was then scarce sufficient to carry away those waters by reason of the before-mentioned obstruction though the Bank was in height no less than xv foot on each side And that before this obstruction was so made whensoever there was any occasion for the repair of the said Bank or raising it higher the agistment of every Acre of Land in those parts at an half-peny was sufficient for the same but that then through the overflowing of those waters every Acre was agisted at iiiid. and that by reason of the said obstruction no less than xl thousand Acres of Moor and Marish ground in Holand fen were overflowed and drowned And they farther said that the Abby of Crouland was founded by the Progenitors of the King 's of England and that two thousand Acres of Land Meadow Moor and Fen belonging thereto were by means of this obstruction overflowed and drowned so that the possessions of that Monastery would not suffice to maintain the House except the number of Monks were lessened and that by means thereof the King in the times of Vacancie of the said Abby did lose the benefit which might accrue to him thereby And they said moreover that by reason of this obstruction the Lands Meadows Moores Marshes and Pastures of Deping fen Burgh fen and Spalding fen which contained seaven thousand Acres as also the Moor and Marshes to the Moores of Kestevene were so overflowed and drowned that the Lords and Commoners of all the Towns adjacent on every part had by reason of that obstruction lost the profits belonging to them And they farther said that the Common passage for Ships and Boats from Crouland to the Haven of Lenne with Corn and other Commodities had wont to be by the said Town of Outwell where the before-specified obstruction was and that then they were constrained by reason of that stop to go about by Old Wellenhee and Litle port which is fifty miles farther than the other way to the damage of the King and his liege people of those parts a thousand Marks yearly And the Jurors for Cambridgshire impanelled and sworn did say upon their Oaths that the River of Ouse descending from Huntendon being the bounds betwixt Cambridge and Huntendon shires and the River of Nene descending from Peterborough and other parts above did meet at Benwick in Cambridgshire and had used to run directly from thence to the said Port of Lenne by the before-specified Town of Outwell untill xxxi years then last past that the said Bishop made that stop as aforesaid by reason whereof the Lands Meadows Fens Turbaries and a great proportion of arable belonging to all the Towns betwixt Fen Drayton and Benwick before-mentioned unto the said Town of Utwell in Cambridgshire and which were adjacent thereto and for the length and bredth of about xxx miles were commonly overflowed and drowned every year so that neither the owners of the said Lands c. nor the Commoners had any yearly profit by them to the damage of the said King and the Inhabitants of those parts and such as would pass that way CCl. and upwards every year And they said moreover that for the reasons abovesaid there was not that passage for Vessells with Corn and Merchandize towards the before-mentioned Port as had used to be neither in going nor returning except by Old Wellen hee and Lytle port which is xxxvi miles about And the said Jurors being asked how much the said Mannour of Coldham was then more worth annually than it had been before that stop was so made they answered xll. by the year And the Jurors for Huntendonshire empanelled and sworn for the same purpose said upon their Oaths that whereas men would pass from the Towns of Iakele Holme Glatton and Ramsey by the River of Nene directly towards the Haven of Lenne aforesaid with navigable Vessels laden with Corn and other vendible commodities by the said Town of Outwell they were then hindred by the said Dam that they were constrained to go about more than fifty miles And they farther said that all the Meadows Lands Pastures Fens and Turbaries from the Town of S. Neots in Huntendonshire lying adjacent or neer to the River Ouse in length xxx miles and in bredth x. miles more or less unto the Town of Benwike where the Rivers of Ouse and Nene have their confluence and likewise the Lands Meadows Pastures and Fens of all the Towns betwixt Aylington in that County unto a place called Mus●cote in the Fen which is xvi miles in floud times were overflowed and drowned by reason that they could not pass away as they had used to do so that the Lords of those Fens and their Tenants as also the Commoners in them did totally lose the benefit which belonged to them thereby to the damage of the said King and Inhabitants of those parts six hundred Marks by the year And they said moreover that the said King was Lord of the Mannour of Glatton whereunto the Hamlet of Holme belonged to which Market men from the parts