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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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heir of the said Hugh unto Richard de Rulos Chamberlain to King William the Conquerour And by his daughter and heir to Baldwin fitz Gilbert Which Baldwin leaving also issue one only daughter and heir w●dded to Hugh Wake the said Hugh became in her right Lord and owner of those places scil Bourne and Deping and was also principal Forester to the King H. 3. for his whole Forest of Kesteven Of what extent the Forest whereof I have already made mention to have been in these parts of this Province and possest by Leofrike Earl of Mercia was I am not able to say but it appears that King Henry the first for the pleasure of Hunting doing much hurt to the Common Wealth by enlarging of Forests as his Brother King William Rufus had done did afforest th●se Fenns between Ke●teven and Holand viz. from the Bridge of East Deping now Market Deping to the Church of Swaiston on the one side from the bridge of Bicker and Wragmere stake on the otherside which met●s divid●d the North p●rts and the river of Weland the South excepting the Fen of Goggisland in regard it was a Sanctuary of holy Church as belonging to the Abby of Crou●and which Fen the Monk● of that House having licence from the said King did cloze for their own use making the Ditches about it bigger than ordinary for the avoyding of discord And being thus made Forest it continued so untill King Henry the third's time who in the xiiiith year of his reign granted unto all the Inhabitants within the same that it should thenceforth be dea●forested by th●se subsequent bounds viz. in length on the one side from Swaftone to East Deping as Kares ●ike extends it self betwixt Swantone and East Deping And in length on the other side towards Holand from the bridge at Bikere to the great bridge at Spalding And in bredth on the one part from that great bridge at Spalding to East Deping as the river of Weland goeth betwixt Spalding and East Deping And on the other side from the land of Swaftune unto the bridge at Bikere So that all the Lands Marshes and Turbaries within those precincts● were thenceforth to be quit of waste and regard In the 18 of King Edw. the first 's reign Henry then Abbot of Croyland and his Monks were impleaded by Thomas Wake of Lidell then Lord of Deping by descent as aforesaid for fishing at Est Deping in the free fishing of the said Thomas and for throwing down a certain bank in his Fen there which the said Thomas had made for the safeguard of the said Fen from being overflowen by the fresh waters But to this the said Abbot and his Monks made answer that being possest of the Mannour and Town of Crouland within which there is a certain River called Weland running time out of mind from the boundary called Kemisf stone in the West unto the site of the Abby within the said Town and so from the said Abby to Brother house towards the North he the said Abbo● and all his predecessors Abbots of that place were always and till that time seized thereof and of the free fishing therein as Lords of that Mannour and Town And farther said that the place where this trespass was assigned to be was within those limits and precinct of that their Mannour acknowledging that he di● fish there as the said Thomas had alleged And as to the said Ditch he said● that within the precinct also of the Mannour of Crouland there was a certain Fen call●d Goukeslaund which then was his proper soil and so had been of his predecessors time beyond memory as pa●cel of the beforespecified Mannour And moreover that the course of the fresh waters flowing from the West in the said Fenn did then run as always they had used to do from the same Fen into the said River of Weland and so to the Sea And he likewise alleged that because the said Thomas had raised a bank upon the land of him the said Abbot within his Manno● of Croyland in a certain place where none had ever been before by which bank the course of those fresh waters being stopt the said Fen called Goukesland and other Fens adjoyning thereto were overflown and the Abby and Town of Crouland in danger to be thereby drowned he the said Abbot perceiving that the abovespecified bank was so raised to the end that the said A●by and Town might be drowned did cause several parts thereof to be thrown down But notwithstanding this answer the Abbot was by the Jurors found guilty both of the trespass in fishing as abovesaid and breaking that bank to the damage of the said Thomas Wake no less than CCCC marks In 9 E. 2. Edmund Deincourt Lambert de Trikyngham Roger de Cuppledyk and Robert de Malberthorp were constituted Commissioners to view and repair the Banks Sewers and Ditches within this Province by which the fresh waters in the Marshes betwixt this part of the Country and Holand had used to pass unto the Sea And in the same year the said Edmund d' Eyncourt Nich. de Widmerpole and Richard de Whattone were appointed to enquire touching the Rivers of Smyte Dyv●ne Wycheme Middelwynene and Fulb●k choakt up for want of scouring by reason whereof the Inhabitants in those parts did then suffer much damage In 16 E. 3. Gilbert de Umframvill Earl of Anegos exhibited a Petition to the King whereby he represented that whereas there was a certain water called the Ee of Kyme betwixt Doc dyke on the East part and Brentfen on the South within this province which did run through the lands of the said Earl for the space of six miles in length but was so obstructed and stopt by reason of mud and other filth that Ships laden with Wine Wool and other Merchandize could neither pass through the same in Summer nor Winter as they had used to do except it were scoured and clensed and the banks so raised that the tops of them might appear to Mariners passing that way whensoever the Marshes there should be overflowed And that as the said Earl had for the common benefit of those parts bestowed no small costs towards the repair of the said place called the Ee and heightning of those banks so he intended to be at much more in case the said King would please to grant unto him and his heirs for ever certain Customs of the Merchandize passing in Ships through the same to have and receive in form abovesaid viz. for every Sack of Wool carried through that Chanel four pence for every Pocket of VVool two pence For every Tun of VVine four pence for every Pipe of VVine two pence For every four quarters of Corn a peny for every thousand of Turfes a peny For every Ship laden with Catel four pence and for every ship laden with other commodities than aforesaid two pence VVhereupon the said King directed his
said Banks and Water-gangs whereupon he required judgement And he also said that after the said Ordinance the said Godfrey and his Tenants gave one Mark towards the repair of the said Banks and Water-gangs before he the said Hamon was Bayliff And that this he was ready to justifie To which the said Godfrey answered that he held himself to the before-specified Charter of King Henry And to the liberty which he and his Ancestors had used against which no Ordinance made by the said Henry de Bathe could or ought to do him harm And stood upon it that neither himself nor any by him had given ought either before the said Ordinance so made or afterwards and that this he was ready to justifie After which on the morrow after the feast of S. Martin in the xlii of H. 3 came the said Godfrey Hamon and others And the Shireeve had command that he should bring xii aswell Knights as others having no lands in the said Marsh on the morrow three weeks after Easter by whom the truth might be the better discovered to enquire whether the said Godfrey and his Ancestors after they had their land of Hurst of the gift and grant of the before-mentioned King Henry had wont to repair the said Banks and Water-gangs together with others that had lands in the said Marsh and to contribute with them for their repair when need should require Whereupon the said Godfrey by a certain Ordinance in which he acknowledged before the said Henry de Bathe whom the King had sent to that end that though he gave a Mark to the repair of the said Banks and Water-gangs before the said Hamon was Bayliff of the said Marsh as they the said Hamon and Iohn did affirm yet he ap●pealed whether himself or his Ancestors were not quit of the said repairs and payments thereto by the Charter of King Henry Grand-father to the then King forasmuch as he did not consent to the said Ordinance nor ever gave any thing to the repair of those Banks and Water-gangs as he affirmed But the Shireeve not making his Precept as above-said was amerc'd and another VVrit directed to him to summon the said xij men to appear c. the morrow after the Feast of the Holy Trinity At which time the said Godfrey Hamon and others came and required that judgement should be done according to the Record and processe upon the before-specified Plea VVhereupon the Plea was recited before the King and his Council And because it was found according to that Record that the King had sent Henry de Bathe his Justice thereunto assigned unto the said Marsh of Romenale who determined that all they that had lands in the said Marsh ought to contribute according to the proportion of their Tenements for the repair of the said Banks and VVater-gangs thereof as the said Hamon and others did allege and to which contribution he the said Godfrey said he was not obliged And that as yet nothing did appear to the King's Court here of the said Ordinance or Determination without which of right there could be no proceeding to Judgement a farther day was given viz. until the xvme of S. Michael that in the mean time the Rolls of the said Henry de Bathe might be lookt into And that the Plea thus depending no distresse should be farther made upon the said Godfrey At which time viz. in the xvme of S. Michael in xliijo H. 3. the said Godfrey came and withdrew his processe against the said Hamon and others therefore being amerc'd he consented for himself and his Heirs that for the future they would repair the said Banks and Water-gangs together with their neighbours according to the quantity of their land as it was the Custome of the Country without any contest or contradiction for ever And that the said Hamon granted and became obliged for himself and the rest that he would make a due accomp● before the xxiiij Jurats chosen by the Country touching the distresses and Catals of the said Godfrey taken from the time of the beginning of the sute until that present And deducing so much as should be sufficient to satisfie the said repairs according to the proportion belonging to the said Godfrey to repay the surplusage of the mony for the Catals of him the said Godfrey so sold. And the said Godfrey agreed that if the said Hamon by his accompt could make it manifest that the value of the Catals so distrained by him for the cause premised would not suffice for his portion in repair of the said Banks and Water-gangs according to the quantity of his Land he the said Godfrey would make satisfaction to him of the whole arrerage from the beginning of the sute till that present time according to the view and estimation of the before mentioned xxiiij Jurats of the Country The next thing memorable touching this Marsh is that King Edw. the first by his Letters Patents bearing date at Westminster the xxth of Novem. in the xvith year of his reign granteda commissiō to Iohn de Lovetot Hen. de Apuldrefeld to view the Banks and Ditches upon the Sea-coast and parts adjacent within the County of Kent in divers places then broken through the violence of the Sea and to enquire by whose default this damage had hapned And together with the Bayliffs of Liberties and others in those parts to distrain all those which held any Lands and Tenements there and had or might have defence and preservation in any sort by the said Banks and Ditches according to the quantity of their said Lands and Tenements either by the number of Acres or by Carucates for the proportion of what they held for the necessary repair of those Banks and Ditches as often and where there should be need so that no man of what condition state or dignity whatsoever who had safeguard in any sort by those Walls or Ditches whether it were within Liberties or without should have favour therein Commanding also the said Iohn any Henry to behave themselves so faithfully and discreetly in the execution of this businesse that aswel the men residing in those parts as their lands should be safe against the like dangers and perhaps worse no custome favourably introduced notwithstanding And that of their transaction in this imploym●nt they should distinctly and plainly certifie the said King under their Seales and the Seals of the Jurats aswel Knights as other honest and lawful men Commanding moreover his Shireeve of Kent to cause so many and such persons of his Bayliwick to appear before the said Iohn and Henry at certain days and places whereof he should give them notice by whom the truth in the premisses might be the better enquired into and known By virtue of which Mandate the said Shireeve was required to summon the xxiiij Jurats of the Marsh of Rumenale and all the Lords of the Banks of the same Marsh as also such and so many honest and lawful men of all the
