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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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Thornburgh and others for those Banks and Sewers from Skegnes and Dodyngton-Pygot to Tyddegote In 7 E. 4. Thomas Kyme of Friskeney and others had the Port of Waynfl●te to ferm with Market and Wind-mill as also the Court of the said Market and Haven and fishing within the same paying xxl. yearly and supporting all chardges belonging to the said Haven Mill and fishing In 49 H. 6. Iohn Bishop of Lincolne George Duke of Clarence Richard Earl of Warwick and Salisbury Sir Humfrey Bourchier Lord Cromwell Sir Gervase Clyfton and Sir Will. Skipwith Knights Robert Taylboys Esquire and others had Commission for the view and repair of all the Banks and Sewers throughout this whole Province The like Commission in 12 E. 4. had Sir Richard Hastyngs Sir Thomas Burgh and Sir Will. Skipwith Knights Robert Taylboys Robert Ratclyf and others So also the same year had Thomas Prior of Spaldyng Richard Welby Leonard Thornburgh Richard Pynchebeck Iohn Bolles Robert Dokkyng and others for those from Dodyngtone-Pygot to Tyd-gote and thence to Skegnesse By all which Commissions since 6 H. 6. power was given to the persons before-mentioned and their associates to act therein according to the Custome of Romeney Marsh as abovesaid In 4 E. 6. VVilliam Lord VVilloughby of Parham S●r Edward Dymok and Sir Iohn Copeldyk Knights George S. Poll and others Commissioners of Sewers by a Decree made at Wrangle on the first day of September ordained that the Inhabitants of the Soke of Bullingbroke together with Sir VVilliam Brereton Knight the Lord of Dalby and the Kings Fermour of his fishing at Waynflete and all others drayning thereby should clense scour and dyke the Haven of Waynfle●e from the AE end unto the Sea in bredth xxij foot at the top and in the bottome xiij And in depth from the Chanel downwards three foot to be done before the Feast of S. Peter ad Vincula then next following And that a sufficient Gote or Clow set up at the outer end of the same Haven for stopping of the salt water out of the North part thereof should be made there at the costs of the Inhabitants of the said Soke the Lord of Dalby and the Kings Fermours of his fishing there And moreover that an old Gote an● Dreyner called Symond's gote extending in length from the deep of the East Fen unto the Fen bank and from that Fen bank to the Sea which was then decayed for lack of scouriug should be sufficiently clensed So likewise the Dyke and Sewer extending from the Deep of the Fen unto the Fen bank Also that there should be two Gotes made of the said Drayner and Sewer the one at the Fen bank and the other at the out end of the Sea at the costs of the Inhabitants of the said Soke and the Inhabitants of such towns and the Landlords therein who had before that time been chardged betwixt the Fen bank and the deep of the said Fen and all to be done before Martinmasse then next ensuing And farther than this wherein I have given instance I shall not descend to any more particulars till the time of Queen Elizabeth that Thomas Quadring Hamond Upton Thomas Marsyngberd and others then Commissioners of Sewers sate at Partenay on the 22th day of Iuly in 2 of her reign for the setling of all things touching the repair of the Banks and Ditches in this Provicne before whom the Jurors then presented that there was one Sea-bank new made in Skegnes to begin at a place called Ranson hyrne and to be xl falls in length from the North end of the said Ranson hyrne towards the South and so to be joyned and closed unto the old bank which said Sea-bank to be fifty foot in the skirt fourteen foot broad on the top and xij foot in height and to be made by the Land-holders in Skegnes aforesaid And they likewise at that time presented that the old Sea-bank ought then to be repaired for it's better withstanding the rage of the Sea Also that another new Sea-bank should be new made within the limits of Skegnes aforesaid from one slaver there w●ich goeth up the lands late belonging to Charls Duke of Suffolke unto the South end of the Gild Hall which new bank to be xx falls in length and to stretch from the said Gild-Hall to the old Bank and be made by the said Land-holders Likewise that the old Sea bank in Skegnes called the Haven bank should be repaired where defect was Also that Wainflet haven being defective for want of scouring from the Crosse at the Eyes end into the Sea that being a necessary drayn for the Soke of Bullingbroke and heretofore diked and scoured by the Inhabitants thereof and to be done before the Feast of S. Iohn Baptist next following Moreover that a place there called Guddyke which leadeth from the Eyes end to the Fen be also scoured viz. two parts thereof by the said Queen or her Fermour for the fishing there and the third by the Lord of Dalby as had been accustomed And that a new Gote or Clow be set in Waynflet haven within ten falls of Thorpe and Waynflet Sea-gote and a Bank on the South side of the said Haven from the said new Gote unto the .......... and that the Inhabitants of the seven towns in Holland should be at the chardge of setting up the said new Gote in respect of their benefit of common in the East and VVest fenns Also that the Bank to be then made between the new Gote and Thorpe be done viz. three parts thereof at the chardges of Hamond Upton Esquire one of the Commissioners above-mentioned and the fourth at the chardges of Iohn Whiting Rob. Whiting and the bank on the South side of the Haven to be don by the Soke of Bullingbroke Likewise that a new Gote be set at the Fen Dyke bank to take in fresh water by it to be done by the Inhabitants of Waynflete S. Mary And another Gote called Dayles gote and another to be set fourscore falls beneath the old Sea Gote both to be done by the Land-holders in Waynflet S. Mary aforesaid And that a new Cryke of xxx foot wide and six foot deep be made from the said new Gote unto the old Gote and beneath the said new Gote another new Cryke made from the said new Gote unto the old Cryke to be done by the Lords and Land-holders in Waynflet S. Mary and on either side the said Cryke a sufficient Sea-Bank to keep out the flouds of water And they also presented that one petty Gote should be made in Crosse gate against nine Acres of Mr Dyghtons and another in Westgate against Thomas Harrysons Acre as also a spout in Hall gate another in Somergate and another in Acregate Likewise that a spout be made in Waynflete All Saints over the gate on the North side of Burflet at the chardge of the holders of the Lands which did drayn it And that another
them But within the s●ace of two years following they were all thrown down again and the stones carried away by the men of Kesteven Whereupon a Commission was granted and sate at Donington on Thursday next after S. Matthew's day in 17 R. 2. by Robert Lord Willughby and others to make enquiry and to punish the offenders sundry whereof were therefore hang'd some bani●hed and some fined in great sums and command given for erecting new Cross●s of stone at the chardge of these men of Kesteven In 10 H. 4. Iohn Earl of Somerset brother to the King Will. Lord Roos Robert de Tame Iohn de Holand de Welysthorpe with others were constituted Commissioners for the view and repair of all the Banks Ditches c. both upon the seacoast and elsewhere within this province of Kesteven and to proceed therein according to the law and custome of the Marsh there before that time used and the law and custome of this Realm In 7 H. 5. there was a Pr●sentment exhibited against the town of Brunne with the hamlets of Dyke and Calthorp and against the Town of Morton and Hermethorpe for turning the fresh waters towards the North which ought to run Eastwards into the Sea But notwithstanding the boundaries betwixt these Provinces of Kesteven and Holand so set forth as hath been said I find that Margaret Countess of Richmund and Derby being Lady of Deping in 16 H. 7. did then procure a new Commission directed unto Robert Lord Willoughby Thomas Lord Rosse Thomas Lord Fitzwalter George Lord Hastings Iohn Lord Fitz Warren Sir Robert Dimock Sir George Taylboys Edward Stanley Christopher Willoughby and Reginald Bury Knights to hear and determine the controversy between the Inhabitants of the parts abovesaid Which was accordingly done by these Jurors viz. Sir Robert Hussey Knight Sir Iohn Digby Knight Sir Iohn Thimelby Knight Thomas Dimock Richard Thimelby Richard Harington Will. Ermin● Will. Mounson Iohn B●ssy George As●●●y Robert Tirwhit Richard Cecill Iohn B●ll● William Fitzwilliam Iohn Fol●ingham Will. Leigh Thomas Desney Richard Grantham Edward Askew George Mackwo●th Thomas Billesby Will. Thorold Will. Enderby and Iohn Walcot Esquires CAP. XLIII HAving now done with what concerns the Province of Kesteven alone I come to it and Holand joyntly whereof the first mention that I have met with is of the afforestation made by King Henry the first in these parts which continued not long for it appears that King Richard the first about the beginning of his reign by his Charter