of Lenne and elswhere in Norfolk and Suffolk could not pass with their Victuals and Merchandize by Ships and Boats nor return by reason of the said obstruction insomuch as that Mannour of the Kings whereunto the said Market belonged was less worth by ten pounds per annum than formerly And the Jurors for the County of Northampton empanelled likewise and sworn said upon their Oaths that the River of Neene had wont to pass directly from Peterborough to the Port of Bishop's Lenne whereby the men of that County usually carried Merchandize Corn and all manner of Victual with Ships and Boats by Outwell in Norfolke untill within xxxi years then past that the said Walter Langtone late Bishop of Cov. and Lich. obstructed the course of the before-specified water insomuch as all persons who had a desire to go from Peterborough unto that Haven were constrained to go by Old Wellenhee and Litil port which in going and coming is a farther Journey by fifty miles And
his Progenitors inter alia of certain Lands and fishing which Ulfkytell had in Welle And that though the said fishing was then viz. when this Inquis was taken called Livermere and in the Town of Welle which was before called Wylla and in the County of Cambridge and that a certain water called Nene had time out of mind ran to the said Lake and did then so do and that the said Abbot and his Predecessors had ever had the said Lake or fishing with the course of that River of Nene running thereinto and peaceably enjoyed the same the said Commissioners by Virtue of the King's Letters Parents for the view and repair of the Banks Ditches and Sewers in that County and by colour of an Inquisition taken before them without any notice given to the before-specified Abbot intended the obstruction of the said water-course wherein in case they should proceed the said Abbot would totally lose the benefit of his said fishing to the damage of the King himself because that the profit thereof with the benefit of the other Lands belonging to that Abby being of the said Kings Patronage ought to belong unto the Crown in the time of every Vacancy he therefore required them that they should not make any attempt therein to his prejudice without consulting with him Whereupon the Wednesday next before the Feast of the blessed Virgin being assigned the said Commissioners sate again at which time the said Inhabitants of Elme Welle and Wisebeche brought the Kings Writ by virtue whereof the Bayliffs of Tyd Neuton Leverington Wisebeche Elme and Welle were required to summon xij of the most substantial men in every of the said Towns to appear at the Castle of Wisebeche before the said Justices upon Wednesday next after the Feast of S. Luke the Evangelist there to perform what should be enjoined them on the said King's behalf touching the obstruction of that Crike And the said King did likewise issue out another Precept unto the before-specified Justices that after their said Session they should upon the Octaves of S. Hillary under their Seals transmit the Record of their proceeding therein unto him to the end that upon perusal thereof he might consider what farther to do therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm The next ensuing year sc. 14 E. 3. Iohn de Hedersete Iohn de la Rokele and Hugh de Walton were assigned to view the Banks and Sewers on both sides the water of Well Ee within the Town of Waterwell on the borders of Norfolk and Cambridgshire and to take order for their repair And the same year at a Session of Sewers held at Wisebeche upon Monday next after the Feast of S. Iohn Baptist for safeguard of the Towns of Elme and Welle it was ordained that there was a necessity of mending and raising the Bank called the New diche lying betwixt the Rivers of Elme and Welle full two foot more than it was at that time in the highest place and so beginning by the Level of Fryday brigge to Charite Crouch thence to Gongsted lake according to the same Level height and thickness thence to the Cowestowe thence to the Garden of the Prior of Meremaund and thence to Lakebrigge every man to make his frontier of the same height thickness and Level And they also decreed that from Gonsted lake unto Charite Crouch no man should come neer the said Bank called the New diche for to mow or dig for the bredth of ten perches towards Coremere and Hendmere except for the mending of the said Bank and that to be done by common assent And they likewise ordained that a Clow of five foot in bredth and in depth two foot should be made at the Lakebrigge to carry away the waters betwixt the Newdiche and Bishops diche at the charges of those who had Lands and Commons within those places And that one Clow should also be made at Frydaybridge and another at the Stone-Crosse in Outwell for avoiding the waters of Needham each of them of the same bredth and depth as