at More and other his Complices having confederated themselves together by false contrivance to constitute another Bayliff there in favour to his friends and to lay load unjustly upon others contrary to the before-specified Ordinance did so terrifie the said Iohn by grievous threats and otherwise hinder him that he neither would or durst take upon him that Office according to the said Ordinance So that by reason of the said Bayliffs default all the before-specified Marsh being dayly lyable to be overflown was in danger to be destroyed without speedy remedy were had The said King therefore taking this complaint into mature consideration for prevention of that imminent mischief granted his Royal Commission bearing date at Westminster 17º Febr. in the same thirty fifth year of his reign to Thomas de Lodelowe Robert Belknap and Thomas Colepepir appointing them or any three or two of them aswell to oversee the said Banks Gutters c. and cause them to be repaired as to take a view of the said Ordinances And in case they should find them any way defective as to the defence of the said Marsh against those inundations then to correct and amend them and if need were to make a new Ordinance to direct how the same Marsh might be better defended and preserved against the said waters upon any chance that should thenceforth happen And to decree certain strict punishments against all such as should transgresse the said Ordinances so to be made by them the said Thomas Robert and Thomas or any two of them And moreover to cause Proclamation to be made all about in those parts for the perpetual observance of them And likewise to do all other things for the safeguard and defence of the said Marsh in exclusion and evacuation of those waters as should be necessary and fit And lastly to enquire by the Oaths of honest and lawful men of that Country of all the confederacies and practices before specified as also of such trespasses and contempts as had been made against the said King by the before-mentioned Matthew and his Complices By virtue of which Precept the said Thomas Robert and Thomas being met at Crowethorne the Monday next after the Feast of the Translation of S. Thomas the martyr in the year abovesaid● by the consent of the Lords of the Towns the Bayliff xxiiij Jurats and Commonality of the said Marsh viz. by Iohn Franceis Attorney to Simon Archbishop of Canterbury ● the Abbot of S. Augustines in Canterbury the Prior of Christs-Church in Canterbury Simon Master of Gods-House in Dovor Edmund Staplegate Lord of Nether-Bilsyngton and other Lords to this purpose specially elected with certain also of the Commonality scil William de Echyngham Stephan de Valeyns c. chosen likewise for the said Commonality did ordain and appoint 1. that the common Bayliff of the said Marsh who hath lands and residence therein should be elected by the publick consent of the Lords of the Towns of the same Marsh or their special Attornies And where the greater number consenteth the c●oice to stand Which election to be made at Demecherche or Newecherche or some other fit place within the compasse of the said Marsh in the xv me of S. Michael yearly upon summons of the before-specified Bayliff except upon necessity and reasonable cause the said Bayliff ought to be removed within that year and another put in his place 2. And if the person so elected shall be present and refuse to undergo the said Office that he be forthwith amerc'd in xls. to be levyed by the succeeding Bayliff upon his Goods and Catals for the common benefit of the said Marsh And so forthwith a new choice to be made of another Bayliff who will undergo the Office and take his Oath and receive for his Fee the double of all the money assessed upon any whomsoever for their negligence And if the person so elected shall be hereafter hindered by any man so that he dare not undergo the Office that then the parties so hindering him to be severally punished by the said Electors in such sort as the said Bayliff should have been punished if he had refused to take his Oath and to bear the same Office 3. And if i● happen that he that shall so be chosen be absent at the time of election all his Goods and Catals to be forthwith distrained by the preceding Bayliff of the Marsh and impounded in fit and wanted places and there detained until he shall repair to the Arch-bishop of Canterbury Abbot of S. Augustines and Prior of Christs-Church for the time being or to one of them and admit of the said Office and take his Oath and thereupon carry to the preceding Bayliff his Letters sealed And this he shall do within six dayes next after the election made and if he do not then to be punished as aforesaid and a new election to be presently made 4. At which principal Last if the said common Collectors of all the former general Taxes will be present they shall make their accompt to the Bayliff xxiiij Iurats and Commonalty of the said Marsh Which accompt to be written by Indentures made betwixt them and the Bayliff xxiiij Iurats and Commonalty of the said Marsh. And after the same manner shall the Bayliff make his accompt of those things which belong to him to reckon for And if any of the xxiiij Iurats do make default in the said principal Last except he have a reasonable excuse he shall be amerc'd in xii d to be levyed by the Bayliff to the use of the Commonalty 5. And if it happen that any of the xxiiij Iurats do depart within the year or ought to be removed that then another be made choice of in his place and put in the said principal Last by the Lords of the Fees Bayliff xxiiij Iurats and Commonalty of the most faithful discreet and wealthy men of the said Marsh to the number of xxiiij compleat 6. In like sort it shall be done touching the Collectors and Expenditors so that they be not chosen out of the said xxiiij Iurats if the said Lords will be there And if the said xxiiij Iurats Collectors or Expenditors shall be chosen and will not take his Oath he shall be amerc'd in xxs. to be levyed as aforesaid and forthwith another chosen in his place and receive the chardge 7. And if the before-specified xxiiij Iurats shall be summoned wheresoever within the precinct of the said Marsh to the common or several Last where no more than eight or ten at the most do come by reason whereof there can be no Iudgement and Decree made for the safeguard of the said Marsh considering the absence of the greater number that then every absent person shall be ●merced by the Bayliff in vi d to be levyed as aforesaid whereof the said Bayliff shall make accompt in the principal Last 8. Also
The next year following Richard VVakeherst VVill. Bertyne Thomas Betenham Thomas Hordene VValter Colepeper and Iohn Derham had the like appointment for the Banks c. betwixt Smalhithe and a certain place called the Pendynge and likewise betwixt Farnehille and a Bank leading from Mayteham to Pendynge aforesaid in the Parishes of Tenterden and Rolveldene with power to make Statutes and Ordinances for the preservation of those places according to the Law and Custome of this Realm and the Custome of Romney marsh As also to take so many Diggers and Labourers in respect of the instant necessity as should be needful for that work In 28 H. 6. VVill. Kene Esquire Iohn Bamburgh Stephan Slegge and others were in like fort constituted Commissioners for the view and repair of those Banks c. betwixt the Town of Redyng and Redehille thence to Huntebornebrigge thence to the up-land of Bregge and thence to the said Town of Redyng in the Parishes of Tenterden Apuldre and Wodechirche and to make Statutes and Ordinances c. as abovesaid In 13 E. 4. Sir Iohn Fogge Knight Sir Will. Haute Knight Roger Brent Iohn Fyneux VVill. Brent Iohn Nethirsole and Iohn Hert were in like manner appointed for those Banks c. betwixt Tenterdene and Lyde as also to make Laws and Ordinances c. as abovesaid In 14 E. 4. the King having received advertisement that the Banks Ditches c. lying on the Sea-coast and Marshes betwixt Robertsbrigge in Sussex and the Town of Romney in this County of Kent were by the raging of the Sea and violence of the Tides much broken and decayed to the great damage of those parts and being therefore desirous that some speedy remedy should be used therein did by his Letters Patents bearing date at Westminster 16º Iulii in the year abovesaid constitute Sir Iohn Fogge Sir William Haute and Sir Iohn Gilford Knights and Iohn Elryngton Iohn Brumston Henry Auger Will. Belknap and Robert Oxenbregge Esquires as also Bartholmew Bolney Roger Brent Iohn Fyneux Vincent Fynche Iohn Nethersole and Iohn Hert his Commissioners giving power to any four three or two of them whereof the said Bartholmew Roger Iohn Fyneux Vincent Fynche Iohn Nethersole and Iohn Hert to be one to take view of the said Banks c. and to enquire upon the Oaths aswell of Knights as other honest and lawful men of the before-specified Counties aswell within Liberties as without by whom the truth in the premisses might be the better known through whose default these damages had there hapned and who they were that had Lands and Tenements or common of Pasture or Fishing in those Counties or had or might have preservation and benefit any manner of way by those Banks c. or losse for want of them aswell those that were remote as those that were neer to the danger and to distrain all such according to the quantity of their Lands and Tenements or number of Acres or Carucates proportionable to what they held and so likewise for their common of pasture or fishing and together with the Bayliff of the Liberties and other places of the Counties and parts aforesaid for the repair of those Banks Ditches Gutters and Sewers and to make them or some of them new where need should require And likewise for clensing the Trenches and if cause were to stop them up so that no favour should be shew'd to any person whatsoever rich or poor or of what state degree or dignity soever who might have advantage by the said Banks or detriment for want of them And moreover to make agistments upon the Sea-Ditches for the safeguard of those parts according to the number of acres or perches and as often as it should be needful to renew them And likewise to depute certain diligent and faithfull Guardians for the preservation before mentioned and to hear the Accompt of the Collectors of moneys which were to be levyed for that occasion and for the repair of the said Banks or obstruction of those Trenches And that they the said Commissioners or any four three or two of them whereof the said Bartholmew Roger c. to be one to take distresses either by themselves or others whom they should think fit to depute for that purpose for the arrerage of what ought to have been Collected as often as need should be And also to make and ordain fit and necessary Statutes and Ordinances for the defence of the Sea-coasts and Marshes aforesaid and the adjacent parts according to the Laws and Customes of this Realm of England and of Romeney Marsh. And to hear and determine all the premisses aswell at the said King's sute as the sute of any other whasoever which should come in question before them according to the Law and Custome of this Realm and the Custome of Romeney Marsh aforesaid As also to take and imploy in the said works and repairs as many Ditchers and other workmen and labourers as should be expedient for the works and repairs before mentioned upon competent salaries to be paid to them in that behalf in regard of the great urgent and instant necessity for expedition therein Futrher requiring the said Commissioners and any four three or two of them whereof the said Bartholmew Roger c. to be one to accomplish the premisses in form aforesaid and whomsoever they should find either negligent or refractory in making their proportionable repairs belonging to them to compell them thereto by distresses and amerciaments and such other wayes and means as they should deem most expedient to the end the said defects might be suddainly made good And to cause whatsoever they should ordain and determine therein to be firmly observed acting therein as to Justice appertained and according to the Law and Custome aforesaid Saving to the said King all amerciaments and other things herein to him belonging Whereupon afterwards viz. on the tenth day of April in the xviijth year of the reign of the same King the said Justices were informed that all the Lands and fresh Marshes lying within the subsequent limits viz. betwixt the Marsh called Cowelese towards the North the lands in the Ree leading from the said Marsh to the place call'd Lynkehoke neer Romeney towards the East the way leading from the said place called Lynkehoke by the inside of the Bank at Lyde and through the midst of the high street of that town to Pigwell and a place call'd the Holmestone lying without the Bank called Wikewall the Land of Promhill situate without the Banks called Simondes Wall and Kent Wall and the gulf of salt water running from the Camer unto the said Marsh called Cowelese towards the West excepting the Marshes called the Kete Denecourt mershe and Bourghser's mershe and other Marshes then lately taken in by the before-specified Iohn Elryngton and Richard Gilford Esquires with the Banks belonging to them were dayly subject to the danger of inundation by the Sea and salt water for default of repair and
support of the Banks of the Marshes called Estmersh and Becard and of divers other Marshes which lying within those limits except before excepted served for the defence and safeguard of the same Land and Marsh from the peril of the Sea and inundation of the salt water were through the violence of the tides and overflowings of the fresh waters running to the Sea broken in many places so that inestimable losses would very likely happen in a short time unlesse a speedy remedy were taken By reason whereof by virtue of the said Letters Patents the Shireeve was commanded that he should not neglect for any Liberty but cause xxiiij aswell Knights as other honest and lawful men of this County by whom the truth might be the better known to come before the said Justices at Apuldore in the said County on the Thursday before the Feast of the holy Trinity then next ensuing to enquire and make certificate to the said Justices concerning the Premisses and touching other Articles and circumstances specified in the said Letters Patents and lastly to do and receive what should be enjoyned them on the said King's behalf At which day came before the said Iohn Fogge Iohn Scotte Will. Haute Iohn Elryngton Iohn Brumstone and Iohn Nethersole six of the before-specified Justices at Apuldore aforesaid William Brent who prosecuted for the King in this businesse And Richard Haute then Shireeve of Kent made return of the said Precept to him directed executed together with two several Panells affixed thereto containing the names of the Jurors to enquire in form aforesaid All which being performed as of right it should be Robert Godfrey Thomas Ieffe Will. Hikke and others of the first Panell made their appearance and being severally sworn as is evident by those Panells and charged to enqui●e of the premisses and not being agreed on their Verdicts did severally request a farther day for the delivery up thereof to the intent they might in the mean time make more diligent enquiry of the premisses and then present the same before the said Justices All which upon that their desire and by the assent of the before-specified VVill. Brent then the said Kings Attorney in this businesse was granted and thereupon a day was given to the said Jurors to come before the said Justices at Lyde in this County upon the Friday then next following And the said Jurors were then advertised that they should in that interim enquire diligently of the premisses and then to appear severally to deliver their Verdict each man upon the penalty of xls. Upon which Friday the said Sir Iohn Fogge and the other Justices last mentioned did all of them personally go to the said Land and Marsh to take view of the Banks lying within the before-specified limits touching the danger whereof the said Justices had received information as aforesaid And then and there the Bayliff and divers of the Jurats of Romeney Marsh mentioned in the said Letters Patent as also other discreet persons to apply a fit and proper remedy for avoiding this danger and losse being expert men in the Statutes Ordinances and Customes of the said Marsh as also very many others who had and might have by those Banks safeguard and defence for their Lands within the said bounds except before excepted and then and there in their presence did take deliberate and diligent