to the Monastery of Spaldyng of the Towns of Spalding and Hinchebec with the lands waters and Marshes to them belonging did acquit the Inhabitants of those places from all duties belonging to the Forest as also of Harts and Hindes with all other wild beasts and of all Forest Customes and exactions which had used to be there do ●e or required so that no Forester or any other might thereupon vex or disquiet them And moreover gave them License to make Banks and Ditches to inclose their Lands and Marshes as also to build Houses and exercise tillage as they themselves should think fit within these particular metes and bounds viz. betwixt the river of Wailand and Chelebeche in length and from Midfen dic which is the division betwixt these two Provinces of Kesteven and Holand and Gudramesend which is the boundary as far as Saltene in bredth and Hasmanespade as the said river of Wailand coming from Crouland descendeth to the Sea From this deafforestation abovemention●d I shall descend to King Henry the third's reign in whose time I find that there was a Precept directed to the Shireeve touching the partition of Hauthuntre-Fen by the consent of those that had right therein whereby the said King gave special command that each Town might have their due proportion thereof assigned to them but in the first place that a Perambulation should be made by the Oath of xij lawful and discreet Knights betwixt it and the Fen called Fenting fen viz. in length from the Town of Swinefheved to a little rivulet called Barkesmere and so from the Marsh of Stevening as Barkesmere goeth betwixt the said Fen called Hauthundrefen and the Marsh of Hale unto the river of Kime and so in length by the said river of Kime to Dockesdike and from thence by the water Wuna to certain land of Boston And that so soon as the said Petambulation should be th●s accomplisht then to make partition of the before mentioned Fen by the Oaths of those Knights in such sort as each Town might have an assignation of their particular share to dispose and make improvement of the same according to their own best liking After this viz. in 44 H. 3. the King then directing his Precept to the Shireeve of this County whereby taking notice that not only the Landholders in those parts but himself had suffered inestimable damage by the overflo●ing of the Sea and likewise of the fresh waters through the default in rep●ir of the Banks Ditches Gutters Bridges and Sewers in the lands which lately belonged to William Longespe in these parts of Kesteven and Holand he commanded the said Shireeve for●hwith to distrain all such Landholders who had safeguard by those Banks and Ditches and ought to repair them according to the proportion of their lands to the end that they might be speedily repaired in such sort as they ought and had used to be And in 23 E. 1. Adam de Crokedayk and W. Inge were constituted Commissioners to view the Banks Ditches and Sewers in these Provinces and to see that the currents of fresh waters in the Marshes thereof might have their due and antient passages as they had wont to have In 9 E. 2. Lambert de Trekyngham Roger de Coppeldyk and Robert de Malberthorp being then constituted the King's Justices of Sewers for these parts sat at Boston upon the Tuesday next after the feast of the Exaltation of the holy Cross there to make enquiry by the Oaths of good and lawful men what persons of this County of Lincolne had used to repair and maintain the Banks Ditches Gutters and Sewers within the fens of Kesteven and Holand and other places thereabouts as also the floudgates by which the fresh waters that had used to run from the parts of Kesteven into the said Fens were hindred from so doing and by whom the said waters were turned out of their right and due courses as also in what sort Whereupon Sir Will. d' Autre Knight Iohn de Holand and several other persons of quality being sworn did upon their Oaths present That the Town of Danington ought and had used to repair the Causey of Holand with little Bridges and Ditches on each part of the same from the said Town of Donington to the new Ditch And from the said Ditch unto the Chapel of S. Saviours the Prior of S. Saviours to perform the like repair there being at that time great defects
this County and Apul●re in Kent the Jurors presented upon their Oaths that there was a certain small M●rsh neer unto the Town of Rye within the liberty of the Cinque Ports called S. Mary Croft containing by estimation xlviij acres of land which could not be well defended against the force of the Tides except an old Gutter therein were stopt up And they said that it would be necessary and profitable for the preservation and clearing of the said Marsh that there were a new Gutter and Sewe● made beyond the bank of the said marsh and the land of Iohn Chitecrofte in a certain Marsh called Corboylesmarshe containing ........... about a quarter of an acre of land and so to passe into the Water-course coming from Leveshameswall unto the Sluce at Melfl●t All which said work viz. the stopping up of the old Gutter and making of the new Sewer and Gutter might be performed as they estimated it for xijl. And they farther said that the Land-holders of the said Marsh called S. Marie Croft should pay to the said Iohn Chitecroft for the said land according to the Custome of Romeney marsh for every Acre xls. And they likewise said that the said Land-holders should be lyable to make contribution for their portions towards the diverting of the VVatercourse in Curboylesmarshe for the maintenance of the Sluce there and the Bank beyond the said Sluce not taxed as also to the making of the new Sewer in Curboylesmarsh when occasion should be viz. for every Acre of theirs as the Land-holders of Curboylesmarsh for theirs which water so diverted was not to the hurt or damage of the said Marsh called Curboylesmarshe And therefore the Maior and Bayliff of Rye had command that they should summon the said Iohn Chytecroft to appear before the Lieutenant to the Constable of Dovor Castle at Rye upon the Wednesday next before the Feast of the Nativity of the blessed Virgin to shew c. As also the land-holders of the said Marsh called S. Mary Croft VVho severally said that they could not gainsay but that they were obliged to make contribution according to the Inquisition aforesaid And likewise the said Iohn Chitecrofte who said nothing thereto Therefore it was decreed that the said new Gutter and Sewer beyond the said Bank and over the land of the said Iohn Chitecrofte should be made according to the purport of the said Inquisition and that the said Iohn Chitecroft should have for his said land according to the Custome of Romeney marsh x s In 3 H. 5. Sir Iohn Pelham Knight Richard Wakeherst Robert Oxenbrigge Vincent Fynche Adam Iwode and Will. Marchaunt were constituted Commissioners for to view and repair the banks c. betwixt the Towns of Pesemersh Rye Farlegh and Pette and to do all things therein according to the Custome of the Marsh and the Law and Custome of this Realm So also in 9 H. 5. had Robert Oxenbrigge Henry Hoorne Iohn Halle junior Will. Cheyne and Adam Iwode for those betwixt Ashewalle and the course of the Sea-water running from the town of Rye to Appuldre and Bodyam in the Towns of Wytresham and Stone in Kent and to Idenne Pesem●rshe and Bekkele in this County and to do all things therein according to the Custome of Rumney Marsh and the Law and Custome of England The like Commission the same year had Robert Lord Poynings Thomas Prior of Lewes Iohn Preston Sir Iohn Pelham Knight Iohn Darell and others for those betwixt Flecchyng and Seford on the Sea-coast and to perform all things therein according to the Custome of the Marsh and the Law and Custome of this Realm So also the same year had Sir Iohn Pelham Knight the Prior of Michelham Robert Oxenbrigge Adam Iworde Iohn Nelonde and Iohn Halle for those betwixt Hastyngs and Boxele in the Towns of S. Leonard Holyngtone Wyltynge Bexele Croweherst and Bulwerhithe and to proceed therein as abovesaid The like had Will. Westbury Robert Oxenbrigge Iohn Hall Richard Wakehurst and others for those betwixt the Parish of Berghestede on the west part and the parish of Felgham on the East and from those Parishes to Westregate and to do all things therein as abovesaid So also in 1 H. 6. had Sir Iohn Pelham Knight the Prior of Michelham Robert Oxenbrigge and oth●rs for those Banks betwixt Hastyngs and Bexele as abovesaid And the like had Robert Lord Ponynges Thomas Prior of Lewes Iohn Preston Sir Iohn Pelham Knight and others for those betwixt Flecching and Seford and to proceed therein as abovesaid But in such sort did the said Sir Iohn Pelham and his Fellow Commissioners proceed therein that in 6 H. 6. upon information made to the King that they had by colour of that Commission raised certain new Banks which did so obstruct and hinder the antient course of of those fresh waters that had used to run betwixt the said towns of Hastyngs and Boxle by certain Sewers and Trenches to the Sea that much land was thereby drowned the said King assigned the Abbot of Bataille the said Sir Iohn Pelham Knight Sir Roger