abovesaid and to be done at the costs of all those who had lands within the Bishopsdiche and Needham diche and within the River of Elme and the Greendiche and Thorndiche And they moreover ordained that the old Sewer of Deleford unto the Stone-Crosse should be clensed and digged as it ought to be at the charges of Needham and that every Ditch drawing water to the said Sewer should be opened at all times of the year wherein water could run And that Piisdrove should be raised in each low place and that from the same little Drove one Crest should be made into the large Drove unto the Grenediche having a Causey for Common Drift of Cattel at all times of the year and this to be done at the charge of Upwell and Outwell and that all Slades and low places in the same Drove and ways be amended at the charge of the Towns each for themselves And they likewise ordained for Drayning of the Lands at Bodebeche that there should be three Pipes placed the first of one foot square every way and this to be fixed in the Bank sometime belonging to Gilbert atte Delf neer the Milne hill the second in the Bank of Christian de Beaupre opposite to the School being two foot in bredth and one foot in depth and the third in the antient Sewer to be a foot square on every side All which Pipes to be made at the charge of the Landholders in Bodebeche And they also ordained that the frontier of the Abbot of Dereham in Bodebeche should be stopt and that for the future no mau should dig Turfs nor Slakkes in the common Droves of Elme and Welle for dieving of flax or hemp in the common Ditch and Sewer to the nusance of the Commonalty except by the oversight and appointment of the Guardians which were to be deputed for the present And that the Bank called the New diche extending from Charite Crouch to the Prior of Meremound's Garden should be anew repaired equally and afterwards agisted And also that the breaches in Bishopesdiche and Needham diche should be repaired and moreover that all the Frontiers of the Uausedrove unto Frydaybrigge and thence to Eustace le Vernoun's Drove should be stopped up And they also ordained that one stop should be made in Oldfield neer to the Se diche in the Ditch of Raphe atte Field and to be in thicknesse eight foot at the charges of the said Raphe And that the Floud-gates of Elme as also the old Bridge together with the great Bridge neer to the Church of Elme should be newly repaired and amended at the charges of the whole Town And that for the repair of the said New diche every Acre of land from thence to Needham diche should pay a penny and every Acre from Needhamdiche unto ....... and Uernons field and the Infield and Brodbechefield an half peny and either more or lesse as need should be About
made higher by three foot 120. And that Guyhirne gole be banked with a Bank of xvi foot and in height x foot by all the lands lying in Wisbeche between Sorcel dike and the high Fendike On the 12th of Iuly in the same 13th year of Q●een Eliz. reign it was thus ordered by Robert Bell Ieffrey Coleville William Hunston Robert Balam William Brian Richard Nicholas Thomas Hewar and Henry Hunston Esquires Justices of Sewers for the Countrey of Marshland in the County of Norffolf and for the Borders and Confines of the same viz. Forasmuch as Bishops dyke within the Isle of Ely is greatly decayed by the abundance of fresh waters which hapned this last Winter the like whereof was never seen within the remembrance of man to the great decaying and impairing of Broken dyke being one of the defenc●-Dikes for salvation of the whole Country of Marshlande to the great peril of the drowning the said Country of Marshland and to the utter undoing of all the Landholders of the East side of Elme between the said Bishop's dike and Broken dike if the said Bishop's dike be not sufficiently repaired and amended in time the experience wherof was too manifest this last winter to the great losse of a number of the Queen's Majesties Subjects the misery whereof is unspeakable it is therefore condescended and agreed by the said Justices That the Landholders of Elme within the Isle of Ely aforesaid between Nedeham dyke and Broken-dyke aswell for that the Countty of Marshland may the better repair and maintain the said Broken dike this last Winter decayed by the means of the overflowing of the said Bishop's dike as also to be without charge of making and defending of the said Broken dike the said Broken dyke being maintained which cannot be if the land there remain surrounded still and so thereby no profit to be reaped by the Owners of the same land shall have license to issue out the water of Oldfield between Needham dike and Broken dyke at the Gote or Pipe already laid on Broken dike not far distant from Blewick's house and to issue into Marshland by the direction of Mr. Balam Mr. Hewar and Mr. Henry