view of all those Lands and Marshes aswell at a distance as neerest to the danger and likewise of all the Banks and whatsoever else was necessary for the safeguard and preservation of those Lands and Marshes and did then desire of the before-mentioned Bayliff and Jurats of the said Marsh of Romney and of the other discreet and expert men advice and counsel for applying a fit and speedy remedy in this behalf And afterwards on the before-specified Friday at Lyde aforesaid came the said Will. Brent who then prosecuted for the King in this businesse before the said Sir Iohn Fogge and the rest of his said fellow Justices before named And aswell the said Jurors of the first panell as those of the second being impanelled in form aforesaid as also sworn and chardged to enquire of the premisses came and severally said upon their Oaths that in the said Lands and Marshes within those limits before mentioned except before excepted the wall of the Marsh of the Becard called Becard Wall leading from the Marsh called the Kete unto the Marsh of Estmarsh And also the Bank of the said Marsh called Estmarsh Wall leading to the Ree Wall were defective and stood in need of repair for resisting the Sea and salt water And if that the salt water of the Sea should enter on any part of the said Banks or in any place from thence to Holmystone aforesaid which is at the East part of the Bank called Newe Wall lying betwixt the Sea and the Land of Promhill aforesaid and that a resistance thereof could not be easily made all the Lands and Marshes before mentioned situate within the precincts before-specified except before excepted touching the danger whereof information was given in form aforesaid unto the said Justices would be in a very short time overflowed with the salt water to an inestimable damage And the said Jurors did likewise severally expresse that it would be proper for the safeguard and defence of all those Lands and Marshes except before excepted called Becard Wall and Estmarsh Wall to be sufficiently repaired as soon as conveniently could be and continually sustained against the violence of the Sea Storms and Tides lest the salt water should get in at any of them and thereby all these Lands and Marshes except before excepted be drowned And they farther said that it would be very expedient that the said Bank called Newe Wall which is without the said Banks called Kent Wall and Simonds Wall and within the bounds aforesaid except before excepted should be sufficiently repaired as soon as might be to withstand the rage of the Sea storms and Tides for the defence of the said Banks called Kent Wall and Simondes Wall and afterwards continually maintained for prevention of the peril of the Seas inundation whereunto those Lands and Marshes were subject And likewise the said Jurors in form aforesaid sworn and severally chardged did say upon their Oaths that it seemed to them expedient that the Lands and Marshes called Cheyncourt Seynt Thomas Innyng and White kempe which were within those precincts and lyable to the said danger should be drayned by one Sewer in the Land of Thomas then Archb. of Canterbury at Rounde mershe running into the Sea where the Gutter then was and that there should be made in that place Sluces and Gutters fit and proper for that purpose And that there should also be Bayliffs Jurats and other Officers within the said limits except before excepted for the view and conservation of the Marish grounds and Banks within those bounds except before excepted And that there should be had for every Sea-bank there a
Commonalty And in like manner at either of the said principal and general Lasts there should be yearly made an Accompt of the Bayliffs aforesaid before the said Lords of the Fees or their Attornies if they would be present thereat and before those of the Iurats and Commonalty as would also be there present viz. of those things whereof it should happen or concern the said Bayliffs to make Accompt that is to say to be made by Indentures betwixt them the said Bayliffs and the said Iurats Commonality The Oath of the xxiiij Jurats It was likewise decreed and ordained that every one of the said xxiiij Iurats to be elected in form aforesaid should swear that he together with his Fellows would make right Iudgements Decrees and Awards not favouring any rich or poor aswell for making distresses and assessing of Taxes as of the Banks Land waters Water-courses Sewers Ditches Gutters and Bridges to be made repaired and maintained or taken away and of all other impediments whatsoever within those limits which should happen to be removed and for punishing offenders And it was farther ordained that the said xxiiij Iurats should make exercise and perform and have full power and authority in making exercising and performing all and singular the things specified in the said Oath to be by them done exercised and performed That the xxiiij Jurats be observant to the Bayliff Also it was decreed and ordained that the said Iurats or three or two of them should attend the Bayliffs for the valuing and selling in places accustomed or that should be thereafter assigned for that purpose the distresses taken and impounded for three dayes at the most and that they should cause to be enrouled all Iudgements Decrees and Awards by them made and cause Indentures thereupon to be made betwixt themselves and the said Bayliffs for the time being The Oath of the Collectors and Expenditors It was also decreed and ordained that the Collectors and Expenditors to be chosen as aforesaid should swear that they would faithfully levy collect expend and Account in form aforesaid for all Taxes assessed or to be assessed before the said Lords of the Fees and by the said Bayliffs and ten or eight at the least of the Iurats aforesaid according to their Ordinance And the like observance to be made in all Sewers within the before-specified limits except before excepted before the Lords of the Fees touching every such Sewer if they would be present thereat And it was ordained and decreed that the said Collectors and Expenditors should make exercise and perform and have full authority and power of making exercising and performing all and singular the things specified in this Oath to be done exercised and performed The Oath of the Bayliffs and executions to be made by them It was also decreed and ordained that the said Bayliffs chosen or to be chosen as aforesaid should swear to make faithfull execution of the Iudgements and Determinations of the said xxiiij Iurats ten or eight of them and of those things which did or should belong to them to judge determine and award And that the said Bayliffs in their proper persons should chardge all the Collectors aswell of the general Assessment as of the several as aforesaid upon their Oaths that they should faithfully levy collect expend and accompt for the same And that the same Bayliffs in their proper persons should take view of all the Banks Water-gangs Sewers Gutters and Bridges within the before-specified limits except before excepted as often as need required at least twice in the year viz. once in the moneth of January and again in the moneth of May. And that they at the going out of their Office should deliver unto their successors all the evidences in their custody that is to say the Charters of the Kings of England if they had any such in their hands the Ordinances and Statutes of the Lands and Marshes within those limits before-specified except before excepted the Copies or Exscripts of the said Statutes and Ordinances the Roules of Iudgements Considerations Decrees and Awards of the said xxiiij Iurats ten or eight of them and the Rents with all the processe of Accompts of the Bayliffs Collectors and Expenditors whatsoever had in their time And it was also decreed and ordained that the same Bayliffs should do exercise and perform and have full power and authority of doing exercising and performing all and singular the things specified in this Oath which were for them to be done exercised or performed That Damms or Fords be not made It was likewise decreed and ordained that it should not be lawful to any one for the future in the said Lands and Marshes within the limits aforesaid except before excepted to make Dams or other impediments in any Lands or Land-eas Water-gangs Ditches or common Gutters there whereby the common course of the waters might in any sort be hindered or any publick damage grow there and if any such thing were done and the same witnessed by the said Bayliffs and six of the said xxiiij Iurats the party delinquent be amerc'd and the amerciament levyed by the said Bayliffs to the common profit aforesaid And moreover if any other than the Commonalty of those Lands and Marshes within the said limits except before excepted did receive prejudice therein he should make satisfaction to the party wronged at the discretion of the said Bayliff and six Iurats aforesaid That the Taxes Assessed be proclamed It was also decreed and ordained that every Tax assessed in the said lands and Mar within those limits except before excepted be publickly proclamed in certain places there and that the dayes and place of payment be thereupon assigned and proclamed to the end that ignorance may excuse none when and where within the precincts aforesaid those Taxes ought so to be paid The buying of Acres It was also decreed and ordained that every Acre in the said Lands and Marshes within the limits aforesaid except before excepted being necessary for the Banks in-Ditches and Water-gangs to be therein made should be bought for xls. and measured by a rod of twenty foot And that if before that present Friday any Bank called a See Wall should be raised within those Lands and Marshes except before excepted upon or of any mans land there or that any Forland or in-ditch should be made for the defence and safeguard of the said Lands and Marshes except before excepted from the peril of the Sea and that it were fit or expedient that the said Bank Forland or in-ditch for this defence and safeguard to be longer maintained and kept so that the Land-holde● upon whose ground that Bank was raised or where the said Forland or in-ditch were made could not occupy the said Land and receive his peculiar profit thereof and that such Tenant had never any satisfaction for the said Land it was decreed and ordained by the consent abovesaid that the same Bank Forland and in-ditch should be raised and kept
the end that they might not get their ships back who discerning what was done left them and fled towards Severne That which is here called a Castle is supposed to be some Fort made at or neer Hartford situate upon the Bank of this River for before the tides were kept back at Stratford Bowe by a large Sasse there made to keep the levell above it from drowning no question but that they flowed above Ware and brought up small Vessels neer to Hartford there being betwixt Ware and Hartford a Hill which to this day beareth the name of Shipman's Hill and a tradition of the Country people that ships did in antient time lye at Anchor in that Valley The first mention wherewith I have met concerning the Marshes of Essex is in King Iohn's time Roger de Crammavill being then attached to shew cause why he did not stand to the determination made in the said King's Court by a Fine betwixt himself and the Prior of S. Iohns of Ierusalem touching the Banks Gutters and Ditches to be made in Renham marsh at which time the said Prior produced the before-mentioned Fine so made betwixt them which testified that the said Roger did then agree that he and his heirs would make and repair those Banks c. according to the proportion of his Land in that Marsh so that every Acre which the said Roger did possess should be taxed as those that belonged to the Prior. And the said Roger came and acknowleged the agreement and justified that he had fully made those Banks according to what belong'd to his Tenement and thereupon put himself upon the view of those who knew the Laws of the Marsh. Upon complaint made to the King in 8 E. 1. by the Abbot of Stratford that whereas he did use yearly to repair the Banks and Ditches of the Marshes of West-Hamme as often as need required for the preservation of his Lands and the Lands of his neighbours lying within those Marshes againts the over-flowings of the Rivers of Thames and Luye and that his said neighbours did neglect to do the like for what belong'd to them the said King directed his Precept to the Shireeve of Essex commanding him to distrain all those that were faulty therein to the end that the said Abbot might have contribution in that behalf In 15 E. 1. Iohn de Lovetot and Will. de Lamburne had Commission to view and repair the Banks and Ditches in this County upon the side of Thames and parts adjacent then in decay and to enquire through whose default they became so ruinous In 20 E. 1. the Abbot of Stratford made a new complaint to the King in the like manner as abovesaid Whereupon the said King required the Shireeve to distrain all those who were obliged to such repair of their Banks and Ditches and had not accordingly done their duty therein as also those who did refuse to contribute to the said Abbot according unto their due proportions In 31 E. 1. Walter le Baud Richard de Perneford and Iohn de Dovor were assigned to view and repair the Banks Ditches c. in this County and those at Wolwyche in Kent The like Commission had Iohn le Bretun and Will. de Wauton in 34 E. 1. for those in Essex only Several other of the same kind for this County only were in King Edward the second 's time viz. to H. Spigurnell Iohn de Dovor and Iohn de Malegraffe in 3 E. 2. To Walter le Baud Will. Fitz Robert and Iohn de Norton in 6 E. 2. To the same William Henry Gernet and Thomas Dakenham in 7 E. 2. To Will. de Hanyngfeld Iohn le Burser and Thomas de Ultyng in 8 E. 2. To Nich. Frembaud Henry Gernet Iohn de Davor and Richard Bastard in 9 E. 2. In 14 E. 2. Henry Grene Iohn de Dovere and Thomas de Chene had the like Commission for the view and repair of the Banks c. at Renham Benington and Alvitheley In 17 E. 2. Iohn de Doure Robert de Ashele and Nich. de Scotford the like for all the Marshes upon the Thames in this County So also had the said Iohn Iohn de Wydefeld and Walter de Hegham for the Banks c. betwixt Stretford atte Bough and Est-Tilbury and the parts adjacent In 18 E. 2. Iohn Boteler and Iohn de la Hay were appointed to view a certain Causey betwixt Maldon and Hebrugg under which through an arch the fresh waters had used to run into the Sea which waters were then stopt And likewise to view and repair the Banks c. in the Marshes of Esthamme in Essex and Wolwiche in Kent So also in 5 E. 3. had Robert de Rochford and Will. de Stanford for all the Banks c. within the Hundreds of Densey and Rochford In 10 E. 3. Henry Gernet and his fellow Justices assigned for the view and repair of the Banks c. on the Coast of Thames in this County sate at West Hamme on Wednesday being the Feast of S. Edmund the King where the Prioresse of Stratford made complaint before them that Will. de Masun Bayliff of the Marsh of Westhamme had distrained her for Cs. for the repair of a certain Bank called the Prior's Wall for she said that she neither had nor held any land nor ground in the said marsh for the which any wall ought by her to be repaired and therefore required judgement But she said that one Iohn de Covele long ago viz. in the time of King Henry the third held in the said Marsh as of the fee of Muntfichet which then belonged to Sir Iohn de Handlo fifty acres of land together with the said Bank then called Coveles Wall and a certain piece of Pasture called the Hope lying neer the said Bank without the precinct of the said Marsh viz. between the same Bank and the course of the River of Thames which land together with the said Bank of Hope were before that time ever assessed together for the repair of that Bank whensoever it stood in need And the said Iohn de Couele being so seized aliened the said Bank and Hope to Robert le Ku to hold to him and his heirs for the repairing and maintaining of the said Bank for ever the said Hope then being sufficient for the Pasturage of six Kine as it was reported And afterwards the said Iohn de Couele long before the Statute entituled Quia emptores terrarum sold the said Land by parcells to divers Tenants to hold to them and their heirs of him the said Iohn and his heirs for a certain yearly Rent and sute of Court to be thereupon performed And afterwards the said Iohn did wholly sell from himself and his heirs all the demesn of the before-specified Tenements together with the whole Rent and service which he had wont to receive of his said Tennants unto one Simon de