Fenys Knight Adam Iwode Iohn Corffe and others to view the same and to take such course for the rectifying thereof as should be consonant to the Custome of the Marsh and the Law and Custome of this Realm In 10 H. 6. Humfrey Duke of Gloucester Sir Thomas Echyngham Knight Iohn Halle Will. Fynche and others were appointed to view and repair the Banks betwixt Farlegh in this County and Derlandes Knokke in Kent and to make Laws and Ordinances therein according to the Custome of Romeney Marsh As also to imprest so many Labourers upon competent wages as there should be cause for to imploy in that work considering the great necessity of expedition therein The like appointment in 12 H. 6. had Iohn Earl of Huntendon Robert Prior of Lewes Sir Robert Poynings Sir Thomas Echyngham Sir Thomas Leukenore Knights Iohn Darell Richard Wakehurst and others for the Banks betwixt Flecchynge and Seford upon the Sea-coast and to proceed as abovesaid as also to imprest such and so many Labourers upon fitting wages c. as abovesaid So also in 21 H 6. had Edmund Mille Will. Sidney Iohn Leyle Iohn Wode Richard Dalingrugge Esquire and Will. Breys for those betwixt the Parish of Berghstede on the VVest part and the Parish of Folgham on the East and from those parishes extending to Westgate And to do all things therein according to the Custome of the Marsh and the Law and Custome of this Realm T●e next year following had Sir Rog. Fenys Knight Richard Dalyngrugge Esquire Iohn Faukes Clerk Iohn Denysh Esquire Edmund Mille and Adam Iwode the like Commission for those banks c. betwixt Hastyngs and Bexele within the Towns of S. Leonard Holyngtone Millynge Bexele Croweherst and Bulwerhithe and to proceed therein as the last Commission directed In 33 H. 6. Richard Abbot of
was amended at the time of the presentment made and long before as the said Abbot and his Tenants of UUythies had also pleaded And as to the Trees growing athwart the River at Monketon they said that they did grow above those Mills ●here boats never came nor ought of right to come as the said Abbot had also pleaded And touching the pleck of Osiars they said that the same nusance was amended and totally removed as the Tenants of the said Abbot had also pleaded And as to the ground in Monketon appropriated by the said Abbot his Servants and Tenants by planting of VVillows and other Trees thereon they likewise said that the said nusance was also amended and totally taken away as the said Abbot had alleged Upon all which considerations it was determined that the said Abbot and his Tenants and Servants excepting the before-specified amerciaments should be dischardged In 11 R. 2. there was another general Commission directed to the Abbot of Glastonbury Nicholas de Audley Guy de Brienne and others for the view and repair of all the banks Ditches c. in this County In 2 H. 4. Sir Peter Courtney Sir Humfrey Stafford Sir William Bonville Sir Thomas Brooke Knights Iohn Strech and Iohn Manyngford were appointed to view and repair the banks c. at Bristoll Mertok Taunton Yevelchestre Welyngton Dunsterre Bruton and Severne and in all places betwixt Bristoll and Dunsterre and betvvixt Bruton and Severne to do all things therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm In 6 H. 4. the Master of S. Marks House in Bristoll was dischardged from the repair of the Bridges scouring of the Ditches and making of Sluses in the Towns and places of Powlet Combwich Pyriton Huntspill and betvvixt Blakbrig and Purytonbrugg as also from the clensing the Chanell called Hyburne and likewise that which goeth from the Town of Cork running to Hyburne betwixt the Mannour of Stokeland which belonged to the said Master and the Mannour of Wyke which was the Lord Poynings And likewise for the Sluce of Thele for shutting out the Sea-water and moreover for the stone bridge in the VVarth of Wyke In 5 H. 5. Sir Will. Botreaux Knight Thomas Chaucer and Richard Chedder Esquires Iohn Stourton William Sparow and Iohn Gregori of Bruton were assigned to view and repair the banks betvvixt the Cities of Bathe and Bristol and from Yilcestre Lamport Briggewater and Taunton and to proceed therein according to the Custome of the Marsh and the Law and Custome of this Realm The like assignation in 2 H. 6. had N. Bishop of Bathe and Welles Sir Will. Botreaux Sir Thomas Stowell Knights William Westbury Iohn Warre Iohn Stourton and Iohn Beaf for the banks in Brentmershe Wryngemershe and Pouldon and to do all things therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm As also to take so many Labourers upon competent wages to be imployed therein as should be requisite in regard of the great necessity of expediting the vvork So also the next year following vvere Sir Thomas Broke Knight Richard Cheddre Esquire Iohn Marchant and William Newetone for those betwixt Yevelchestre Burneham and Welles and to act therein and imprest Labourers as aforesaid And in 33 H. 6. Sir Thomas Seymour Knight Robert Warre Esquire Alexander Hody Roger Fitz Iames Iohn Sidenham junior Iohn Porter and William Bodesham had the like appointment for the banks c. betvvixt the Town of Langeport-Estoner on the East side and the Town of Thurlokeston on the West as also betvvixt the Tovvn of Cory-Malet on the South part and the Tovvn of Briggewater on the North and to make Lavvs and Ordinances therein and to proceed in all things touching the same according to the Lavv and Custome of Romeney Marsh. And in 3 E. 4. Richard Chokke Sir Theobald Gorges and Sir Walter Rodeney Knights Iohn Fitz Iames senior and Robert Stowell Esquire had the like for the Banks c. from Ryngwelle to Haylake Yoo thence to Shestrygge Yoo thence to Colestoke and thence to Blakstake in the See and to proceed therein as abovesaid Thus much for the Commissions I next come to the Watercourses of Brent marsh and who did antiently repair them The Lord of Bageworthe ought to repair the Chanel from Blakelake unto the Sea And the Lord of Bitesham that from Winesbrugge to the Sea Philip the Son of Corbin that from Winesbrugge to Blakelake Hugh the Son of Auger and the same Philip from Hengestes mere to the Sea The second course from Hengestesmere to the Sea the same Hugh the son of Auger and the third course from Hengestesmere to the Sea Raph de Seinbarbe From the mouth of Mere to the Sea the Church of Glastonbury and from another part from Blakeswelleshevede to the Sea the Church of Glastonbury From Schipperide to Wakefen the Dean of Welles and so from Wakefen to the Land of Robert de Ewyas Lord of Hewisch and from Brodecrofte to the Mill of Geffrey Lord of Burham From Thipride to Baggepole the Dean of Welles and Lord of Blakeforde Also from Baggepole to Watebrok the said Lord of Blakeforde From Wathebrok the Dean of Welles upon his own Land and Robert de Countvile also for as far as his Land extended After him the Lord of Alnodestone beyond Aldodestone were beyond Wereham Bagerde superior and inferior to the Sea So also from Bethepulle unto the Land of Chalftone and from Ewendone and Chalftone unto Cosingtone and from Cosingtone to Honispel and thence to the Sea Sedgmore There is also in this County a large Fenny plain which being covered with water for the most part of the VVinter and in Summer affordeth nothing but Rushes Reeds and Sedge hath thence the name of Sedgmoore Over this level there is a fair Causey of stones and gravel from Somerton to Bridgwater about eight miles in length antiently made by one of the Abbots of Glastonbury as tradition saith which still bearing his name is called Graylock's fosse I do not find from the authority of any Records or other credible testimony that there was ever any endeavour used for the improvement of this Moor by drayning till of late dayes that King Iames of blessed memory making title to the soyl resolved to do it But as in most other places there be a perverse generation of people who of themselves are not content to sit still but will hinder others that would promote such laudable works for the publick good so was it here for divers there were that made opposition thereto But after a Bill exhibited in the Exchequer those opponents and the rest of the owners of the adjacent Lordships commoning with their Cattel upon this Moor discerning that they could make no justifiable claim to the soyl offer'd to assign unto the King four thousand Acres in lieu of his right thereto and to lay out the residue being nine thousand five hundred twenty and two Acres unto those their
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