Hunston through Emneth and Walsoken in the highest parts of Marshland Provided that when it shall be thought by any two of the Justices aforesaid or by any four of the chiefest Landholders of the Country of Marshland then resiant within the said Country that the same water running underneath Broken dike is hurtfull to the Country of Marshland or to any part thereof or that it shall be perceived by any two of the said Justices or by any four of the chiefest Landholders of the Country of Mershland aforesaid that the Charge bearers of Bishop's dike be negligent in the well defending the said Bishops dyke or that the Landholders of Oldfield do not sufficiently from time to time maintain and keep Needham dike or lay any Gotes or Pipes in any place of the said Needham dike to issue any water from any part of the South side of the said Needham dike or that any water is received into Oldfield by any way or device to the intent to utter the same at the Gote in Broken-dyke other than the downfall of the Ayre falling into the aforesaid Oldfield that then and at all times afterwards it shall be lawfull for any of the Inhabitants of the Country of Marshland so to cease the running of the water through the same any thing mentioned in this Order or Law to the contrary notwithstanding Or if the owners of the lands which do lye between Needham dike and Broken dike or any of them do refuse to bear and pay all and every such charges to Knight's goole or to any Sewer leading thereunto as the other lands in Marshland do according to the number of Acres and the same to be paid to the Dikereeves in Emneth Or if the Owners and Landholders of Oldfield do not from time to time well and sufficiently repair and maintain aswell the said Gote or Pipe lying underneath or through Broken dike as also as much of the Bank or Dike called Broken dike alias Oldfield dike as the same Gote or Pipe is in length or bredth Or if the same Gote have not two strong dores viz. at each end one always in readinesse to be shut or stopped when occasion shall serve at or before the day of S. Michael the Arch Angel next ensuing the date hereof and from time to time thenceforth to continue and keep the same in good reparations or else to cease as is aforesaid At a Session of Sewers held at Wisbeche 22 Apr● xvi Eliz. Ordered that the Causey called Norwol dam shall be raised with gravell three foot higher than it is at the costs of the Hundred of Wisbeche saving a way to be left of xii foot in bredth with a Bridg over the same as heretofore hath been accustomed which Bridg to be made at the costs of the Bishop of Ely Also that Longe's drove in Elme shall be made sufficient to keep out Says field water by the Landholders of Oldfield In An 1576 xviii Eliz. was the first Improvement of Needham Buriall fields lying within the Precincts of Upwelle by an Agreement of the Landholders there on the xxiiiith day of Iune in the same year at which time they setled an Acre-shot of six pence the Acre for defraying the charge thereof And about two years after this at a Session of Sewers held at Erith brigge viz. 4º Augusti xx Eliz. it was ordered by the Justices that there should be a Bank made from Marysse dike unto Bishop's dike alias Lovedays dike over the River of Elme to be in height eight foot in bredth xii on the upper part and in the bottom xxxii foot as also a Clouse at Marisdam but so as Boats might passe through the same And likewise that the Bank beginning at Ke●ismill and extending to Guy hirne and so by Coldham to Fryday bridg in Elme should be repaired so that the height thereof might be six foot the bredth in the bottom xxiiii foot and at the top 8 foot At a Session of Sewers held at Wisebeche upon the 12th of Iuly in xxiii Eliz. it was thus ordered that whereas the Common called Ladwers lying in Elme is drowned for want of a Crest that there be a Crest or Bank made beginning at Tylneyhirne and so leading to the New Leame thence by the River of Nene to the Horshooe thence to Marmond land thence to the West end of Langbeche adjoyning unto Bishops dike which Bank to be xii foot in the bottom in bredth 4 foot at the top and in height 5 foot And that the Sluse upon Marys dam shall be taken up and when the said Bank is made then to be set at New Leames end As also a convenient Tenement built meet for a man to dwell in for the keeping of the same And it was likewise
