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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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said bank to take care of it's amendment In 34 H. 6. Sir Iohn Fortescu Knight then chief Justice of the Kings bench Iohn Fylolle Thomas Burgoyne Walter Grene Iohn Harpour Robert Tanfeld Will. Chadworth Thomas Cornwalys and Thomas Croxton were appointed Commissioners for the view and repair of the banks c. lying betwixt S. Katherines Mill before mentioned unto the Chapel called S. Marie Matfelone thence to the Church of S. Dunstans in Stepenhithe thence to the Church of S. Leonard in Bremley thence to the River of Leye thence to the Thames and so to the said Mill And to make Laws and Ordinances according to those of Romeney marsh The like Commission in 7 E. 4. had Thomas Abbot of Graces neer the Tower of London Thomas Urswyk Thomas Frowyk Esquire and others In 14 E. 4. Sir Thomas Urswyke Knight Iohn Elryngtone Thomas Frowyk Will. Essex and others were assigned to view and take order for the repair of all those banks c. lying betwixt the Tower of London and the Town of Stratford atte Bowe and to proceed therein by making Laws c. and otherwise according to the Laws and Customes of Romeney marsh In 20 E. 4. Thomas Bishop of London Edmund Abbot of Graces Will. Wirsley Dean of Pauls Sir Iohn Elryngton and Sir Thomas Frowyk Knights Richard Gardener and others had the like assignation for those betwixt the Town of Lymeostez and the wall called Black Wall So also in the same year had the said Thomas Edmund and William together with Henry Sharpe Dean of the free Chapel of S. Stephan within the Kings Palace at Westminster Iohn Harding Master of the Hospital of S. Thomas of Acon in the City of London Sir Iohn Elryngton Knight Sir Thomas Frowyk Knight Richard Gardner and others for all the banks upon the River of Thames and Leye betwixt the metes and bounds of the City of London and the bridge of Stratford atte Bowe on the North and West side of those Rivers and the Road-way which lyeth betwixt White Chapell parish and the Town of Stratford atte Bowe before-specified CAP. XVI Marshes in the Suburbs of LONDON AND that some places in the very Suburbs of the City of London it self have originally been Fenny and Moorish though now by no small industry and cost equalling the chiefest which were naturally otherwise is apparent from undoubted testimony Fitz Stephan who lived above five hundred years since speaking of that place now called Moore Fields saying thus Cum est congelata palus illa magna quae moenia urbis Aquilonalis alluit exeunt lusum super glaciem densae juvenum turmae c. When the great Fen which watereth the walls on the North side of the City is frozen multitudes of young people go to play upon the Ice Some taking a little room to run do set their feet a good distance and glide a great way Others sit upon thick pieces of Ice as big as Mill-stones and being drawn by many who hold hand in hand when the foot of one slippeth they all tumble down together But others more expert in sporting thereon fix bones under their heeles and taking a Pike-staff do shove themselves forward with so much force that they glide with no lesse swiftnesse than a Bird flyeth or an Arrow passeth out of a Bow This Fen saith Stow stretching from the wall of the City betwixt Bishops-gate and the Posterne called Cripple-gate to Finsbury and to Holy-well continued a waste and an unprofitable ground a long time so that the same was all letten for four Marks the year in the reign of King Edward the second But in the year MCCCCxv 3 H. 5. Thomas Fawconer Maior caused the wall to be broken towards the Moor and builded the Postern called Moore gate for ease of the Citizens to walk that way upon Causeys to Iseld●n and Hoxton Moreover he caused the Ditches of the City and other the Ditches from Shores-ditch to Deepe Ditch by Bethlem into the Moore ditch to be newly cast and clensed by means whereof the said Fen or Moor was greatly drained and dryed And in the year MDxij Roger Atchley Maior caused divers Dikes to be cast and made to drain the waters of the said Moore fields with bridges arched over them and the grounds about to be levelled whereby the said field was made somwhat more commodious but yet it stood ful of noysome waters Whereupon in the year MDxxvij Sir Thomas Seymour Maior caused divers Sluces to be made to convey the said