by the space of one Rode of land in the same Town and thence to a Close called Thom Parrok in the same Town of Est Cottyngwithe which Watercourse was so obstructed that the adjacent lands for default of clensing thereof were d●owned And that Robert Abbot of Fountaines ought and had used to repair the said VVatercourse from that place called Bothe hill to the Halle banke And that Thomas Abbot of S. Maries in Yorke ought and did use to repair the same from thence unto Middilhylbrigge And that Will. Woderowe of Queldryk ought to repair the same from thence for the space of one Rode And that the Prioresse of Thikhed ought to repair it from that Rode unto the Close called Thom Parrok And that the Chanel of the said watercourse being clensed ought to be xiiij foot in bredth and six foot in depth The Shireeve therefore had command to summon the parties abovesaid to answer c. who appearing accordingly could not gainsay but that they ought to repair the same VVherefore they were amerc'd and the Shireeve required to distrain them And they also presented that there was a certain watercourse called Newlandyke in Telburne descending from Landryk mose on the East part unto the Chanels called Dubbeldykes in Melburne which said Chanels do run to a place called Skategraves in Seton and thence by the current of two Sewers called the Fossedykes running betwixt Seton on the East part and Lathum and Folkerthorpe on the VVest unto the River of Foulnay and that the said Chanels were obstructed for want of scouring as also that the lands there sowed with corn together with the Meadows and Pastures adjacent were overflowed for want of repairing the same And that the Town of Melburne ought to scour and clense the same from Landrykmose to Skategreves and from thence the great Ditch unto a place called Doderesse on the North side And the Town of Seton Alice Hay Lady of Lathum the Prior of Ellerton the Town of Lathum Iohn de Pothowe and the Town of Folkerthorpe to repair all those other Chanels before-mentioned that is to say each of them for their lands and against their lands unto the said water of Foulnay And that the said Sewers ought to be xij foot in bredth and six foot in depth from Folkethorpe bridge unto the said water of Fo●lnaye VVhereupon the Shireeve had command to summon them to answer c. who appeared c. and were amerc'd c. as abovesaid And they likewise presented that the VVatercourse called Blaktoft damme otherwise Haunsardamme which reacheth from Foulnay to the River of Ouse was then also obstructed and ought to be repaired by Richard Haunsard and the Town of Blaktoft for their Lands in Blaktoft and that the same ought to be xvi foot in bredth and viij foot in depth VVhereupon the Shireeve had command c. as abovesaid And they farther presented that the said Richard Haunsard ought to repair the same Chanel from Hunsardamme to Foulnay unto the South end of Gyl●erdyke and therefore that he was amerc'd And that the Village of Blaktoft ought to repair the same from Haunsardamme as abovesaid therefore the Shireeve had command to distrain c. And the said Jurors also presented that the water-course of Langedyke from Whalsey to Skelflete ought to be xij foot in bredth and six foot in depth and that the same as also the watercourse of Ragolfdyke ought to be repaired by the towns of Spaldyngton Gripthorpe Wylughtoft Fowerthorpe He●l●thorpe Melburne Bubwithe Lathum Seton Everyngham Herswell Holme Birsay Beleby Estryngton Portyngton Kaynyll Birland Ous●thorpe Hythe Sandholme Blaktoft Yneflete Cotnesse Saltmersk Skelton Sandhall Hothom Southclyff Northclyff and Scalby and that the said watercourses were obstructed wherefore the Shireeve was commanded to summon the Inhabitants of the said Towns who appearing could not gainsay the chardge therefore they were amerc'd and the Shireeve commanded to distrain them for the compleat performance of all those repairs And they likewise presented that the watercourse called Thornton damme which extended it self from Langdyke to the River of Ouse was obstructed so that the adjacent grounds were thereby drowned and that the same ought to be repaired by the Abbot of Thorntone for Thorntone house and also that Thorntone damme and ...... damme ought to be xvi foot in bredth and viij foot in depth The Shireeve therefore had command to summon the said Abbot c. And they also presented that the said Abbot was obliged to repair clense and maintain the watercourse from Langedyke unto the Town of Skalby and thence to the River of Ouse as it was before alleged wherefore he was amerc'd and command given to the Shireeve to distrain him by all his Lands And they moreover presented that the water-course called Temple damme which lately belonged to the Master of the Temple in England was obstructed so that the lands adjacent were thereby drowned which water-course ought to be repaired by Sir Stephan le Scrope of Masham Knight Lord of the Mannour of Faxflete from Mikilsyke with the Ditches in Helwysgote and Crakeputte to the water of Humbre wherefore the Shireeve had command to summon the said sir Stephan who appearing by Thomas de Waldeby his Attorney said that he could not deny but that he ought to repair the said watercourse called Temple damme from Carbrygge unto th● River of Humbre but said that he ought not to repair the same from Mikilsyke with it's Ditches in Hewysgote and Crakepitte to the said bridge called the Carbrygge any otherwise than a Commoner in Wallyng fen and desired that it might be enquired of by the Country c. VVhereunto the Jurors said that the said Stephan was not bound to repair the same watercourse from Mikilsyke with the Ditches in Helwysgote and Crakepi●te unto Carbrigge otherwise than a Commoner in the Marsh of Wallyngfen in such sort as he the said Stephan had in his pleading alleged and therefore he was dischardged thereof but because the said watercourse from Carbrygge unto the Riv●r of Humbre was not repaired at the time when the before-specified presentment was taken he was amerc'd and the Shireeve had command to distrain him And the said Jurors presented that a certain watercourse called Parkdyke descending from Haunsardamme Eastwards to Thornton damme and thence betwixt Scalby and Scalby grene unto Temple damme ought to be repaired by the Town of Blaktoft from Haunsardamme to Thornton damme and thence to the Temple damme by the Abbot of Thorntone and the Town of Scalby And that the said watercourse was obstructed towards Skalby by Henry de Kelme and others who threw earth into it by the command of Sir Stephan le Scrope of Masham Knight VVherefore the Shireeve was required to summon the said Sir Stephan and Henry to answer c. VVho accordingly appeared and said that there then was and had been time out of mind a certain Road-way from the Town and Mannour of Faxflete unto the same place where by
in the VVapentakes of Mauley and Coryngham and in the Soke of Kirketone in the said County of Lincolne and in the Soke or Hundred of Bas●tlawe in this County And to make Statutes and Ordinances therein consonant to the Laws of this Realm and the Laws and Customes of Romeney marsh and to do all other things touching the same according to the Law of this Realm and the said Customes of Romeney marsh As also to imprest so many Labourers upon competent wages to be imployed in the said work as should be needfull considering the great and urgent necessity for the speedy accomplishment thereof The like Commission in 14 E. 4. had Thomas Bishop of Lincolne Will. Lord Hastyngs Sir Iohn Scrope of Bolton Knight Sir Robert Markham Knight Iohn Stanhope Gervase Clifton Robert Willughby Thomas Molineux Thomas Nevill and Iohn Metheley for the view and repair of the Banks and Sewers● from Broughton-Sulny unto the River of Devene in this County and from Feldyke in Bingham unto the said River of Devene as also by and about the same River from the County of Leicester beyond Kilvyngton unto the River of Trent in this County And to proceed therein as abovesaid So also in 22 E. 4. had the same Archbishop and most of the before-mentioned persons But farther touching the Fens in this County I have not seen other than what a Law of Sewers made at Stockwith 14 Aug. 5 Caroli mentioneth which is that whereas Iohn Lyens and other Dutch men had undertaken to the King and his privy Council to drayn the Carrs and Marshes in the Lordship of Hatfield in the County of Yorke Axholme in the County of Lincolne and other great Carrs in this County of Notingham and had made divers great Rivers and drayns to that purpose it was decreed that for the better conveying away of the waters one Sluce should be erected on Bikersdyke within the Parish of Misterton at a place lying over the bridge called Bleesford bridge and to make a cut over the common grounds called Bleesford to Mifterton firm grounds And that whereas the said Iohn and his Participants became undertakers for the drayning of certain Carr grounds in Everton in this County of Notingham in consideration thereof they were to have to them and their heirs and assignes for ever five hundred Acres of land laid out from Everton inclosures all along by Gryngeley bank side unto the Tofte Carr banke or New bank to be set out by Surveyors chosen on each part CAP. XXVII BEing now come into Lincolnshire I shall first begin with the Isle of Arholme which for many ages hath been a Fenny tract and for the most part covered with waters but more antiently not so for originally it was a woody Country and not at all annoyed with those inundations of the Rivers that passed through it as is most evident by the great numbers of Oak Firr and other Trees which have been of late frequently found in the Moor upon making of sundry Ditches and Chanels for the drayning thereof the Oak Trees