And in 18 E. 2. to William la Zouche Iohn de Cantebrig Simon de Brim and Iohn de Hinton for those in this County alone Upon a Pleading in 40 E. 3. it was found by the Jurors that the Prior of Ely did obstruct the course of the water at Wilburgham magna in a certain place called Watholm dam so that it could not have it's current as it usually had insomuch as the Commons belonging to the Town of Fulbourne were overflowed to the damage of the whole Country And in 12 H. 4. the Town of Harlton being questioned for diverting the current of the water betwixt Harlton and Haselingfeld to the damage of the whole Country could not deny the charge and therefore was amerc'd Raphe Bateman being then Lord of that Mannour In 14 H. 6. William Godrede Thomas Fulthorpe Sir Iohn Colvyle Sir Henry Rocheforth and Sir Robert Hakebeche Kts William Yelverton Thomas Dereham Iohn Iakys Thomas Reynold and Iohn Tylney were constituted Commissioners for the view and repair of the Banks Sewers and Ditches throughout this whole County only and to make Statutes and Ordinances for the same according to the Laws and Customes of Runmey marsh On the West side of this County and at the outmost skirt thereof lyeth Wittlesey mere the greatest Lake in all these parts and consequently the more worthy of note I shall therefore cloze up what I have farther to say of this Shire with that particular description of it which I find in the Register of Peterborough In Septentrionali parte stagni c. On the North side of this Lake there is a water called Merelade issuing out of the River of Neene where the Northern bounds thereof are This with the Fens thereto belonging hath at the end thereof a certain Fishing called Edd●rmuthe Upon the East part thereof are two other Meres called Wellepole and Trendelmere betwixt which is a narrow stream containing two furlongs in length called Trendelmere beche having in it two Fishings And there is likewise another narrow water there of one mile long which is called Falet having in it one Fishing In that part thereof betwixt Wytlesmere and Kynkesdelf where the Eastern boundary thereof is the bredth of the Meer containeth three miles having in it a narrow stream called Derescuf and a Wood named Rageholt On the South part thereof also there is another slender stream of three furlongs in length called Selfremerebeche having in it two Fishings at the end whereof is a Lake named Selfremere having on the South side thereof a narrow water of half a mile long called Ubbemere lade at the head whereof is likewise another Fishing And about the middle thereof there is a place in the Fen called Alwynesbarwe and there is the Southern boundary thereof Moreover on the West side of this Lake there is also a narrow stream containing two furlongs in length named Trendemere beche which hath one Fishing in it at the end whereof is the Meer called West Trendemere On that side there are also these waters viz. Drelgmere Wellepole Withibuscemere Langemere Kinninges and Musklemere There is likewise on that side another narrow water of one mile in length extending to Oppebeche and hath in it one Fishing at the end of which water is the Western limits of the Fens and all the waters pertaining to Witlesmere About two miles distant from the North East side of the before-specified Meer there is a memorable Chanel cut through the body of the Fen extending it self from neer Ramsey to Peterborough and is called King's delph The common tradition is that King Canutus or his Queen being in some perill in their passage from Ramsey to Peterborough by reason of the boysterousnesse of the Waves upon Witlesey mere caused this Ditch to be first made and therewith do some of our Historians agree who say thus Anno Domini Mxxxiiii Cnuto Rex potentissimus viam in marisco inter Ramsey Burgum quod King's delph dicitur ut periculum magnorum stagnorum vitaretur eruderavit But how to reconcile this testimony to what I meet with above threescore years before I well know not which is that King Edgar confirming to the Monks of Peterborough before-mentioned the fourth part of UUitlesmere with all the waters Fishings and Fens thereto belonging bounds it to these limits viz. quorum Septentrionalis est ubi primùm intrat Mere lode de ampne Nen orientaliter ad King's delph Australiter ad Adewinesbarue c id est whereof the North side is where Mere lode first enters thereinto from the River Nen Eastward to King's delph and Southward to Aldewynesbarue c. But the largest and most notable is that fair Chanel made from Stanground steafe below Peterborough to Guyhirne neer UUisebeche of xl foot in bredth by Iohn Moreton Bishop of Ely in King Henry the seventh's days and still called Moreton's Leame or the New Leame a work certainly of singular consequence not only for the quicker evacuation of the overflowings of Nene but for conveniency of Carriage from Peterborough to UUisebeche which will remain a lasting memorial to that worthy Bishop CHAP. LI. SOuth-west from Cambridgshire lieth the County of Huntendon into which a skirt likewise of this great Level extendeth at the entrance whereof I meet first with Ramsey compassed with Fens on all parts excepting towards the South-west and containing about ...... Acres wherein for the like respect as in Ely Crouland and Thorney by others Ailwin