so to Sakevylestrow and so to Yortham thence to Rikenebrigs and so to the old Sluce of Pevenese time out of mind with the rest of the Tenements in the said Town of Wortlyng Eltham Herst-Monceux c. And without that that by evacuation of the fresh waters by those Gutters and Sewers though they should be so repaired and made as by the Presentment was supposed they should have benefit and safeguard and this they were all ready to justifie c. And William Grangiam the King's Attorney there at that time said that the Sewer beginning at the boundary called Squabber tending to Gorebreggs and so to Sakevylastrowe and thence to the old Sluce of Pevenese had been usually repaired in common by the Landholders in the said Towns of Wortlyng Otham Herst-Monceux c. and that by such evacuation of the fresh waters by those repairs they had commodity and safeguard as in the said Presentment was alleged c ..................... ................................ In 3 H. 4. Thomas Erpyngham Constable of Dovor Castle the Prior of Michelham Iohn Pelham William Fenys Will. Makenade and others were constituted Commissioners for the view and repair of the Banks in Pevensey Marsh betwixt Birle and Bechief and to perform all things therein according to the Custome of that marsh as of the marsh of Romeneye and the Law and Custome of this Realm Whereupon the said Prior Iohn Pelham and William Makenade went unto Westham in the Parish of Pevensey upon Friday next before the Feast of S. Gregory by the consent of the Lords of the Towns the Bayliff and the xii Jurats otherwise called Skawers and of the Commons of the said Marsh and ordained these following Statutes for the due governance of the same marsh and salvation thereof in the time to come First because there was no certain Law of the said Marsh ordained nor used before that time but at the will of those Lords who had Lands within the same so that divers perils and hurts intolerable dayly grew therefore for eschewing thereof and for increasing of the common profit they ordained and fully agreed that a principal Court should be yearly held in the said Marsh within xv dayes of the Feast of S. Michael the Arch-Angel whereat one Bayliff xij Skawers as also Collectors and Expenditors of the Scotts or Assessments should be chosen by the Lords of the Towns of the said Marsh or by their Attorneys for the safeguard thereof which Bayliff to oversee the defects and the xij Skawers to make Orders and Decrees according to the Law and Custome of Romney Marsh and also that every man by lawful quantitie of his holding of common of Pasture and Fishing within the bounds of the said Marsh shall contribute by equal portions to the reparation and maintenance of the Banks Gutters Sewers Bridges and all other necessary things within the said Marsh by the consideration of the xij Skawers and that all the reparations of the said Banks Watergangs Gutters and Sewers be done as often as needeth the costs whereof to be made and raised in this form viz. That every man that hath any land subject to danger be it neer or far off from the said peril so that the said land may be saved or the owners have profit by the Banks Watergangs Gutts and Sewers before-mentioned shall be contributory for their Lands and Tenements according to the proportion of their tenure so that no man holding such Lands and Tenements under the form of af●resaid shall be spared in that part be he rich or poor of what state dignity or condition soever be he within Liberties or without and in case any man be negligent in paying of his portion at a certain day ordained by the Skawers for repairing the said Banks Gutts and Watergangs that then such men shall be distrained of their Goods and Cattell wheresoever they be found within Liberties or without within the Precinct of the said Marsh untill such time as they shall have duly paid their said proportions with their Wanes the which Wanes to be reserved to the profit of the Bayliff And that the said distresses taken by the Bayliffs and the xij Skawers shall be kept for three dayes and if the owner be obstinate or negligent of his payment during that time then that the said distress be sold and the mony reserved for the safeguard of the said Marsh against the violence of the Sea And that the common Bayliff of the said Marsh of Pevensey who hath lands within the same be chosen if it be profitable but otherwise that another be elected by the assent of the Lords of the Towns of the said Marsh or by their Attorneys in sitting and holding of the Courts and Lasts at West Ham or at some other lawful place within the bounds of the said Marsh and within xv dayes of the Feast of S. Michael before-mentioned yearly upon the summons of the Bayliff except the said Bayliff for some reasonable cause happen to be changed within the said year and another be chosen in his stead And if the said Bayliff be present at such his election and will not accept of that Office that then he shall be amerced by the Electors in xls. which the succeeding Bayliff shall levy of his Goods and Catalls to the comman profit of the said Marsh and so forthwith a new choyce of another Bayliff to be made who shall accept of that Office and take his Oath and have for his labour the Wanes that fall in his time of the Scotts so assessed and levyed And if the said Bayliff so chosen be hindred by any man so that he dare not accept of that Office by reason of any threats that then he which so threatneth him or by any suggestion causeth him to decline that Office shall be punished by the Electors in such sort as the Bayliff himself should be in case he refused the same Office And if the Bayliff be absent at the time of his election that then he be distrained by the Bayliff of the Marsh his Predecessor by all his Goods and Catalls the which shall be pounded in certain places ordained by the said Electors and there kept unto the time the said Bayliff go to the Constable of the Castle of Pevensey the Abbot of Begham or Prior of Michelham or to one of them and make his Oath accepting of his said Office whereupon he shall receive Letters of him who hath so taken his Oath sealed with his Seal and directed to the Bayliff his Predecessor And thus shall he do within six dayes after his election and if he do not so he shall then be punished as aforesaid and forthwith a new choyce made And at this principal Last or Court the common Collectors and Expenditors of all the general Scots before-mentioned shall make their accompts before the Lords of the Marsh or their Attorneys if they be present before the Bayliffs xij Skawers and the Commons of the said Marsh which Accompts to be
virtue of the Agreement abovesaid did build and plant a Town called Sandtoft with a Church therein placing a Minister there whereunto resorted above two hundred Families of French and Walloon Protestants fled out of their native Country for fear of the Inquisition only to enjoy the free exercise of their Religion here who erected and planted above two hundred habitations for Husbandry and plowed and tilled much of the said twenty four thousand and five hundred Acres of land to the great benefit of the Common wealth All which they enjoyed till about the Month of Iune in the year 1642 that some of the Inhabitants thereabouts pretending they had right of Common said they were not bound by the before-specified Decree and therefore taking advantage of the present distractions for then it was that the Parliament began to raise a powerful Army for the safety of the King's person defence of both Houses of Parliament and of those who had obeyed their Orders and commands and preserving the true Religion Laws Liberties and peace of the Kingdome as their votes and Remonstrances did set forth a vast proportion of money and plate being brought in by the Citizens of London and others for that purpose the King being at that time at Yorke with some slend●r guards which they voted to be a levying of warr against his Parliament they arose in tumults brake down the fences and inclosures of four thousand Acres destroyed all the Corn growing and demolished the Houses built thereon And about the beginning of February ensuing they pulled up the Floud-gates of Snow Sewer which by letting in the tides from the River of Trent soon drowned a great part of Hatfield Chase divers persons standing there with Muskets and saying that there they would stay till the whole levell were drowned and the Inhabitants forced to swim away like Ducks and so continued guarding the said Sluse for the space of seven weeks together letting in the tides at ev●ry full water and keeping the Sluse shut at an ebb And about that time likewise some of the Inhabitants of Mi●●erton pulled down another Sluse neer that Town which occasioned the River of Trent to break down the Banks and overflow the whole levell so that the Barns and Stacks of Co●n were drowned a yard high at the least And thinking this not to be mischief enough the Inhabitants of the Isle of Axholme did about Michaelmasse in the year 1645 tumultuously throw down a great part of the Banks and filled up the Ditches putting in Cattel into the Corn and Pastures of those that had been Adventurers for the drayning Whereupon the said Participants in this great and costly work by their humble Petition exhibited to the Parliament in December following presented that after the expence of at least two hundred thousand pounds in those works the Tenants of the Mannour of Epworth notwithstanding their consents to that Decree before-specified which had been passed in the Excheque● for settlement of what had been agreed on and set out of that Mannour for the said Participan●s and their Tenants had in a tumultuous manner thrown down and laid waste a proportion of at least 74000 Acres of land and destroyed a great quantity of Rape and Corn growing by forcible keeping and depasturing their Cattel thereon as also demolished very many Houses burnt others cut and burned the Plows beat and wounded those that were Plowing or resisted them in any of those their outragious acts and then threatned the drowning of the whole by cuttng of the Banks and misusage of the Sluses and moreover that they resisted the said P●rticipants in levying taxes for the repair of the works to the great damage of the Common wealth in general and scandal to the Justice thereof in case these things should not be restrained and the offenders to be punished For preventing therefore of the like mischiefs and preservation of the peace of the Country it was then ordered by the Lords in Parliament that the Shireeve of the said County of Lincolne and Justices of peace there should upon complaint made to them therein punctually pursue the Statutes made in 13 H. 4. for suppressing of Riots and Routs and call to their assistance if need required the Trained bands of the said County and the Parliaments forces next adjoyning to be aiding and assisting to the said Participants in guarding and keeping these Sluses and Sewers and in repairing what had been so demolished and in levying the Taxes legally imposed tending to the preservation of so good and beneficial a work to the common wealth And for the setling of this businesse they farther ordered that the Shireeve of the County of Lincolne for the time being should upon request to him made by the said Participants appoint such a Deputy within the limits of the same levell for the sudden aiding and assisting of them when need should require as they from time to time did desire And that this Order should be forthwith published in the several Parish-Churches and Market-Towns of this County Which course being thus taken for restraint of those their tumultuous and riotous practices seven of the Inhabitants of the said Mannour of Epworth brought their actions at Law against the said Participants for recovering of what had been so formerly setled by the before specified Decree with their own consents Whereupon the said Participants exhibiting their Bill in the Exchequer Chamber for establishing their possession against those seven obtained this Order viz. that the Kings Solicitor general should proceed upon the same in that Court with all convenient speed and in the mean time the possess●ion of the lands in question to be held in quiet by the Plantiffs as it had been formerly setled by the said Court and enjoyed at any time since the said Decree made and likewise that their sutes at Law should be stayed by the Injunction of the same Court untill the hearing of the cause or that the Court gave farther order therein Upon which Injunction the Shireeve had a Writ of assistance and came with near a hundred persons to quiet the possession and set up the Banks of those 4000 Acres first laid waste But one Daniell Noddel Solicitor for the before-mentioned Inhabitants hearing of the said Shireeve's coming got together about four hundred men and forced him with all his assistants to flie and having so done demolished what he the said Shireeve had before caused to be set up The Participants therefore being thus forcibly kept out of possession brought their Bill to hearing which the said Noddel discerning he drew in to his aid Lieutenant Colonell Iohn Lilburne a person of a most turbulent Spirit and who since dyed a Quaker and Major Iohn Wildeman and whilst the cause was hearing joyned with the said Inhabitants in a farther Riot on the remaining 3400 Acres which till then had been kept up impounding the Tenants Cattel and refusing to admit of Replevins and so forced them to what rates