waters over the Town ditch into the course of Walbrooke and so into the Thames and by these degrees was this Fen or Moore at length made main and hard ground which before being overgrown with Flaggs Sedges and Rushes served to no use Nor was the ground in Fleetstreete and thereabouts long since much better than a Marish for the same Author saith that in the year MDXCv he observed that when the Labourers had broken up the pavement against Chancery lane end up towards S. Dunstan's Church and had digged four foot deep they found another pavement of hard stone more sufficient than the first and therefore harder to be broken under which were in the made-ground piles of Timber driven very thick and almost close together the same being as black as cole and many of them rotten And now to manifest that not only the Law but the usual practice is where disobedience or neglect hath been found in those as be chardgable with the maintenance of any Banks or Sewers made for the common defence of such Marshes as are in danger of surrounding that coercion is to be exercised for the performance thereof I shall here exhibit the testimony of a Decree made in a Session of Sewers held at Ilford in Essex 19º Aprilis Aº 1639. which reciting an Ordinance made in the like Session at Ilford before-specified for raising the summ of seventeen hundred and six pounds for repairing a breach in the Banks or Marsh-wall of Bromley marsh in this County whereby ninety four Acres of land were surrounded and the neglect of certain persons therein named to pay their proportion thereof which were assessed upon them a Lease for xli years was made of several parcels of ground belonging to those so neglecting unto others at the Rent of one pepper corn yearly CAP. XVII HAving now done with the Marshes in Middlesex I come to those in Essex which Counties are divided by the River of Lye antiently called Luye Of this River it is memorable that the Danes in the year of Christ 894. and 23 of King Alfred's reign sayled up it with their Ships and built a Castle on the Bank thereof about xx miles from London Neer which the Londoners giving them battail and having the better of the day put them to flight so that they were constrained to flye to that Hold whereof the King having notice he caused this River to be cut into three branches to
Lordships which being accepted of by the King there were Allotments then made according to the proportion of each Mannour Neverthelesse after this fair entrance to so good and beneficial a work nothing was done therein To give some encouragement therfore to posterity in case this present age shall still decline it I have here exhibited a perfect Map thereof with the particular Allotments assigned to each of those bordering Lordships The Division and Allotment of King's Sedgmore to the several Mannours and Freeholders thereunto adjoyning according to the Survey thereof taken     Quantity of the Mannors Allotment of Acres in the Moor. Names of the Mannors   Acres Acres Dunwere Bower To the heirs of Sir Robert Chichester 600 171 To William Hinkmore Esquire 350 100 To Brent's Lands there 260 75 Stawell To Sir Iohn Stawell Knight of the Bathe 960 274 Sutton Mallet To Iohn Mallet Esquire 820 234 Bawdrippe To Walter Longe Esquire 765 218 Brodney To Thomas Muttlebury Esquire 246 70 Middle Zoy. To Richard Warr Esquire 1714 488 To Sir ●ichard Strode 194 56 To the Freeholders there 80 23 Mourlinch To the heirs of Mr. Floyer 1240 354 Higham To Henry Lord Gray 2485 708 Netherham To the heirs of Sir Edward Hext 928 264 Aller To Sir Iohn Stawell     Berre To Sir William Courtney 400 114 To Iames Northover Gentleman his Farm there 300 86 To the Parsonage and other Freeholders there 100 29 ●ishcot To Sir Thomas Cheeke 1846 526 Horsey To Sir George Horsey 1293 370 Ched Zoy. To William Earl of Pembroke 1440 411 Wes●on To Sir Peter Van Lore 2038 582 To the Parson and Vicar Iohn Brag and Nicholas Watts     Othery To Edward Trint Esquire 1378 393 To Mr. Balle Mr. Harris and Mr. Sanders their Freeholds 121 35 Somerton To Thomas Hill Esquire 1430 408 To Iames Rese Esquire 464 132 To the heirs of Sir Edward Hext 3159 901 To the Parsonage there 171 49 To the Church-Burgages 52 15 Graynton To the heirs of Mr. Watts 1019 291 Pitteney To William Earl of Northampton 1114 318 To the heirs of Sir Iohn Hanham 882 251 Cumpton Dondon To Sir Iohn Strangways Knight 1921 548 To Baronet Portman his Freehold