a neer Kinsman to King Edgar and who is stiled by our Historians totius Angliae Aldermannus id est Chief Iustice of England did found an eminent Monastery for Monkes of S. Benedict's Rule almost an hundred years before the Norman Conquest Touching the situation of this Isle for so it was antiently called let us hear what the Register of that Abby saith Quum igitur in orientali angulo territorii Huntedonensis c. Forasmuch therefore as this place situate in the Eastern corner of Huntendoushire where the Chanel of the River Ouse restraineth the bounds of the Fens is for its bigness the fairest of the fenny Islands and which many have endeavoured to extoll so that it needeth not our commendation nevertheless we will not wholy leave it untoucht On the West side for on all other there is no access to it by reason of the Fens it is severed from the firm land with certain deep and boggy Quagmires in bredth about two Bow shot insomuch as in times past the access unto it was by navigable Vessells brought thither through a slow stream with gentle windes but now by much labour and no small cost there is with Wood Stones and Gravel a firm Causey made so that people may come to it on foot In length this Island doth extend almost unto two miles but in bredth not so much being environed with Alders Reedes green Canes and Bulrushes which do beautify it exceedingly and before it became inhabited was full
distringendum per amerciamenta alio modo prout c. All which was by the Authority of the Common law id est the antient usage of this Kingdome as the learned Sergeant Callice well infers from the words dignitatis suae Regiae all Prerogatives being without limitation of time Now for the Statutes The first of these was in 6 H. 6. and this adds to the power of the said Commissioners for it gives them Authority to make Officers to take Accounts of their Expenditors to set Labourers on work and to rate the wages of such Labourers Then that of 8 H. 6. Cap. 3. which supplying the defect of the former grants power to the said Commissioners to ordain and execute the Statutes Ordinances and other things to be made according to the effect and purport of the said Commissions Next that of 18 H. 6. Cap. 10. which continueth the power of that Statute of 6 H. 6. for ten years longer the time first limitted therein being then expired Then that of 23 H. 6. Cap. 9. prolonging that of 18 H. 6. to xv years more Next that of 12 E. 4. Cap. 6. which not only addeth the like number xv years more thereto but enlargeth it to the Marches of Caleis Guynes and Hammes on the borders of France and Flanders Then that of 4 H. 7. Cap. 1. prolonging that of 12 E. 4. to xxv years more Likewise that of 6 H. 8. Cap. 10. ratifying the former Acts and giving power to the Lord Chancellor of England for the time being to grant out Commissions of Sewers into all parts of this Realm Next that of 23 H. 8. Cap. 5. in the Preamble whereof there are these words viz. the King nothing erthely so highly weighing as advancing of the Commō profit wealth and Commodity of this Realm Whence saith the before-specified learned Sergeant it appeareth that the making of this Law was of all other thought to be most necessary and of greatest consequence the King preferring the same before any earthly thing and the King's care therein became his Royal person very worthily because by this Statute safety was brought to the Realm and wealth and profit to the people thereof In that Preamble 't is likewise observable First that Marshes and low grounds had formerly been by politick wisdome won and made profitable for the good of the Common-wealth Secondly that if more speedy and further remedy were not had and provided though divers provisions had been formerly made yet none of them were sufficient remedy for reformation thereof And thirdly that power is given thereby to six Commissioners of Sewers whereof three to be of the Quorum to take any man's timber c. to be used therein and to set the price thereof as also to sell any mans Lands nay the King 's also or part thereof in fee or for what other term they pleased All which being confirmed by the King 's Royal assent had thereunto are not to be repealed but by Act or Parliament and makes them therefore an absolute Court to hear and determine all things concerning Sewers After this about two years viz. 25 H. 8. Cap. 10 there was another Statute which extendeth this last Commission to the Town and Marches of Caleis and imposeth a penalty of five Marks upon every Commissioner who shall refuse to be sworn according to the Act of 23 H. 8. Then that of 3 4 E. 6. Cap. 8. which taking notice how beneficial the Statute of 23 H. 8. had been to this Realm ordained that it should continue with these additions thereto for ever viz. that all Skots Lo●s and summs of money thenceforth to be rated and taxed upon