Aug. in the said xlith year And he to be chardged with the Banks compassing the said Fens with the diking scouring and roding of both the said Rivers c. with Bridges Stakers Drayns and other things by the said Laws imposed And that he the said Thomas in consideration thereof should have a full third part of all the said Fens to be laid out by metes and bounds by certain men thereunto appointed under such conditions c. for the drayning of the other two parts c. And whereas the said Thomas by virtue c. of the said Laws had taken upon him the chardge of the said drayning c. and therein spent his whole estate to the value of twelve thousand pounds and more and yet by reason of certain questions wilfully stirred c. between the Counties of Kesteven and Holand about the metes and bounds of the said Countries lying in the said Fens whereby not only the said Thomas could not have his said third part allotted and set out unto him according to the time and manner set down in the said Laws c. And whereas for the deciding those controversies there was the 8th of April in xliiij Eliz. a solemn meeting of many Knights and Gentlemen strangers to both the said Countries who did ●ot only set down and determine the cause of the said bounds but did also set out and assign the said third part belonging to the said Thomas Lovell as by the Laws c. made at Spaldyng aforesaid the day and year aforesaid by Sir Henry North Knight Sir Iohn Bolles Knight Valentine Browne Henry Warner Robert Bevill Robert Wingfeld Anthony Ireby Rob. Cotton Richard Coxe Robert Ietherell and Iohn S. George appeareth According to which division the same was by men skilfull in surveying divided and set out Since which there hath been divers Conferences and Agreements for two several Drove-ways through the said third part which was lastly set down by way of Laws of Sewers 17th of March 45 Eliz. by Tho. Lord Burlegh Edw. Heron c. Commissioners of Sewers with allowance to the said Tho. Lovell of as much ground out of the said Fenns as the said Drove-ways contain which together with the rest making up a full third part was by metes and bounds assigned to the said Tho. Lovell and which he begun to enclose but could not perfect the same in regard of the unseasonablenesse of the times and riotous lets and disturbances of lewd people casting down his Banks c. It was therefore enacted that the said Thomas his Heirs and Assigns should for ever enjoy the same third part so set out c. upon condition that if he did not fully perfect the said drayning within the space of three years from the 20th of August then next ensuing c. And after that maintain and keep them c. firm and depasturable in Summer and Winter except three hundred Acres or thereabouts to be left in the said Fens called Spaldyng and Deping Fens and Gogsland for Lakes and Sikes and xl Acres in Borne and Thurlby Fens and excepting the Drayns and Sewers then in the said Fenns but should suffer the said two parts to be drowned c. by the space of a year together after the expiration of the said three years and the same certified by xii Commissioners of Sewers whereof six of the parts of Holand and six of Kesteven in the high Court of Chancery and there Recorded that then in case the said ground within one year following were not recovered c. then the Lords and Proprietarìes of the said Fens to re-enter And the Inhabitants of Holand and Kesteven enter upon their Common in the said third part according to their former right How far Mr. Lovell proceeded in this adventure I know not but his attempt not succeeding as it seems I find that the Commissioners for the general drayning of the great Levell whereof I shall speak at large by and by sitting at Wisebeche on the xxiijth of May 14 Caroli for the imposing of several Taxes upon the particular Fens and Marshes throughout that vast tract in order to that work assessed xxxs an Acre upon Deping Fen before-specified And afterwards scil in Iuly following sitting at Huntendon by their Letters dated the xxiiijth of that Month and directed to the Lords of his Majesties most honourable Privy Council certified that they had heard all that could be alleged by the Learned Councel of the Earl of Exeter and the Adventurers touching that Fen aswell for ma●ter of Law as fact and Equitie and upon full debate and advised consideration thereof were unanimously of opinion that the Tax imposed by the Commissioners at Wisebeche before-mentioned was upon just grounds and ●o resolved And forasmuch as the same was not paid they might therefore lawfully proceed to make a Decree for the further and perfect drayning thereof and thereby to adjudge and order aswell from his Majesty being Lord of the soil as from the Adventurers and others interessed therein such proportion of land as might sufficiently bear the chardge of the work which would be very great notwithstanding what had been before that time disbursed by the said Earl and Adventurers And they farther certified that before they would enter into the making of any such Decree they humbly desired that they might receive his Majesties pleasure whether they should proceed therein or not and in case they should whether his Majestie would become the undertaker of the work himself and so dispose of it to the said Adventurers to do in respect of their great disbursments therein whereof they had or could receive little fruit as the state of the said Fens then stood which they wholly did submit to his Majesties wisdome and pleasure desiring that the same might be speedily signified unto them to the end they might proceed accordingly and humbly offered this advice to their Lordships that it might not be left to the power of the Adventurers or any others that should undertake the said drayning under his Majestie ●o perform it by any ways or designs other than such as his Majestie or the Commissioners should approve and direct by new Acts of Sewers in that behalf as the best and most convenient for the perfect drayning of their Fens and the benefit of other the Fens and parts of the great Levell thereunto adjoyning in regard otherwise the drayning of these mig●t prove very prejudicial to the general work and they moreover desired that care might be taken that no more time were lost in the prosecution thereof but that the same might proceed that instant Summer in such a way as the King upon consideration thereof should please to direct In answer to which proposals I find his Majesties pleasure signified to the said Commissioners by the Lord Bishop of London from Theobalds in the same moneth of Iuly which was to let them know that they might proceed to make a Decree for the farther and more perfect drayning of
those fields as of all others lying within the Precinct of the said Bank called Pokediche to be then newly made that there should be made one new Pipe under the Bank called Kirkfield diche and under the great River there and the said new Bank on the VVest side of the said Priory of Mullycourt And likewise one new Sewer from the said new Pipe through Mullycourt drove to Rightforth lode thence into North hooke and thence into the great River which runneth from Salterys lode to Bishop's Lynne And that all persons having Lands and Tenements in the said fields called Plawfield and Kirkefield should always repair clense and scour the said Pipe and Sewer so to be new made unto Kightforth lode at their own proper costs and charges when and as often as need should require And that all persons and their heirs having lands in the said fields called Budbeche and Sandy field should have one Sewer there for avoiding the fresh waters thence into Blewe diche and from Bl●we diche unto Rightforth lode And that the same persons so having lands in those fields called Budbeche and Sandyfield should repair and clense the said Sewer unto Blewediche for the future at their own costs and chardges whensoever need should require And that the same persons their heirs and assigns having lands in the said fields called Budbeche and Sandy field as also all the said Inhabitants of those Towns of Upwell and Outwell having common of Pasture within the precinct of the same Bank called Pokediche to be so new made as aforesaid should repair and maintain the said Sewer from Blewe diche to Rightforth lode for the future at their own proper costs and charges as often as need should require And that all persons having Lands in the said fields called Plawfield Kirkfield Budbeche and Sandyfield as also all the Inhabitants of Upwell and Outwell having Common of Pasture and Fishing within the Precinct of the said Bank called Pokediche so to be new made as aforesaid should repair the said Sewer called Rightforth lode unto North hooke at their own proper costs and chardges for the time to come whensoever need should require And they likewise ordained that the Abbot of UUest Dereham and his successors should new make repair and maintain well sufficiently for the time to come one Causey of six foot in bredth Eastwards throughout all that part of his land lying betwixt the old Pokediche on the North part and a certain piece of land belonging to the Abbot of Ramsey and another pertaining to Thomas Duke of Exeter on the South part and abutting on the before-specified great River towards the East And that the said Abbot and his successors should be justified and ordered for the not making and repair of the same Causey according to the Law and Custome antiently used in the Town of UUigenhale And that the said Abbot of Ramsey and his successors should also new make repair and maintain one other Causey of six foot likewise in bredth through another piece of his land lying on the East part towards the said great River And they farther ordained that every person having lands Common of Pasture or Fishing within the land of the said Abbot and Common lode should likewise new make repair and maintain one Causey well and sufficiently viz. each man against his own land towards the said great River And for the performance thereof that they should be compelled by the Steward of Thomas Duke of Exeter for his Mannour of Stow Bardolf his heirs and assigns in the Court of Stow-Bardolf And that all the Tenants and Inhabitants in the Towns of Downham hithe Wimbotesham and Stow Bardolf should new make as also repair and maintain well and sufficiently for the time to come a certain Causey beginning in a place called Common lode and extending it self from thence to Salterys lode All which Ordinances and Agistments so made in form aforesaid the Towns in Marshland before-mentioned as also Welle Wigenhale Dounham hithe Winbotesham and Stow Bardolf did for the time to come agree for themselves their heirs and assigns to observe and hold firmly It was therefore decreed by the before-specified Justices that the Inhabitants of the said Towns which had La●ds Common of Pasture or Fishing within those fields and safeguard of the said Bank called Pokediche to be new made in such sort as aforesaid should for the future be obliged to repair and maintain the same according to the form and effect of the Inquisition Ordinances and Agistments before declared and to be distrained for the time to come for the performance thereof as often and when need should require In witnesse whereof the said Henry Rocheforth and Thomas Dereham did affix their Seals thereunto VVhich Inquisition and Ordinances were exemplified by the said King Henry the sixth under his great Seal upon the xijth day of May in the third year of his reign And in respect that the ground from Salterys lode to North delfe before-specified whereon the said Bank was to be raised was then the proper soyl of the said Thomas Duke of Exeter as part of his Mannour of Stow Bardolf the said Duke in confirmation thereof did by his Deed wherein he likewise stiled himself Comes Dorcestriae Harcuriae Admirallus Angliae bearing date the Monday next aft●r the Feast of S. Peter ad vincula in the said first year of the reign of the same King King Henry the sixth grant and confirm for himself and his heirs to Iohn Bishop of Ely Sir Iohn Colvile and Sir Henry Rocheford Knights Richard Peverell Thomas Karvile Thomas Dru Robert Karvile and Edmund Massingham Esquires and all the Inhabitants of Wigenhale Tylney Islington Cleuchwardon Terington Walton Enmethe Walpole and Walsoken in the parts of Mershland their heirs and assigns the said Bank called Pokediche so to be new made and raised for safeguard against the said fresh waters on the North part of the River which runneth from Welle to Salterys lode and Wigenhale beginning at Salterys lode aforesaid within his the said Duke's Lordship which extendeth it self in length from thence unto Northdelfe before-mentioned viz. ground containing xxiiij foot on the South side of the same Bank for the making repairing and maintaining thereof as also sufficient ground on the North side thereof xl foot distant from the same for the repair likewise and maintenance thereof provided that they should not dig any earth on the said North side thereof for the purposes abovesaid as long as the said Bank could be fitly repaired with the earth on the South side And he did moreover grant and confirm to the said Iohn Bishop of Cly and the rest of the persons above-specified their heirs and assigns that they not any of them should be molested in their passage to and fro in the making and repair of the said Bank wheresoever there might be cause for the same Saving neverthelesse to him the said D●ke and his heirs Wayfe Stray and other amerciaments for
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