there     Walton To Sir Thomas Thinne 1893 540 Streete To Andrew Whittington 1711 488 To Mr. Alexander Deyer     To Freeholders omitted       Memorandum that these Allotments were rated proportionably after the rate of xxviij Acres and a half of the Moor by the perch of xv foot to every hundred Acres of the severals The total 32374 Acres The total 9522 Acres besides 4000 Acres intended for the King CAP. XXI● TOuching the Marshes in this County the first Commission that I have found was in 5 E. 2. and directed to Iohn de Wyllington Robert de Clyderhom and Stephan de Salt-marsh for the view and repair of the Banks c. in the parts of Hambury in Saltmersh The like about two years after was directed to Nich. de Kyngeston Richard de Rodeneye and Iohn de Dunstaple In 33 E. 3. Thomas de Berkelee of Coberlee Simon Basset William de Chiltenham Iohn de Yate and Iohn de Clifford were assigned to view and take order for the repair of all those which were bordering upon Severne betwixt Bristoll and Gloucester So also in 36 E. 3. were Thomas Moygne Iohn Tracy Iohn Clifford and Iohn Sloghtre And in 38 E. 3. the said Iohn Tracy Iohn Clifford and Iohn Sloghtre Who accordingly sate at Thornbury upon Monday next after the Feast of S. Peter ad Vincula where the Juro●s presented unto them upon Oath that Iohn Fitz Nicholl Lord of Hull was bound to receive the watercourse of the Rendyche lying betwixt the Lordships of Roehampton and Hull and to lead the same upon his own land unto the Severne which he had not done and that the Country was dampnified by such his neglect And the same Iohn being thereupon distrained to come before the said Justices at Sobbury on Wednesday next after the Feast of Peter Paul in the 39th year of the said K. E. 3. to answer thereunto came and said that he ought not nor ever did receive and lead the said Watercourse upon his own proper soil unto Severne as it was alleged and therefore did put himself upon the Countrey And accordingly was dischadrged therof by the Jurors In 44 E. 3. Iohn Moubray Will. Wakebrigg Iohn Sarjaunt Robert Palet and William Church hill were appointed to view and repair the Banks c. in Saltmersh neer Bristoll In 2 R. 2. it was certified that there was and antiently had been a certain standing water occasioned by rain in the Meadows and Fields of the Towns of Aylbrighton Olveston Auste neer Cotes and Littelton in the Winter season every year for the drayning whereof there likewise was and antiently had been a certain Trench wholly out of the land the Abbot of Malmesbury extending from the waters of the said Towns to a certain place called Holpole and from thence to another place called Holpole and thence to a place called Pynkenhampspull and thence to another place called Cakepull and thence to Severne which is an arm of the Sea Which trench the said towns of Aylbrighton Olveston Auste neer Cotes were obliged to scour And they said that neither the waters of Aylbrighton Olveston Auste neer Cotes and Littelton nor any other waters coming upon or overflowing the Lands and Meadows of those Towns by rain or any other means before the twentieth year of the reign of King Edward the first did use to run to Boyston nor from thence to Severne no● Littelton's pull nor to the trench which the said Abbot claimed only for the drayning of the waters overflowing his Lands unto Severne as by the allegation of Thomas Shardelowe then the said King's Attorney was supposed Several other Commissions there were in this King's time for the repair of the Banks Ditches and Sewers in this Shire viz. in 4 R. 2. to Sir Thomas de Berkele and Sir Iohn Thorpe Knights Raphe Waleys and Iohn Stanshawe for those in the Towns of Albrighton Olveston Luttleton and Aust neer Cotes In 6 R. 2. to Sir Iohn Beauchamp of Powyk and Sir Will. Castelacre Knights Iohn Cherleton and William Heyberer for all in general throughout this County In 8 R. 2. to Sir Thomas Berkele Sir Iohn Berkele and Sir Edward de Bradeston Knights Robert de Cherletone Iohn Sergeant Raphe Weleys and Iohn Stanshawe for those on the coast of Severne in the Hundred of Berkele Grumbaldesash Thornebury and Hembury In 9 R. 2. to Thomas Berkley of B●rkley Robert Bealknap Iohn Berkley Iohn Tracy Iohn Sergeant and Iohn Lucy for those on the coast of Severne and parts adjoyning So likewise in 13 R. 2. to Sir Iohn Berkele Knight Iohn Cassey Raphe Waleys and others In 16 R. 2. the King directing his Precept to