any of the King's Lands his Heirs or Successors for any thing concerning the Articles of the said Commission of Sewers should be gathered and levied by distress or otherwise in like manner and form as should and might be done in the Lands of any other persons And that no Commission of Sewers should thenceforth have continuance for above five years after the date thereof Next that of 13 Eliz. Cap. 9. which authoriseth the Commissions of Sewers thenceforth to stand in force for the term of ten years next after their dates unless they were repealed by reason of any Commission or by supersedeas And lastly that of 3 Iac. Cap. 14. which comprehendeth the Walls Ditches Banks Gutters Sewers Gates Causeys Bridges Streams and Water-courses having their passage into the River of Thames and within two miles of the City of London as subject to the Commissions and Statutes of Sewers and to the penalties of the same To these for removing of some scruples touching the power of the Commissioners of Sewers for erecting of new Sluses and for making new Cuts and Drayns where none were before I shall add the opinion of those two Chief Justices viz. Popham and Anderson men famous in their times for their learning in both these Cases and which is observed by the before-specified Serg. Callice in his said Reading upon the Stat. of 23 H. 8. As also of Sir Henry Hobart Knight Attorney general to King Iames. In 43 44 Eliz. a great controversy did arise in the County of Lincoln about the erecting of two new Gotes at Skirbeck and Langare for drayning the waters of South Holland and the Fenns into Boston Haven which work Sir Edward Dimock Knight did by himself and his friends further what he could but it was opposed by the Country of Kef●even and they very exception taken thereto was that the Commissioners of Sewers could not by the power of their Commission make a Law for the erecting of these new Gotes where never any stood before Whereupon the decision of this point coming at length before the then two Justices viz. Popham and Anderson they delivered their opinions that the said new Gotes if they were found to be good and profitable for the safety and advantage of the Country they might be erected by the power of this Statute The like controversie arose in 12º Iacobi in the Counties of Cambridge Huntingdon and Northampton about the making of new Cuts and Drayns in the Isle of Ely by the power of the Commissioners of Sewers which being much opposed the businesse came in the end to be heard before the King and the Council Whereupon the said King by the advice of his Council upon mature deliberation comparing the undue proceeding of those who had disturbed his Commissioners of Sewers in those Counties with the antient Laws of this Realm as also with the constant practice of antient and later times and the opinions of the Lord chief Justice Popham delivered in writing very exactly and fully upon the said Questions touching the power and authority of the said Commissioners● it being objected 1. that the Commissioners had no power to raise new Banks Drayns or Sluses where there had been none before 2. that they might not lay the Tax upon Hundreds Towns or the Inhabitants thereof in general but upon
next year following upon the 7th day of Iune in a Session of Sewers held at Ely these following Laws were made viz. 1. That the defects in Popham lode shall be amended 2. That for the safeguard of the grounds in Welle by which the said Lode must passe there be on either side of the same a sufficient Crest made extending from the Causey of Upwe●l to Welle river at North delph and the said Crest or Bank to be six foot from the plain ground and in bredth at the top six foot and in thicknesse at the bottom xviii foot And that the said River be scoured and cast two foot more in depth than it then was With Indikes of x foot in bredth and four in depth and two convenient Pipes or Sluses at its fall at North delph into Welle River 3. That a Bridge of stone be made at the head of the said River by the Causey aforesaid over the said Lode of x foot broad with Sluses in the three Arches thereof 4. That four pair of Barrs be set up to keep Cattel from coming on the said Banks 5. And that Welle River from Mullycourt to Salters lode be made above 50 foot wide By virtue of which Law the River called Popham lode was again taken in hand upon the first of August ensuing and cast two foot deeper Soon after this viz. on the xxiii of the same month in a Session of Sewers held at Ely the Commissioners taking into their consideration that whereas part of the main River dividing the County of Huntendon from the Isle of Ely called the West water had used to fall by and through Sutton lode and thence by sundry Lodes to Cannol lode and so into Welney water neer Littleport all which Lodes by sundry annoyances and negligences