from the place called West head unto Welle Town so far as it hath been of late accustomed viz in height six foot above Bardolf Fenne and in bredth at the foundation xxx foot and in bredth on the highest part thereof xv foot 2. That no man take or dyke any menure within viij foot of the South part of the same Pow diche And on the North part of the same no menure to be taken within C. foot from the foot of the same Pow diche 3. That the same Powdiche be made by every particular Township whole and Common by Acre silver and not otherwise and the same to be done by every Township by Whitsunday then next coming or Midsomer at the farthest in pain of every Township xll. to be levyed to the use of the said King and Queens Majesty And that every particular Town do sufficiently Clay their particular charge on the fore-part thereof in thicknesse with Clay one foot and an half and on the top thereof one foot 4. And for the better preservation of the same Powdiche they did in like manner ordain that there should be re-edified upon the said Powdiche three Houses that is to say one at North hooke gate another between Walpole and Tirington gate upon the Bank and Powdiche and the third at Welle gate the charges to be levyed upon the whole Townships of Marshland and Town of Wigenhall by Acre silver 5. That if any man were then indited or thereafter should be indited vexed or molested for any cause touching the defence maintenance or preservation of the same Country and Town of UUigenhale then they and every of them to be defended and saved harmlesse by the said Country and Town of UUigenhale all so far as the Law will serve and permit 6. That the Broken dyke be sufficiently made maintained and repaired from time to time as it hath been in times past that year and other years thenceforth by the said Country of Marshland 7. That a view be made at Emneth by the chief Inhabitants of the Country where there might be newly made and re-edified within the Levell and Rinde thereof a new Dyke for the defence of the water if Broken dyke be broke which view to be at Sandy rood upon the Friday following by eight of the Clock And on the tenth day of the same month of April it was farther concluded by the consent of the said chief Inhabitants and Town of Wigenhale that the said Dyke called Broken dyke should be made maintained and kept from time to time by and at the costs charges and expences of the whole Country of Marshland as afore-time had been accustomed And that a new Dyke be made from Myll dam unto Peter Sanderson's house and so by the high way directly about unto a certain place called Suffield gate in such height thicknesse and bredth as Thomas Guybon Iohn Reppes William Hunston and Thomas Karvill Esquire Richard Baker alias Ladde Richard Nichols Henry Hunston and Thomas Hewar Gentleman or the more part of them with the advice of the workmen should think meet and convenient After this viz. in 8 Eliz. there were other Ordinances made touching the Banks Ditches and Sewers in these parts the substance whereof are as followeth viz. 1 That Rightforth lode from West-head or North hooke Westward being but 8 foot wide ought to made xij foot in bredth by Edmund Beaupre Esquire And so every person c. to make his or their part of the same widenesse from the said Edm. Beaupre VVestwards and so to Stowbridge 2 That the brinks of the great River from Stowbridge unto Common load be made in the upper part 8 foot in bredth between the Houses Hedges and VValls of the VVest part of Ouse 3 That Common lode lying on the South side of Stowbridge houses be made of the widenesse of xij foot and 4 foot deep with such a Sluse as Rightforth lode hath at S●owbridge to be done c. at the charge of the Inhabitants of Dounham Wimbotesham and Stow-Bardolf for that it is their Drayn c. 4 That upon the stopping of Newlode lying between Common lode and Downhambridg the said lode called Common lode or Downham lode was made 5 That the gole betwixt Dounham bridg and Salters lode to be made xij foot wide and 4 foot deep and to extend into the Fen from the said Sluce a mile and more and scoured by the Inhabitants of Dounham 6 That the brinks on the VVest side of Ouse from Common lode to Dounham brigg be made xij foot broad in the bottom and 8 foot on the top and one foot higher than the highest water mark to be done by the Inhabitants of Stow-Bardolf UUymbotesham and Downham 7 That Edm. Beaupre Esquire and other the Land-holders in great Powdichfield and Whart medows have a Sluse at UUelle Clouses at the North head of Whartmedow and so to drayn through the midst of Marshland fenne 8 That the brinks of Ouse from Dounham bridge to Salters lode be made xij foot broad in the bottom and 8 foot at the top as also one foot higher than the highest water mark 9 That the new Powdiche from Salters lode to North delph be made xviij foot broad in the bottom xij foot at the top and ●ive foot in height from the plain ground And from North delph to Mullicourt ● of the same bredth at the top and bottom and six foot in height from the plain ground All which to be done and kept by the Inhabitants of Marshland the Town of Wigenhall the Land-holders of the hundred Acres within Stow Bardolf called the Lords hedding and the Land-holders of the decayed Tenement sometimes Bexwell's at North delph 10. And that from the East corner of Mullycourt unto Mullycourt drove it be made of the like bredth at the bottom and top by the Dean of Ely and six foot in height as abovesaid VVhich said Powdiche from Mullycourt droves end tendeth VVestwards unto the Bridge at the East end of Outwell Church and thence Northwest unto Boxstedstile which is the farthest bound of Outwell towards Emneth and is the division betwixt the half Hundred of Clakclose and the Hundred of Freebridge The which Bank or Causey ought to be made and kept by the Inhabitants of the Town of Outwell for their lands lying in Mullycourt field Sondy field and Powdich field 11. That the River of Welle called Welle Ee coming from the Bridge at the East end of Outwell Church and running Eastward till it come opposite to Saltham lake thence South East unto North delf thence Eastward to Salters lode to be made xxvij foot wide in the bottom and xl foot at the top from the said Bridge at Outwell Church to Mullycourt droves end by the Inhabitants of Outwell and from thence of the same widenesse by the Dean of Ely to Saltham lake and from thence to Salters lode of the like bredth by the Inhabitants of Marshland and Town of UUigenhall 12 That at the end of
lost to the value of xl l. In this distresse the people of the Town fled to the Church for refuge some to Hay-stacks some to the baulks in the Houses till they were neer famishe● poor women leaving their Children swimming in their beds till good people adventuring their lives went up to the breast in the waters to fetch them out at the windows whereof Mr. Browne the Minister did fetch divers to the Church upon his back And had it not pleased God to move the hearts of the Mayor and Aldermen of Kings Lynne with compassion who sent Beer and Victual thither by Boat many had perished which Boats came the direct way over the soyl from Lynne to Terington 3 That the Creek which now runneth under Terington bank and underneath them hath within four or five years last past run half a mile off and that about xx years since it did run about a mile off 4 We think that the approach of the said Creek is the greatest cause of the decay and overthrow of the said Banks and that at this present the said Creek runneth where Banks have lately stood being xxiiij foot deep or more at a low water And that by the said outrage there are four other great Creeks worn in the whole ground to the Town-ward where there was Corn reaped the last Harvest whereof two of the said Creeks are fourscore foot broad a piece and neer xxx foot deep and are worn to the Town-ward within ten rod of the Indyke by the reflowing and ebbing of the waters from out of the Town to the Sea-ward and that these Creeks were so worn within the space of xlviij hours 5 We say that the Township of Terington standeth chardged with xiC Rod of Bank at xvi foot to the Rod which within 50 years last past cost making MMxx l. And that ninescore Rod part thereof have by the space of xx years last past been made with earth straw and wood at iiijl. the Rod per annum which is for every year 720l. There hath been more fourscore and two Rod part of the said Bank made very strongly with lime and stone which cost the first making betwixt xvi and xxl. the Rod amounting to MMMl. There was more six Rods of stone wall made which cost CCl. The yearly repair of the said stone walls having cost by the space of xij or xiiij years last past CCl. The repair of viiC Liiij Rode the residue of the said xiC rods cost seven years since CCCLxxiijl. and now upon this rage will cost more There are also two Inbanks lost by the said outrage which were made within ten years last past and cost CCCC l. Also one other Indike made the last year which cost making DXCviii l. and is now ruinated by this last rage to the value of Cxx l. There were also exposed to the Sea this last year without the said Indike Cxxxvi. Acres for which by the Law of Sewers an allowance of fifty shillings the Acre is and must be paid amounting to the sum of CCCxx l. 6 We say that the Salt Marshes of Terington are exceedingly worn away For the Kings Majesty had one Marsh in the occupation of Awdley Lad alias Baker or his assigns called the Gonge Marsh which by report hath contained about CCC Acres and within xxx years last past contained Lx. Acres which is now all worn to the Sea And his Majesty hath lost more within these xxx years C Acres of Marsh being part of other Marshes which the said Mr. Lad holdeth by Lease of his Majesty Which Marshes are as we suppose chiefly wasted or decayed for want of keeping and maintaining of divers Damms which are named and set down hereafter in the answer to the xiith Article 7 We say that the waters of Wisebeche and Elme have antiently fallen to the four Gotes as they now do and from thence they have fallen to the Sea within the memory of man more than a mile off from Terington Banks And it is very probable that in antient time they have fallen to the Sea much farther off But in our opinions upon our view taken they might be carryed at this time a neerer way to the Sea viz. from the four Gotes aforesaid over Tyd marsh and Sutton marshes unto a Creek there called Kings Creeke and there to fall into the deep called Lutton Leame and so to the Sea which is a shorter course for the River by vi miles and hath a much better out-fall 8 We say that all the Towns within the Isle which have been heretofore chardged with the maintenance of Wisebech River and such other Towns in Northamptonshire and Huntingdonshire bordering on the said Isle between Peterborough and Somersham who have heretofore contributed to the maintenance of Clows crosse drayne or Wysebech River shall in our opinions be benefitted thereby And the Towns of Walpole and Terington proportionably but for the portions of money to be particularly rated upon every several Town we leave it to farther consideration 9 VVe say that we hold it convenient there be a new Indike taken at Terington for the present and better preservation of the said Town but whether the said Indike will defend the Town any long time except the waters be diverted and the Marshes imbanked we know not 10 Nihil 11 Nihil 12 We say that these Marshes following are very much decayed for want of making and maintaining of Damms viz between one Marsh in the tenure of Awdley Lad and one other Marsh called the New marsh being also the Kings Majesties being in the tenure of Sir Robert Wynde or his assigns there is a Creek called Hurdle fleet which it x rod broad and xx foot deep within the levell soyl being on the East side of the Ewe marsh and the Myss●e which Creek continually floweth and refloweth dangerously over the Marshes But in the memory of man it hath not been Dammed neither can we present who ought to do the same There is also another Fleet called Ground fleet upon the VVest side of Ewe marsh and the Marsh of Mr. Iudde which containeth in bredth 5 rods and in depth xvi foot within the levell soyl which Fleet was never dammed within the memory of man There is also another Fleet on the VVest side of Mr. Iudd's Marsh and the Marsh of Edmund Riches that is in bredth four rode and in depth x foot which likewise within the memory of man was never dammed which said Fleets in our opinions are great occasions of wearing away the Marshes there There is also a passage way or Chase on the VVest side of Ewe marsh which is called UUaterlese diche and on the East side of Mrs. Rachell and Anne Deane and the Marsh of Nicholas Iudde Which Chase is not maintained with Damms as within the memory of man it hath been to the damage of the Marshes but who ought to do it we are ignorant 13 Nihil 14 Nihil 15 We say that in our opinions it were very convenient
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
charge of each man according to the proportion of his lands And they moreover decreed that all the Sewers belonging to every hamlet of Wisebeche from the Fen-banks to the Sea-bank should be well scoured and clensed at certain times in the year by those who antiently used to scour them so that the water might have its course to the Sea without any impediment and that all the Bridges Clows Pipes and Gutters within every of those Towns be repaired and clensed well and sufficiently in all places needfull by those unto whom they belonged as aforesaid so that no loss might accrew to any person whatsoever for default of such repair And that all Banks called Wardyches betwixt every Town of the said Hundred should be raised higher repaired and maintained well and sufficiently by those unto whom they appertain as aforesaid viz. in bredth xvi foot and of a fitting height to stop the water of each Town from other so that no damage might accrue to any of them for want thereof upon penalty o● xls. to be paid to the Bishop of Ely for the time being And likewise that all the Crests aswell betwixt every Field as bordering on all the Sewers of each Town within the said Hundred should be raised higher repaired and maintained well and sufficiently in height bredth and thickness by those also to whom they belonged upon the like penalty of xls. to be paid to the Bishop of Ely for the time being And that no man thenceforth should presume to cut or cause to be cut any Wardiche or Crest within any of the Towns of the said Hundred under the like penalty of xls. to be paid to the said Bishop of Ely as often as there should be an offence of that kind committed And that the river of Wisebeche should be scoured and enlarged in all places defective from Gye hirne to the Sea as often as need required by all the Landholders within the said Hūdred of Wisebeche each man according to the proportion of his holding And the said Jurors also presented that the Bank called Grenedyke of Welle which beginneth at the Stone Cross in Welle and extendeth to Sewalesclote in Welle should be raised and repaired higher than it was at that time by two foot and in bredth xij by the Landholders in Budbeche each man according to his proportion And that the Abbot of Bury ought to repair one Bank in Welle leading from Sewalesclote in Welle to Lakebrigge and make it higher than it was at that time by two foot and in bredth at the top eight foot And that the Landholders in Sayerf●ld in Welle ought to repair a certain Bank in Welle called Thornedyche from Lowndes●rove to the Stone Cross in that Town and to make it higher by two foot than it was at that time and in bredth eight foot And that a certain drove in Welle called M●●sdrove leading from Grenedyke unto Pyldrove be made higher by three foot than at that time it was and in bredth xij foot by the Landholders in Budbeche within the said Drove And the said Jurors also presented that there then was and had antiently been a certain Crest in Uppewelle called Pysdrove leading from Grenedike in Uppewelle unto the great River of Welle aforesaid which Crest ought and had antiently been made and repaired by the