lying somewhat above three foot in depth and neer their roots which do still stand as they growed viz. in firm earth below the Moor and the bodies for the most part North VVest from the roots not cut down with Axes but burnt asunder somewhat neer the ground as the ends of them being coaled do manifest Of which sort there are multitudes and of an extraordinary bignesse viz. five yards in compasse and sixteen yards long and some smaller of a greater length with good quantities of Akorns neer them and of small Nuts so many that there have been found no lesse than two pecks together in some places But the Firr Trees do lye a foot or eighteen inches deeper of which kind there are more than of any other many of them being above xxx yards in length Nay in the year 1653. there was a Firr pole taken up by one Robert Browne of Haxey of xxxvi yards long besides the top lying neer the root which stood likewise as it grew having been burnt and not hewed down which tree bore at the bottome ten inches square and at the top eight About xx years since also in the Moors at Thurne neer five foot in depth was sound a Ladder of Firr of a large substance with about xl staves which were thirty three inches asunder but so rotten that it could not be gotten up whole And in Haxey Carr at the like depth a Hedge with stakes and bindings The truth is that there are so great a number of Trees thus overgrown with the Moor through a long time of stagnation by the fresh waters in these parts that the Inhabitants have for the space of divers years last past taken up at least two thousand Cart Loads in a y●ar As to the time when this woody Level which extends it self into Dikes mersh and Hatfield Chase in Yorkeshire became first thus overflowed I can say nothing there being not any memorial thereof transmitted to us from the light of History or Records but that it hath been so for divers hundreds of years the depth of the Moor doth sufficiently manifest which could not in a few Ages grow to that thicknesse it is of Howbeit as to the occasion thereof I may rationally conclude it to have been through the muddinesse of the constant tides which flowing up Humbre into Trent did in time leave so much silt to obstruct the currents of Idle Done and other Rivers that having not their free passages as formerly they flowed back and overwhelmed that flat Country with water insomuch as the high ground became an Island as it is still we see called and a place so defencible in respect of the spacious●esse and depth of the waters environing it that Roger Lord Moubray an eminent Baron of this Realm in K. Henry the second 's time and then Lord thereof adhering to young Henry upon his ●ebellion in those dayes repaired hither and fortified an old Castle which had been long ruinous for reducing whereof to the Kings obedience the Lincolnshire men having no other accesse thereto transported themselves by shipping in the year 1174 20 H. 2. So likewise in 50 H. 3. after the battail of Evesham wherein the rebellious Barons were discomfited some of them fled hither as to a place of security for the reasons above expressed But after that time it was not long ere the Inhabitants of these parts imitating the good Husbandry of those in other Countryes who had by banking and drayning made good improvements in such Fenny places did begin to do the like here For in 1 E. 3. I find that Robert de Notingham and Roger de Newmarch were constituted Commissioners to view and repair those Banks and Ditches as had been made to that purpose which were then grown to some decay So also were Iohn Darcy of the Park Roger de Newmarch and Iohn de Crosholme Several other Commissions there were
thereupon In the same year also Will. Lord Wilughby Raphe Crumwell Philip Spenser Robert Tirwhit and Robert Cumberworth were appointed to view and repair the Banks and Sewers betwixt Grymesby and Waynflete and to do all things therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm and the Custome of Romney marsh The like appointment the next year following had the said William Raphe and Philip with Richard Muriell and Albine de Endirby for the same Banks and Sewers and direction to proceed therin according to the Law and Custome of the Marsh. In which year I find it presented that the Sewer called the Ea ought to be repaired from the West end thereof unto the Sea by VValter Athall Fermour of the Duke of Lancaster's ●ishing and VValter Ranson Fermour of the Lord of Dalbye's fishing And that the South-west bank of Lusdyke ought to be repaired by the village of All Saints in UUaynflete As also that the Chanel of Lusdyke from Stordyke unto the Eas end ought to be repaired by the same village And that the Ea from the VVest end thereof unto Normandeepe ought to be repaired by the Fermours of the fishing belonging to the said Duke and to the Lord of Dalby In 1 H. 4. Henry Earl of Northumberland Sir Will. de Wilughby Sir Walter Pedwardyn and Sir Iohn Rochefort Kts Robert Tirwhit Will. Michel and Albine de Enderby had Commission for the view and repair of those Banks and Sewers betwixt Boston and Friskeney with power to hear and determine all things therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm and the Custome of Romeney marsh and to take so many Diggers and other Labourers upon competent wages in respect of the great and instant necessity as they should think requisite to be imployed in the said work Other Commissions of the like kind were shortly after directed to sundry persons viz. in 6 H. 4. to VVill. de VVylughby Iohn de Rocheford Rob. Elkyngton VVill. de Ludington Thomas Somercotes Thomas de Enderby Iohn Symons and Robert VVhite for those within the precincts of UUrangle to Barton upon Humbre with appointment to proceed therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm and so likewise in 7 H. 4. to the same VVilliam Iohn Albine de Enderby VVill. de Ludington and others In 9 H. 4. to VVill. Lord VVylughby Sir VValter Talboys and Sir Richard Haunserde Knights Robert Tirwhit Will. de Lodyngton Will. Michel and Thomas Enderby for those betwixt Boston and Trent In 10 H. 4. to Sir Will. de Wylughby and Sir Iohn de Rocheford Knights Will. Lodyngton Thomas Wace Richard de Bradlay and Will. Boleyne for those betwixt Boston and Skegeneys and in divers towns and places within the Sokes of Bolyngbroke and Horncastre with direction to proceed therein according to the Custome of the Marsh and the Law and antient Custome of this Realm In 11 H. 4. to Robert Tirwhit Sir Iohn Rocheford Knight Robert Waterton Iohn Waterton Iohn Skipwyth Will. Lodyngton Richard Tournay Richard Bradley and Thomas Wace for those betwixt Boston and Friskeney and to act therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm and the Custome antiently used in that place In 12 H. 4 to Robert Lord Wylughby Sir Thomas Wylughby Kt. Robert Tirwhit Robert Waterton and others for those betwixt Boston and UUaynflete with appointment to do all things therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm The like Commission the same year had Rob. Tirwhit Sir Richard Haunsard Knight Will. Lodyngton Nich. Tournay Thomas Claymond Henry Morley Iohn Skipwith and Robert Feriby for those Banks and Sewers from Littulburgh all along the River of Trent to Humbre and from Bishops brigges on the River of Ancolme to Humbre So also had Thomas VVace Richard Bradley and others for all the Banks and Sewers throughout this whole Province of Lindsey as also for those betwixt Boston and Friskeney before whom sitting at Bullingbrooke on Friday being the Feast day of S. Ambrose the Jurors presented upon Oath that it would be fit for the preservation of the Eastfenne that the Dam of Waynflete be shut throughout the whole year that the salt water being kept out of the wash the grasse and weeds growing therein might be totally destroyed and to be thus stopped up by the towns of the Wapentake of Bullingbroke and the Inhabitants of UUrangle Leake Leverton Benington Butterwik Freston and Tofte in such sort that the water descending from the mountainous parts of Lindsey and running into a certain Sewer called Lusdyke in Lindsey viz. in Thorpe UUainflete and Stepinge should be so kept within the bounds of a certain trench that it might not enter into the said Washe of the Est fenne but keep it course to the Haven of UUaynflete and thence to the main Sea In 13 H. 4. the King by his Attorney impleaded Will. Leveryk of Irby and Isabell his wife for making of a Ditch in a certain place in UUaynflet called Hall dale by means whereof four Sewers which passed the fresh waters from Bullingbroke and other Towns adjacent in Est fenne and UUest fenne became obstructed to the prejudice of the said Kings fishing there and the overflowing of four Acres of his said land In 1 H. 5. Robert Tirwhit Sir Richard Haunsard and Sir William Frank Knights Thomas Enderby Richard Hawe and Simon Louthe were constituted Commissioners for the view and repair of the Banks Sewers and Ditches from Wytherne to the Sea and betwixt Saltfletby and Trusthorpe and to do all things therein according to the Law and Custome of the marsh Divers other Commissions to the like purpose were shortly after directed to sundry other persons viz. in 6 H. 5. to the same Rob. Tirwhit Will. Lodyngton Tho. Cumberworth Roger Flore Thomas Enderby Thomas Somercotes Iohn Kyme and Iohn Langholme for all the Banks and Sewers in this Province of Lindsey In which Commission they had direction to proceed according to the Law and Custome of this Realm In 1 H. 6. to the same Robert Tirwhit Thomas Santone Robert Feryby Robert Wasselyn Henry Morlay and Thomas Belwode for those betwixt the Rivers of Trent and Ankholme wherein they were to act according to the Custome of the Marsh and the Law and Custome of the Realm In 4 H. 6. to Sir Robert Wylughby Sir Raphe Crumwell Sir William Crumwell and Sir Raphe Rochford Knights Walter Talboys Robert Tirwhyt Iohn Kyme Richard Hawe and Iohn Veere for all the Banks Ditches and Sewers throughout this coast of Lindsey In 6 H. 6. to Iohn Beaumont Sir Will. Tirwhit Knight Iohn Ellerker Robert Feryby Iohn Tourney and others for those betwixt Grymesby and Burton Stather In 9 H. 6. to Sir Robert Wylughby Sir Raphe Crumwell and Sir Raphe Rocheford Knights Iohn Ellerker Walter Talboys and others for all within this whole Province of Lindsey