were become almost altogether unprofitable to the Country c. to the great damage of all the Towns lying on the South side of the said Isle and sundry Towns in the Counties of Cambridge and Huntendon they ordered and decreed that all the said Lodes should be clensed And also that one antient Bank on the East side of the West water extending from Erith to Sutton lode end and so to Mydelmore stampe should be raised four foot from the Level of the ground thereabouts and made ten foot in bredth at the bottom and 3 foot at the top by the owners c. ●f the said grounds And one other Bank lying by the said Westwater upon Mydilmore and another at the South thereof in South Medland extending it self from New ditch c. to be made of the height and bredth aforesaid by the Inhabitants of Sutton abovesaid And that another Bank lying partly by the said Westwater extending from the ●outh end of Abbots Holload house bank to Holload gate at the miles end and so by the Westwater in North Medland unto Sutton lodes end aforesaid t●ence to Mydilmore stampe thence by Shakpole lode so to Manny Mandolegate to Hunlode gate to be repaired as aforesaid by the Inhabitants of Sutton Mepall abovementioned About that time twelvemonth there was another Session of Sewers held at Wysebeche viz. sexto Iulii 8 Iacobi where Iames Hawe Gentleman Edmund Gawsell Gent. and others presented as followeth Inprimis we find not by any Record c. that the River of Well from North delf pingle unto Salters lode hath at any time within the memory of man been ditched But we find that it hath been twice enlarged by the Inhabitants of Marshland and the Town of Wiggenhall and the Landholders of North delf pingle viz. in the sixt year of K. Henry the 1. and at the erecting of New Powdich c. And we likewise find that in 18 Eliz. there was 24 foot of ground lying on the South side of the River next Salters lode granted to the Inhabitāts of Marshland the Town of Wiggenhall whereof xii foot was digged next to the river for the erecting of a Bank to amend the Pow dich in time of necessity In full satisfaction whereof the said Inhabitants of Marshland and Wiggenhall with the Landholders aforesaid did grant to widen the River there xii foot Which Grant was then decreed by a Law of Sewers for perpetuity c. We likewise say that Popham Ee doth and is likely to bring much more water to the River of Welle from North delf to Salters lode than hath usually passed that way within the memory of man Upon which Verdict ensued then and at that place these Orders made by Sir Iohn Peyton Sir Miles Sandes and other his Majesties Commissioners viz. That the ixth of August next following a view should be taken by the said Commissioners of the River between North delf and Salters lode and upon the same view a Law made for the widening diking and making it of such widenesse and depth as the said Commissioners should think fit to be done at the charges of the Country of Marshland the Town of Wigenhall and the Landholders of the hundred and odd Acres in Stowe and the Landholders of North delf pingle And that the said Landholders c. shall be thereupon free from any charge toward Popham Ee. Upon this view it was likewise agreed that the River from North delf to Mathew Bales and xl pole lower● should be made xxx foot wide which was done accordingly The next year following at a Session of Sewers held at Stow brynke in com Noff. upon the xx of May it was thus ordered by the Commissioners that the Undertakers and their heirs should have power to drayn all the grounds mentioned in the Act of 4 Iac. formerly mentioned through the Pipe called Coldham gote which lyeth under the Bank of Elme leame and so through a piece of ground lying between the said Leame and a Bank leading from Fryday bridge to Bishops dike and so till it come over against a Dike between the lands in Oldfield and Needham Thence betwixt the lands in Oldfield and Say's field on the one side and Needham bank and Thornedike on the other side and so to Old lode called Chapell lode Thence through Greendike Thence to the Bridge neer B●aupre Hall Thence to Stonhamslile and so to Boys fen gate Thence unto Bedingfield Barrs and so to Hook gate and thence to Staple were at the Bank of Ouse This was called Coldham and Waltersey Law In pursuance whereof the Dikers set upon the work upon the Wednesday then next following And upon the second of August the Ma●ons began the Pipe under UUelle River which was finished upon the Tuesday after Michaelmass day After which within a few dayes viz on Fryday ensuing the Masons began the Sluse at Stow for Coldham And upon Saturday being the xxith of September the Commissioners took view for Mr. Bell in Stowe and UUelle for the low grounds between Popham lode and the new Powdike All things therefore speeding on so well upo● Thursday following it being the