Landholders in the said Town of Uppewelle And they said that it was necessary for the safeguard of the parts adjacent that the said Crest should be made perfect and higher than it was at that time in the lowest places by three foot and to be eight foot in bredth at the top And that all persons having Land● or Tenements in the Field called Rudbeche in Outwelle and Uppewelle ought to repair a certain Gutter neer unto the messuage of Simon King in Outwelle aforesaid whereby the water of Rudbeche might run into the great River of Outwelle And they also said that for the safeguard of the Lands within the said Field of Rudbeche ●hat the same Gutter ought to be new made with Stone by those persons who had Lands or Tenements in the said Field of Rudbeche Whereupon the before-specified Commissioners did decree and ordain that the said Bank called Grenedyke as also that leading from Sewalesclote to Lakebrigge and the Bank called Thornedyche with the Droves called Meysdrove and Pyisdrove should be raised and repaired in manner and form above-specified by the said parties each man according to the proportion of his tenure as often as need should require and likewise that the said Gutter lying neer the messuage of Simon King should be new made of stone by the parties abovesaid And they moreover presented that the Bank called Elmfendiche beginning at Kekysmylle and leading to Benstedehyrne hence to Tiln●y hirn● and thence to Mareysdam in Elme ought to be raised three foot higher and to be s●x foot in bredth at the top according to an antient agistment And that the Bank called Redmoredyke in Elme beginning at Coldham C●ouse and leading to Fryday brigge in the same Town ought to be well and sufficiently repaired by all the Landholders in Redmoresfield and Walysch●feld by new agistments to be thereof made and to be made higher by four foot than it was at that time and eight foot in bredth at the top As also that the Bank which beginneth at Fryday-brigge aforesaid on the Westside of the River and reacheth to Maryesdam ought to be made three foot in height more than it was and to contain eight foot in bredth at the top And they also presented that the Bank called the Gebrynke in Elme on the East side of the River there beginning at S. Gil●s Drove and extending to Fryday brigge and from thence to Mareysdam ought to be repaired and raised higher than it was at that present by three foot and to be twelve foot in bredth at the top and this to be done by the Landholders in Oldfield and Needham according to an antient agistment And that the Bank called Nedham dyche in Elme beginning at Thornedyche in Welle and extending to Coldham Kyrfe in Elme ought to be repaired and raised higher in all the low places thereof● so that it might be equal to the Bank of Iohn Blewyk which is upon the same Dyche And they likewise presented that all persons having Lands abutting upon a certain Sewer in Elme which leadeth from the hades of the Lands in Nedham from Fryday brigge to Knytesdyke in the same Town and thence to S. Christophers Chapel in Outewelle and thence to the Clow at the Stone Cross in Outewelle ought and had used to repair and scour the said Sewer at the hades of their Lands so that the water of Nedeham might have its course to Wellescholle And that all men having Lands betwixt Fryday brigge in Elme and Grenedyke in Welle and betwixt Bishopisdyke and Nedehamdyke in Elme ought to make and repair one Clow as sufficiently as it could be done to stop the water of Outewelle in the Winter
c. Whereupon complaint being made unto Mr. Justice Gawdy and other Commissioners of Sewers sitting at Sechie in Com. Norff. xi of April last past it was by them ordered 1. That the said Turks banke should be presently cut 2. That Small lode London lode and Mayd lode be sufficiently scoured by the Inhabitants of Welle and the Londoners 3. That Mayd lode be made xxx foot wide at the mouth xxv and xx foot at the Slu●e with Sluses to carry it and five foot in depth and so to be maintained by the Londoners as need shall require Whereupon on May day following the said Bank was cut in many places by reason whereof the water ran so forcibly through the said Cuts that for the space of x or xii days after it sucked in divers Boats and Vessels passing that way And it was farther presented that a little without the upper end of this Bank there hath been a Crest for people to travel on from Welney to Welle in the Summer time when the waters are down for which cause the said Church-path being about fifty years past made of more strength and height than in former times by one Mr. Beaupre the same was not long after cut down in many places by the expresse command of Bishop Goodrick then Lord Chancellour of England and Bishop of Ely In 44 Eliz. there was an Agreement bearing date the xx of March made by Indenture between Sir Iohn Peyton K● Dame Dorothy his wife and Edmund Bell Esquire then owners of the Mannour of Upwell Iohn Richardson and divers others who were at that time the major part of the Commoners and Inhabitants of Upwell aforesaid and Iohn Watts Citizen and Alderman of London Sir William Cokain of London Skinner and others for the drayning of divers Fenny VVasts and Commo●s containing about three thousand acres lying in Upwell between a certain Drayn called London lode towards the North Maiden lode and Ship lode towards the South and towards the VVest adjoyning to and upon the Causey-bank extending from London lode to Welney and towards the East upon Denver Common for drayning and maintaining whereof they were to have conveyed unto them their heirs and assigns one full moytie of the said wasts Whereupon with the expence of great sums of money they did accomplish the work and accordingly had the said moytie thereof set out for them which they enjoyed for divers years till about the latter end of King Iames his Reign that the Fen-waters broke their Banks and drowned all again the Country people then turning the Adventurers out of their possessions which they kept till Francis late Earl of Bedford be●ame the principal undertaker for draining of the whole great Levell and did perform the work But afterwards his said drayning meeting with some disasters the whole Levell became totally surrounded again and so continued untill William Earl of Bedford and his Participants did in the year 1649. undertake to drayn it anew which in four years time he perfected as I have elswhere more fully shewed VVhereupon Sir Iohn Watts Knight and some others who claimed under the first undertakers before-mentioned were restored to the possession thereof At a Session of Sewers held at King's Lynne 1. Octob. 7 Iacobi before Sir Raphe Hare Sir Thomas Hewar and Sir Henry Spelman Knights Iohn Reppes Thomas Oxburgh Thomas Athow Rob. Gawsell and Richard Bachcroft Esquires and others it was ordained that the Decree made for the drayning of Needham fen and Buriall field the tenth of October 31 Eliz. should be confirmed in all points and an Acreshot of xd. the Acre imposed for the speedy redress of all defaults in the said Drayns Banks c. Certain Observances made upon the Marshes below the 4 Cambridgshire Gotes of the outfall of Wisbeche River and certain Creeks there with their Sands and Deeps by Richard Atkins of Utwell Gent. in June 1605. WIsbeche Chanel falleth from the 4 Gotes Eastward down by Walpole Marshes on the East and South to Crosse-Keys Corner alias Gates-end Corner and from thence passeth towards Tirington Bank leaving to the Southward an high Skore of Clay the only preservative of the Town And when it hath run East as low as against the Beacon then doth it turn flat North under the Sand called Tirington brest lying on the East of the Chanel● and so continueth Northwards by the said Brest by the space of 5 miles and there falleth into Blow deepe It is to be observed that upon every flow there commeth from the North out of Blow-deepe a Tide which runneth along Tirington brest on the East side and a Sand called the Thief on the West And out of the West from a Chanel called the Maids Eye commeth another tide and both these do meet within a mile of Tirington banks and so meeting do make great Seas there And many times when the wind is at West or North the Seas rise there higher than they do ten miles off at Sea These two Tides thus united with violen●e run right upon Tirington banks and but that God of his mercy hath there placed a Skore of Clay containing not above a furlong in bredth the Bank could not in man's reason stand the next 3 Tides This Skore of Clay by the fretting of the Sea dayly wasteth and the people of the place not understanding what a defence it is to their Banks continually bear away the same to the repair of those Banks never foreseeing their destruction if that Skore of Clay were once gone and the Sea at the ordinary depth of his Chanel suffered to come to the foot of the Bank Where Mayds Eye meeteth with Tirington deep at the very entrance thereof at a dead low water it exceedeth not 5 or 6 foot deep at this day and it hath been observed that in a great drought the whole mouth thereof of hath been stopped with sands but upon the next great fresh that hapned all those sands have been removed and the Chanel grown to the old course again Here is a special observance to be made Qui habet intellectum attendat Decursus namque aquae dulcis viam praebet marinae Oceanus interim ex duobus his canalibus aestuans fossata marina alatrand● alluendo inundando lacerando saepissimè gravissimeque ita excercet ut deficientibus aggeribus de quibus malè sustentatis multùm doleo de finali perditione dissolutione partium adjacentium verisimiliter quod absit formidatur nisi Hinc nascitur periculum onus illico acquirendum est remedium salus Homines verò patriae cum plerique inertes sint hebeti ingenio in se invicem nuper pro fossatorum sustentandorum oneribus obruentes de remedio ex sublatâ causâ ne somniare quidem possunt sed nec ingeniosos inertiamque suam desidiosam exosos inter se vivere vix sustin●re possunt The head of the 4 Lincolnshire Gotes is preserved especially in Summer by two great Finns brought
the first Presentment or Judgement to charge every man in particular according to the quantity of his land 3. that they had not power to commit to prison persons refractory to their Orders and lastly that actions of trespass false imprisonment and other processe at the Common Law have b●en brought against some of their Officers for executing their Decrees and Warrants their Lordships finding in their Wisdomes that it could neither stand with Law nor common Reason that in cases of such great consequence the Law can be so void of providence as to restrain the Commissioners of Sewers for making of new works to withstand the fury of the waters aswell as to repair the old where necessity doth require it for the safety of the Country or to lay a charge upon the Towns or Hundreds in general that are interessed in the benefit or loss without attending a particular Survey and admeasurement of Acres when the service is to have speedy and suddain Execution or that a Commission that is of so high a Nature and of so great use to the Common wealth and evident necessity and of so antient jurisdiction both before the Statute and since should want means of coercion for obedience to their Orders and Decrees● whereas upon the performance of them the preservation of many thousands of his Majesti●s Subjects lives goods and lands did depend and it plainly appearing that there would be a direct frustrating and overthrow of the authority of the said Commission if the Commissioners their Officers and Ministers should be subj●ct to every sute at the pleasure of the Delinquent in his Majesties Courts of the Common Law and so to weary and discourage all men from doing their duties in that behalf for the reasons aforesaid and the supreme reason above all viz. the salvation of the King and people did order that the persons formerly committed by that Board for the●r contempt concerning that cause should stand committed untill they did release or sufficiently discharge such actions sutes and demands as they did bring at the Common Law against the said Commissioners of Sewers or any their Officers c. The opinion of Sir Henry Hobart Knight Attorney general to King James touching the making of new Drayns the Case of the new Drayns made in the Isle of Ely and the Taxation set for the same being thus 1 THat the grounds now sought by these new Sewers to be won and drained are such as naturally and antiently were dry grounds and not continually overflown so as they were truly land and not water and are still to this day dry half the year and sometimes in good years longer 2. Nextly that there have been alwayes notorious and common Drayns maintained at publick charge for the conveying away of the waters in times of downfall or other overflows 3. Thirdly that the said antient Drayns cannot now possibly were they never so well maintained drayn the Country because their conveyance whilst they were in use was into the Sea running out at Wisbeche from whence the Sea is now departed so that there is no way now to carry these waters to the Sea but by Lynne Haven to which therefore these works are made to carry them ¶ The case I say standing thus in all these parts I am of opinion that the Law of Sewers lately made for these new works is warranted by the Commission of Sewers and that a Tax may be set aswell for the making and maintaining of it according to the meaning of the Statutes and Commission as it might have been for the old if they had remained still in use And therefore I am of mind plainly that though it may se●m still within the power of the Commission by the Letter of it to maintain the old Sewers yet the Commissioners cannot now enforce the m●intenance of them when they are no longer indeed Sewers nor benefit nor damage can arise by them for Sewers are made and maintained for the land and not the land for the Sewers On the contrary when they fail reason teacheth and necessity enforceth some other remedy be found in supply of it And the words of the Commission have it plainly that gives power in one Clause to make necessary and behooffull Laws for the safeguard and preservation of the lands lying to the premisses which premisses being restrained as much as may be to the Sewers yet the lands lying to them must be understood the land● about them or for which they were wont to serve So that the safeguard and preservation of the lands is the principal end of the Commission which being not to be preserved by the old Sewers are by this Clause to be preserved at large● that is as best may be and by the Judgment of the Commissioners shall be found necessary and behoofull which words and meaning are satisfied in this case Henry Hubbert Nor do we want examples of greater antiquity for such new Cuts and Drayns the names of divers which to this day continue manifesting the same as 1. New-ditch alias Lents hirne in Wisebeche 2. Newdike in Buriall field in Welle 3. Newdike in Witlesey a very fair Sewer Newdraine there also xx foot wide 4. Newdrayne from Croyland to Spalding 5. Newdike alias Sandy dyke there also 6. Newdike in Neatmore in Upwell 7. New-leame there fifty foot wide 8. and New-leame in Chateriz and March Nay it is very evident that even the great Rivers themselves have for the like respects been diverted from their antient and natural Chanels For 1. The River of Ouse its outfall by Wisbeche decaying was not only cut straight but by a new River made from Littleport Chaire to Rebbech was let fall into Ouse parva or Brandon water and thence by Salters lode to Lynne Haven its former course from Littleport being by Wellenhee to Welle and so to the North Seas at Wisbeche 2. The West-water a part of Ouse magna having its course from Erith bridge to Chateriz ferry and thence to Benwick and so to March was for the crookednesse of the way conveyed by a new passage called the Leame through Chateriz Dodington and March and thence by Elme Leame to Wisbeche a course of xvi miles and so continueth all this way 3. Moreton the worthy Bishop of Ely in the time of K. H. 7. to avoid the many and crooked passages in the River of Nene between Peterburgh and the Sea by the way drowning many thousands of Acres out of the whole ground made a new River now called Morton's Leame or the New Leame xl foot wide and 4 foot or more deep viz. from Stanground steafe to Guyhirne being a course of xii miles long at the least and continuing the same through Wisbeche ● for the more speedy delivery of the waters attempted to cut through the Sea-dike to Wisbeche at Bevys-Crosse and again at Eastfields end nigh the Horshooe in Leverington which Banks were in lesse than xxx years before ordained by Commission to be maintained id