with directio● and power to make Laws and Ordinances for the safeguard and preservation of the Sea-coasts and Marshes of the same and of the adjacent parts consonant to the Laws and Customes of Romeney marsh and to hear and determine of all things touching the same according to the Law and Custome of this Realm and the Custome of the said Marsh As also to imprest so many Artificers and other Labourers for that work upon reasonable salaries as they should deem necessary to imploy therein considering the great and urgent necessity to hasten the same The like Commission in 11 H. 6. had the said Sir Robert Wylughby Sir Iohn Beaumont Sir Raphe Cromwell and Sir Thomas Cumberworth Knights Iames Strangways Iohn Ellerker and others In 12 H. 6. it was found by Inquisition that the Haven of Waynflete ought to be repaired by the Tenants of the Duke of Lancaster and the Lord of Dalby And so likewise the Ea from that bridge which is towards the Church of All Saints towards the Dam. And in 15 H. 6. I find that there was an allowance of xxijl. iiijs. ixd. for the repair of that Haven whereof the Lord of Dalby for his third part allowed vijl. viijs. iij d. and the Lord of Bullingbroke xijl. iijs. ij d. over and above Liijs. iiij d. to be paid by the Bayliff upon agreement At which time it was likewise presented that the said Haven of Waynflete from the Dam unto Lymgreynes and thence to Norman d●epe ought to be repaired by the Lords of Bullingbroke and Dalby In 17 H 6. at a Session of Sewers held at Louthe upon Saturday next after the Feast of the Epiphany before Richard Haghe and Iohn Langholme with their associates then in Commission for the view and repairs of the Banks Ditches and Sewers in these parts there was a presentment exhibited by the Jurors shewing that it would be most profitable and necessary for the drayning and evacuation of the superfluous water from the North Common of Wynthorpe towards the Sea that there should be made one new and competent Sewer in that common extending it self from Tonlond gate in Wynthorpe unto a certain Sew●r there called the Old Sewere and so descending towards the North unto the Fee of the Dutchy of Lancaster called Fivescore acres in Ingoldmels thence towards the East into a certain Sewer there called the Old Sewer where it would be commodious and expedient for the conduct of the superfluous water towards the Sea to make a new Gutter in that very place where the Chanel called the Old Gote in Ingoldmels was unto the said Old Sewer and so descending to the Fee of the Lord Wylughby and Sir Iohn Gryffith Knight called Redelandes in Sk●gnes and thence into a certain Sewer called the Old Sewer in Skegnes to the Sea And that the said Sewer and Gutter ought to be made and afterwards repaired by all those who had lands or Tenements in the North Common of Wynthorpe and the North Common of Skegnes in respect of what they enjoyed in those places that is to say every one according to the number of his Acres there and by the Land-holders of Fivescore Acres in Ingoldmels aforesaid viz. every man according to the number of his Acres there The Shireeve therefore of this County was commanded to summon all the said Land-holders in the said places called the North Common of Wynthorpe and the North Common of Skegnes and likewise in the Fivescore Acres in Ingoldmels before-mentioned to appear before the above-mentioned Commissioners at Louthe upon the Monday before Palme Sunday then next ensuing to shew what they could say for themselvs why they ought not to make and repair those Sewers according to the form of the before-specified Presentment At which day Robert Etton then the Kings Attorney came to Louthe aforesaid but the said Shireeve not receiving his Precept soon enough could not summon those Land-holders to be there as abovesaid therefore he was required to give them warning to appear at Burwell on the Monday in Whitson week then next following which he did do accordingly but none of them came the Court therefore ordered that the before-specified Sewers and Gutter should be made repaired by all the said Land-holders at their own proper costs and chardges according to the form of the same Presentment In 22 H. 6. Sir Robert VVylughby Sir Leon Welles and Sir Raphe Cromwell Kts Robert Sheffield Iohn Langholme and others were constituted Commissioners for the view and repair of all the banks c. in these parts of Lindsey and to determine all things therein according to the Custome of the Marsh till that time used and approved and according to the Custome of this Realm In 24 H. 6. Iohn Viscount Beaumont Sir Raphe Cromwell Sir Thomas Cumberworth and Sir VVilliam Tirwhit Knights Iohn Tailboys Richard Waterman Robert Sheffield and others had the like Commission for the view and repair of all the Banks Ditches and Sewers in the Wapentakes of Yarburgh Mauley Coryngham We●le Lanres Haslokhowe and Walsh croft within this Province and to make Laws and S●atutes proper for the same consonant to the Laws and Customes of Romeney marsh As also to do all things therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm and the Custome of that Marsh And to take so many Labourers upon competent wages to be imployed in the said work as should be necessary for the same considering the great necessity of expedition to be used therein Many other Commissions for the Banks and Sewers aswell throughout this whole Province as in sundry places therof were afterwards issued out to several persons of the superiour rank in these parts viz. in 29 H. 6. to Sir Robert Wylughby Sir Leon Welles and Sir Raphe Cromwell Knights Richard VVelles Esquire Iohn Taylboys Rich. Waterton and others for those Banks c. throughout this coast of Lindsey with direction and authority to proceed therein as abovesaid So likewise in 31 H. 6. to Iohn Viscount Beaumont Sir Leon Wellys and Sir Raphe Cromwell Knights Iohn Tailboys and others As also to the said Iohn and Raphe with Sir Hugh Wythom Knight Richard Bedyngton and others for those within the Precincts of Skegney Dodyngton-Pygote and Tyd-gote in this County In 34 H. 6. to the said Iohn Viscount Bea●mont Iohn Taylboys Richard Waterton Robert Sheffield and others for those in the Wapentakes of Yarburghe Manley Coryngham Welle Laures ●aslokhowe and Walshcrofte in these parts of Lindeseye In 35 H. 6. to the said Iohn Sir Richard Welles Lord Wylloughby Iohn Taylboys Robert Sheffield Richard Benyngtone of Boston and others for all those throughout this whole coast The like Commission in 2 E. 4. had Sir Humfrey Bourchier Lord Cromwell Sir William Skipwith Knight Thomas Burghe Thomas Blount Iohn Whichecote and divers others In 6. E 4. to Richard Pynchebek Richard Welby Iohn Pynchebek Thomas Meres Leonard