suffred to run as also a Bridge presently laid over But on the xvth of March next ensuing there hapned so great a storm that it brake the Banks of this new River and drowned Neatmore with the severals adjoining So that on the xxi of the same Month of March they were constrained to stop the River at Upwell Towns end again Not long after this there was a Petition exhibited to the King by the Inhabitants of divers fen-towns without the I le of Ely in the Counties of Suff. and Cambridg humbly desiring that whereas a most laudable work of drayning the Fens c. was then recommended to the high Court of Parliament and that divers Towns lying on the skirts of those Fens would have no benefit thereby in regard their lands were very seldome surrounded they therefore might be excluded out of the intended Act of Parliament whereby a proportion of the said Fen grounds was to be allowed to the undertakers in the drayning for the supporting of their charge therein Whereupon the Lords of the Councel by their Letters dated at White-Hall upon the xxxi of August in the fourth year of the said K. Iames his Reign reciting what had been signified formerly by them as to the fecibleness of the before-specified Drayning and that the Lord Chief Justice Popham was present at the Session of Sewers held at Cambridge and gave notice to the Country that his Majesties pleasure was so far to further the same as to men of understanding might appear to be to the general good of his people as also that there was a Law then made for the said Drayning And moreover that at another Session held at Wysbeche order was taken for the drawing of a Law to be presented to the Parliament for confirmation thereof But that some persons not well understanding the state of the cause complained to his Majesty of great losses and hindrances which they were like to sustain in case the said Act should proceed and therefore desired the said Commissioners to examine the true Causes of those Complaints and to represent to them the true state of the Fens with the difference between the last years profit and that present year In answer whereunto the said Commissioners made this return to the said Lords of the Councel viz. that they did meet at Cambridge on the 22. of October 1606. for the Examination of the Petition formerly mentioned and that they found few reasons to fortify it but such as were or might be provided for in the intended Bill all persons with whom they had treated having acknowledged that the want of drayning was an inestimable hurt to those Fenny Countries And that whereas an objection had been made of much prejudice that might redound to the poor by such drayning they had information by persons of good credit that in several places of recovered grounds within the Isle of Ely c. such as before that time had lived upon Almes having no help but by fishing and fowling and such poor means out of the Common Fens while they lay drowned were since come to good and supportable Estates The Chief Contents of the Bill handled in Parliament Anno 4. Regis Jacobi touching this general Drayning The limitation of time allowed to Sir Iohn Popam Knight Lord Chief Justice and the rest of the Adventurers for accomplishing the work was to be ten years after the end of that Session of Parliament The particular Cutts and Drayns c. to be made by the Undertakers were as followeth 1. A New River with a Bank and In-dike from the Upland neer Peykirke between Weland and Burrow Bank unto or neer Heddike Corner and thence to Crouland water head and there to place a Sluse and so to great Porsand Bank with a Dam over the River to the said Bank to keep in Weland from overflowing 2. To amend the Leame from Peterborough to Guyhirne and to cut a new River and Bank on either side of the said Leame with Indikes for preserving of the Banks the North Bank to begin from Burrow little Fen Bank where six of the Commissioners shall think fit 3. To enlarge the River from Guy hirne to Wisebeche and so to the four Gotes 4. To make a sufficient passage for the River of Ouse from Erith to Salters lode either by enlarging its Chanel or embanking c. And to make two new Rivers to begin about Erith brigg and so to go by Sprall's were to Mayd lode and so through Denver fen into Ouse about Denver hithe with sufficient Banks and Indikes c. and Sluses at the upper end of the new Rivers and West water in such sort as the Navigation in old Ouse and Grant may not be impaired 5. To imbank in all needfull places Grant Mildenhall Brandon and Stoke Rivers viz. Grant from a Corner below Clayhithe ferrey Mildenhall and Brandon Rivers from their entrance into the Fens or from some other more convenient places And Stoke River from Stoke Causey unto the places where they fall into Ouse and to enlarge them where need is with Banks and Indikes c. as six of the Commissioners should think fit 6. And to make new Rivers Banks Indikes c. where need is c. yielding to the owners of the Lands such recompence as any six of the said Commissioners should think meet As also Bridges passages Sluses and Land Eas. 7. That they may take in water to maintain fishing so as the same be kept within Banks and be not hurtfull to the adjoyning Fens 8. To make Ferryes and Ferrey houses where need is 9. That for this performance the Undertakers c. to have in severalty 112000. Acres Statute measure by the small hundred by assignation of the Commissioners 10. That where there is sufficient waste to answer the Undertakers and leave sufficient for the Commoners the Land owners not to be impeached in their severals 11. That the Commissioners do respect both quantity and quality in their opportioning 12. That such opportioning be made before Michaellmass A. 1007. if they may 13. That of Waltersey the Undertakers to have 2. full parts of 3. to be set out as aforesaid 14. That the Undertakers shall have the soil waters and fishing of all the new Rivers so to be made with the Banks Indikes c. 15. That they shall begin to take their profits as they finish their draynings 16. That if any of the grounds shall be again overflowen recompence to be made to the parties damnified out of the 112000. Acres to be assessed by any six Justices of the Peace whereof 2. of the Quorum where such surrounding shall happen 17. That all grounds adjoyning to these Fens which are bettered by the Drayning shall contribute towards the charge of the Undertakers as any six or more of the Commissioners shall think meet 18. That all Mannors Wastes and Common shall have metes and boundaries set to them by the said Commissioners where the bounds are
the very point questioned as also the continued practice of antient and latter times and likewise the opinion in writing of the Lord Chief Justice Popham upon the Questions touching the Authority and power of the said Commission viz. first whether the said Commissioners have Authority to cause new Banks Drayns● or Sluces to be made wh●re none have been before Secondly whether they may lay a Tax upon any Hundred Town or the Inhabitants thereof in general and not impose it upon every particular man according to the ●uantity of his land or Common Thirdly whether they may commit to prison such as disobey their Orders c. and Fourthly whether that Actions of false Imprisonment Trespass and other Proces at the Common law have been brought against the Commissioners or their Officers for executing their Decrees Orders c. Their Lordships finding in their wisdomes that it can neither stand with Law nor Common sense that in a case of so great consequence the Law can be void of providence to restrain the Commissioners in making new works aswell to stop the fury of the waters as to repair the old where necessity requireth it for the safety of the Countrey or to raise a charge upon the Towns or Hundreds in general which are interessed in the benefit or loss with attending a particular admesurement of Acres where the service is to be speedy c. Or that a Commission of so high consequence to the Common-wealth and of so antient Jurisdiction both before the Statute and since should want means of coercion for obedience to their Orders c. whereas upon the performance of them the preservation of thousands of his Majesties Subjects their lands goods and lives doth depend and plainly perceiving that it will be a direct frustrating and overthrow to the Authority of the said Commission if the Commissioners c. shall be subject to every sute at the pleasure of the Delinquent c. Their Lordships ordered that the persons formerly committed by that Board for their contempts concerning this cause should stand committed untill they release or discharge such their Actions c. Saving nevertheless any complaint or sute for any oppression or grievance before the Court of Sewers or before the said Council board if they receive not Justice at the said Commissioners hands And that Letters be written to the Commissioners to proceed in their several Commissions c. And in pursuance of this general work the said Lords of his Majesties Council sitting at White Hall the ixth of May then next following orderd 1. That a Sluse must necessarily be made at the out-fall of Wisbeche River into the Sea at the charge aswell of the high-Countries as the low to be rated by the Commissioners of Sewers 2. That the River of Wisbeche and all the branches of Nene and Westwater ● be clensed and made in bredth and depth as much as by antient Record it shall appear they have been or where that cannot appear at the discretion of the Commissioners 3. That Weland be also scoured c. from the out-fall to Waldram Hall at the particular charge of the owners and their Tenants As also the River of South Ea from Crouland to Guy hirne by those that of right ought to do it and that till that be done Clows crosse drayn shall run 4. And that things to be farther done therein be referred to a new Commission of Sewers to be procured at the indifferent charge of the Countries therein mentioned After this viz. upon the xth of September the ●ame year in a Session of Sewers held at Wisebeche before Francis Lord Russell and other his Majesties Commissioners it was inter alia ordered That London lode should be dam'd up at Welle-Causey and that Popham Ea be made a perfect Sewer with Banks on both sides according to a former law for height bredth and strength and so continued for ever And that so much charge as the charge of the Banks on both sides of London lode and of the lode it self whereof they are dischardged by this Order shall be imployed upon the making and maintaining of the Banks and Sewers of Popham Ea the same to be rated by the Commissioners of Sewers And that the said Commissioners shall also consider what charge is to be imposed on those who by the old law were chargable towards Small lode and to allow the same upon Popham Ea c. Whereupon Sir Henry Hobart Knight then Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas being then advised with and likewise assisted by divers of the Commissioners of Sewers delivered his opinion touching this Drain called Smal lode as followeth viz. 1. That it is an old forsaken Sewer not known within the memory of man to have been in use and so grown up that the very tract thereof is not in many places discernable and that it is also uncertain whether the proper out-fall thereof should be towards the Ouse as an exemplyed Law of 39. Eliz. appointeth it or to Wisbeche River as some Presentments much more antient do declare it 2. That the scouring thereof hath antiently belonged to the owners of lands adjoyning now pertaining to Sinolphus Bell Esquire and others but for the reasons aforesaid not put in charge till the said Law of 39. Eliz. ordaining it to be opened and to have its fall by the new Powdich into Ouse 3. That by a Law made ix Iac. grounded upon a view and open debate in Sessions it was ordained to be dam'd up as unnecessary 4. That Popham Ea though a new Sewer is of such use in respect of its largeness and situation that it alone sufficeth as many think both to discharge the waters descending thither from the high Countries and those also of the grounds drayned by London lode that there is no use of this Smal lode 5. That therefore those lands adjoyning which belong to the said Sinolphus Bell and others be discharged from its repair c. Reasons confirming this opinion So long as the outfall of Wisbeche had its perfect being the whole River of Ouse had there its perfect outfall from whence the Town seemeth to have taken the denomination viz. Ouse or Wisebeche Thither then came the first Branch of Ouse from Erith by the course now call●d the West water to Benwick where meeting with a part of Nene which then was very small the greatest passage being in those days by Crouland South Ea Wride stream and other Courses about Thorney fell together by Great Crosse or Plant-water to the North Seas at Wisbeche The other part at Ouse being the second Branch fell down from Eryth to Harrymere and there meeting with the River Grant from Cambridge passed so united to Ely thence to Litleport Chair and so by Welney and Welle to the said North Seas at Wisbeche where it met with the former Branch from Benwick Then as it seemeth there was no River between Litleport Chair and Rebbech which is a