ought to clense and scoure the Sewers of Stakesgraft Swynman dam and Swanelond so that the current of the water might not be hindred frō the fen to the Chanel which carrieth it to the Sea And they said that there was great necessity of a good Bank for preservation of the Fen betwixt Deping and Spalding from the House of Iohn the Son of Simon of Spalding to Wodelode to be made at the chardge of the Prior and Town of Spalding so that each a●re might be taxed alike and that no Hoggs might come neer that Bank nor any defensible Banks in any place of Holand nor the Sewers therein by the space of half a mile And they lastly said that all the beforespecified Ordinances were for the common benefit of the said Towns in Kesteven and Holand and that every Acre ought to be assessed alike in all taxes and costs for the necessary repair of the said Gutters Sewers Banks and Bridges In 25 E. 3. there was a Petition exhibited to the King and his Counsel in Parliament by those of these Provinces of Kesteven and Holand who resided in the Fenns shewing that whereas the antient boundary called Midfen dike and other metes which go through the said Fenns from the river of Weland to the stream of Withum which had wont to be the old limits betwixt these two Provinces as by certain Crosses of stone then continuing was very evident were at that time by reason of floods and other impediments so obscured that no certain knowledge could be thereof insomuch as great controversies and debates were occasioned betwixt the Inhabitants in those parts upon execution of the Kings Writs and otherwise the said King did therefore assign Saier de Rocheford Alexander Aunsell Simon Simeon Will. de Skipwith Thomas de Sibthorpe and Thomas de Levelance to take view of the said boundaries and to distrain all such persons for the scouring and clensing the same who ought to have performed that work After this divers years viz. in 41 E. 3. Godfrey Fuljaumbe Simon Simeon Walter de Campeden and others were appointed to view and repair the Banks Sewers and Ditches from Bardney ferry to Catebrig within the Province of Kesteven and within the Wapentak of Ellowe in the parts of Holand Upon a pleading in 3. H. 4. I find that on Will. Wyting of Deping was pardoned for the breaking down of two Crosses which had been set up betwixt these Provinces of Kesteven and Holand by five of the Kings Justices upon the said King's appointment In 3 H. 5. Thomas le Warre Robert de Wylughby Will. Lodingtone Robert Hagbecche Geffrey Lutterell Iohn Belle Iohn Henege and others were constituted Commissioners for the view and repair of the Banks Ditches and Sewers in these parts of Kesteven and Holand then in decay with direction to proceed therein according to the law and custome of this Realm and the Custome of Romeney Marsh As also to take such and so many workmen and Artificers upon competent wages as they should think fit to be imployed in that work in respect of the great necessity for expedition therein The like Commission in 5 H. 5. had Thomas Duke of Clarence Gilbert Umframvill William Lodyngton Iohn Cokayn Iames Strangways Thomas de la Launde and others and to act therein according to the custome of the Marsh and the law and custome of this Realm So also in 26 H. 6. had Iohn Viscount Beaumont Sir Robert Wylughby Knight Sir Raphe Cromwell Knight Sir Leo. Welles Knight Nich. Dixon Clerk Thomas Merys and others with direction to make Laws and Ordinances therein consonant to the Laws and Customs of Romeney marshe and to hear and determine of all things touching the same according to the Law and custome of the said Marsh As also to imprest Ditchers and other Labourers upon competent salaries and to imploy them in the said work as long as there should be occasion so to do in regard of the great and imminent danger which might by delays accrue In 7 E. 4. Richard Earl of Warwick Humfrey Bourchier Lord Cromwell Sir Henry Stafford Knight Sir Thomas Burgh Knight Oliver S. Iohn Esquire Will. Husee Will. Coote and divers others had the like Commission for the view and repair of all the Banks and Sewers c. from Staunford in this County to Dodyngton Pigot and from thence throughout these two Provinces to the Sea c. And in 34 H. 8. Charles D. of Suff. Rob. Dymmoke Tho. Heneage Iohn Copledyk Iohn Hussey and Rob. Tirwhit Knights Edw. Dymoke Ric. Themolby and others Es●uires then Commissioners of Sewers in these parts sitting at Donington decreed that the Floudgate or Sluse under Boston Bridge should be repaired at the chardges of the Wapentakes of Kyrton and Skirbek in Holand for the one half and the Wapentake of Ellow and Town of Boston for the other half to be performed before the Feast of All Saints then next coming in as compleat a manner as it had been formerly done by Margaret Countess of Richmund and Derby Moreover that two great Sewers xx foot wide and 5. foot deep should be made and digged in the divisions betwixt Kesteven and Holand from the most Western point at Gotheram coat corner neer the River of Glen unto Wragmere stake thence to the River of Wythom at Langrake where then lay a certain Sluse in the said River so as the said Sewer and Water-courses were no● above xxxvi foot one from the other until they come to Wragmere stake and that the menure should be cast betwixt the said Sewers to raise a firm Bank And from Wragmere stake both Sewers to run in one Chanel of xxx foot broad in a direct line leaving the division of those Countries to Gilsyke to go wholy in the Eight hundred Fen of Holand And that the said Sewers from the River of Glen to Wytham so intended from the South to the North should ●all into enter and go through all the loads and draynes in the Fenns aforesaid which came out of the parts of Kesteven to Hamond beck alias Holand Fen dyke to the end that all the water going together might the better run within its own Brinks and Chanels and the sooner come to the Sluse at Skirbek gote and the new Gotes by that decree intended And that those Sewers should be made in manner following and in places hereafter named viz. first from the said place called Gotheramscote unto Nestilholm corner by a right line on the outside of Nestilholme aforesaid where the Harth stede is and the limits divyding Holand and Kesteven and that the said Sewer should come as neer to the corner aforesaid as might be so that it enterd not into the Dyke of Nestilholm aforesaid And that the said Sewers should be made from the place to the place aforesaid on the Westside within the several Townships by the Inhabitants of Burne cum membris Moreton cum membris Haconby cum membris
one half and the Abbot of Thorney the other And they said that the other part of Nene which passeth from Peterborough bridge aforesaid unto Wodeshed in Wytlesey thence to Wittleseybrigge thence by Wittlesey to Wardiscote in Wittlesey and thence into the great River of Wisebeche ought to be scoured from the said Wodeshed to Wardysgote aforesaid by the Town of UUittlesey and the Landholders late Pavy's in March and that it was not then clensed And they said that the Town of UUittlesey ought to clense one Sewer beginning at Goose UUillow drove in UUitlesey unto the North part of Adernale in the same Town and thence to Brodreche in UUisebeche called Upstanlake and that it was not clensed And that the Bishop of Ely ought to clense the said Upstavinlake unto the great River of UUisebeche which was not then done In 9 E. 4. W. Bishop of Ely George Duke of Clarence Richard Earl of UUarwick and Salisbury Iohn Earl of Northumberland Iohn Earl of Oxford Humfrey Bourchier Lord Cromwell Iohn Catesby Will. Ienny Thomas Grey Roger Tounsende Henry Spilman Thomas Daniel and others were constituted Commissioners for to view the Banks Ditches Sewers c. of Marshland Upwelle and Outwelle and of other Towns and Fens by the water which goeth from Erith brigge directly to Benwyke thence to Paddok mere thence to Farset brigge thence to Standground and so to Muscote and from Muscote to Thorney mille and Godelakcrosse by Noman's land and thence to Dowysdale and so to Clowecrosse thence to Wylowedyke thence to Edgreynes thence to Tydegote and thence to the Sea And to make Statutes and Ordinances for the repair of them according to the Laws and constitutions of this Realm and the Statutes of Romeney marsh As also to imprest such and so many Diggers and other Labourers to be imployed in those Works as they should deem necessary for the expedition thereof The like Commission w had they for the view and repair of those in the Marshes betwixt the water running from Erith brigge aforesaid by Ely to Salterslode and Wigenall to Bishops Lenne and the water passing from the same Bridge at Erith by Benwick Gretecrosse and Wyssebeche to the Sea About this time I suppose it to be for it is without date that the Landholders of Pokediche field in Welle exhibited a Petition to the Lords and Commoners of Marshland shewing that the said Field was agisted for its number of acres in as high a measure towards the repair of the Bank called Pokediche for the safeguard of that Country as any part thereof which lay within the precinct of that Bank and that the water of Pokediche did so overflow the same field that they could not dig earth upon occasion for repair of the before-specified Bank and therefore desired that they might drayn the same by a Sewer through the said Bank into Marshland in such a place where it would be of least damage thereto Whereupon they were allowed to have a certain Clow neer Thwart medows for that purpose In 20 H. 8. at a Session of Sewers held at Stuntney in the Isle of Ely by Sir Thomas Knight Tho. Dereham Iohn Fincham and others there was a Presentment then made by the Jurors of all the Sewers at that time in being within this part of the Countrey instancing to whom the repair of each belonged the tenor whereof I shall here insert The Bishop of Ely ought to scour Crekelode extending from the great stream towards Sotherey unto the Willough by the space of two furlongs And from the said Willough to Pulverlake the Cellerar of Bury hath an half part against all others for the space of a mile and more From the said Willough also to Pulverlake the Prior of Modney hath a share So likewise the Prior of Norwich for the Church of Fordham and the Parson of Helgay for the Church of Helgay And the Landholders late Massingham's and Bekeswell's ought to clense the same against the Cellerar of Bury from the said Willough to Pulverlake Which Cellerar of Bury hath also an half part in the middle of this lode against all others for two miles The Abbot of Ramsey ought to scour the Sewer called Balkwere abutting upon Gnat lode for one quarter of a mile And the Prior of Norwich the Rector of Helgay with the Tenants of the lands late Massingham's and Bekeswell's ought to repair the same unto the four Lodes end In Crekelode also Thomas Boteler of Helgay ought to scour a place called Hogges middle for the length of one furlong And the Duke of Gloucester one part in Gretwere a part of the said Crekelode for the length of a mile against all others And another part there for half a mile the Prior of Castelacre Abbot of Wendling and the Tenants of those lands late Bekeswell's Sheting middil in Crekelode ought to be clensed by the said Cellerar of Bury for the space of one mile and more Chutting in Crekelode by the Duke of Glouc. for half a furlong and more Strem middil by the Cellerar of Bury for one mile In Ung medil the Prior of Modney holdeth one part by the space of two furlongs against the Prior of Chetford Iohn Ashfield and the Abbor of Ramsey for the lands late Nich. Gunnes The same Iohn Ashfield holdeth one part in Lodwere in Creklode aforesaid for two furlongs In Bullinger the Prior of Modney holdeth half a part for two furlongs and more against the Abbot of Ramsey The said Prior of Modney and the Tenants of the Lands late Massingham's ought to clense all Gredy middil for one mile The Prior of Chetford ought to scour Iellis middil for the space of one mile The Town of Lyttilport the Widow of Nich. Orme and the Earl of Worcester ought to clense Newdike unto Welney court for one mile Criklode in March beginneth at the Great Ee betwixt March and Welle and goeth on directly to Elme containing by estimation six miles and ought to be scoured by the Bishop of Ely and Abbot of Bury equally Gnat lode beginneth at Hawkyns bytte and continueth to four lodes end containing by estimation three miles and ought to be scoured by the Towns of Elme and Littilport Small lode betwixt Welle and Outwelle ought to be clensed by the Abbot of Dereham from the great River in Welle to Ingram's hirne by the space of three quarters of a mile Another part in the said Smal lode from Ingram's hirne to Seman's gole containing one mile the Abbot of Ramsey and Iohn Aylesham ought jointly to clense Maidlode beginneth at Welneywater and continueth to Sheppe lode and thence to Sheppeslodes end which ought to be clensed by Richard Cranford and Clarice late Wife of Iohn Cranforth by the space of one furlong and by the Town of Upwell for the Lands of Mr. Will. Dunthorne by the space of one mile and for another mile and more by the Town of Welle Shiplode ought to be clensed by Iohn Sambroke for half a mile by
And in 18 E. 2. to William la Zouche Iohn de Cantebrig Simon de Brim and Iohn de Hinton for those in this County alone Upon a Pleading in 40 E. 3. it was found by the Jurors that the Prior of Ely did obstruct the course of the water at Wilburgham magna in a certain place called Watholm dam so that it could not have it's current as it usually had insomuch as the Commons belonging to the Town of Fulbourne were overflowed to the damage of the whole Country And in 12 H. 4. the Town of Harlton being questioned for diverting the current of the water betwixt Harlton and Haselingfeld to the damage of the whole Country could not deny the charge and therefore was amerc'd Raphe Bateman being then Lord of that Mannour In 14 H. 6. William Godrede Thomas Fulthorpe Sir Iohn Colvyle Sir Henry Rocheforth and Sir Robert Hakebeche Kts William Yelverton Thomas Dereham Iohn Iakys Thomas Reynold and Iohn Tylney were constituted Commissioners for the view and repair of the Banks Sewers and Ditches throughout this whole County only and to make Statutes and Ordinances for the same according to the Laws and Customes of Runmey marsh On the West side of this County and at the outmost skirt thereof lyeth Wittlesey mere the greatest Lake in all these parts and consequently the more worthy of note I shall therefore cloze up what I have farther to say of this Shire with that particular description of it which I find in the Register of Peterborough In Septentrionali parte stagni c. On the North side of this Lake there is a water called Merelade issuing out of the River of Neene where the Northern bounds thereof are This with the Fens thereto belonging hath at the end thereof a certain Fishing called Edd●rmuthe Upon the East part thereof are two other Meres called Wellepole and Trendelmere betwixt which is a narrow stream containing two furlongs in length called Trendelmere beche having in it two Fishings And there is likewise another narrow water there of one mile long which is called Falet having in it one Fishing In that part thereof betwixt Wytlesmere and Kynkesdelf where the Eastern boundary thereof is the bredth of the Meer containeth three miles having in it a narrow stream called Derescuf and a Wood named Rageholt On the South part thereof also there is another slender stream of three furlongs in length called Selfremerebeche having in it two Fishings at the end whereof is a Lake named Selfremere having on the South side thereof a narrow water of half a mile long called Ubbemere lade at the head whereof is likewise another Fishing And about the middle thereof there is a place in the Fen called Alwynesbarwe and there is the Southern boundary thereof Moreover on the West side of this Lake there is also a narrow stream containing two furlongs in length named Trendemere beche which hath one Fishing in it at the end whereof is the Meer called West Trendemere On that side there are also these waters viz. Drelgmere Wellepole Withibuscemere Langemere Kinninges and Musklemere There is likewise on that side another narrow water of one mile in length extending to Oppebeche and hath in it one Fishing at the end of which water is the Western limits of the Fens and all the waters pertaining to Witlesmere About two miles distant from the North East side of the before-specified Meer there is a memorable Chanel cut through the body of the Fen extending it self from neer Ramsey to Peterborough and is called King's delph The common tradition is that King Canutus or his Queen being in some perill in their passage from Ramsey to Peterborough by reason of the boysterousnesse of the Waves upon Witlesey mere caused this Ditch to be first made and therewith do some of our Historians agree who say thus Anno Domini Mxxxiiii Cnuto Rex potentissimus viam in marisco inter Ramsey Burgum quod King's delph dicitur ut periculum magnorum stagnorum vitaretur eruderavit But how to reconcile this testimony to what I meet with above threescore years before I well know not which is that King Edgar confirming to the Monks of Peterborough before-mentioned the fourth part of UUitlesmere with all the waters Fishings and Fens thereto belonging bounds it to these limits viz. quorum Septentrionalis est ubi primùm intrat Mere lode de ampne Nen orientaliter ad King's delph Australiter ad Adewinesbarue c id est whereof the North side is where Mere lode first enters thereinto from the River Nen Eastward to King's delph and Southward to Aldewynesbarue c. But the largest and most notable is that fair Chanel made from Stanground steafe below Peterborough to Guyhirne neer UUisebeche of xl foot in bredth by Iohn Moreton Bishop of Ely in King Henry the seventh's days and still called Moreton's Leame or the New Leame a work certainly of singular consequence not only for the quicker evacuation of the overflowings of Nene but for conveniency of Carriage from Peterborough to UUisebeche which will remain a lasting memorial to that worthy Bishop CHAP. LI. SOuth-west from Cambridgshire lieth the County of Huntendon into which a skirt likewise of this great Level extendeth at the entrance whereof I meet first with Ramsey compassed with Fens on all parts excepting towards the South-west and containing about ...... Acres wherein for the like respect as in Ely Crouland and Thorney by others Ailwin a neer Kinsman to King Edgar and who is stiled by our Historians totius Angliae Aldermannus id est Chief Iustice of England did found an eminent Monastery for Monkes of S. Benedict's Rule almost an hundred years before the Norman Conquest Touching the situation of this Isle for so it was antiently called let us hear what the Register of that Abby saith Quum igitur in orientali angulo territorii Huntedonensis c. Forasmuch therefore as this place situate in the Eastern corner of Huntendoushire where the Chanel of the River Ouse restraineth the bounds of the Fens is for its bigness the fairest of the fenny Islands and which many have endeavoured to extoll so that it needeth not our commendation nevertheless we will not wholy leave it untoucht On the West side for on all other there is no access to it by reason of the Fens it is severed from the firm land with certain deep and boggy Quagmires in bredth about two Bow shot insomuch as in times past the access unto it was by navigable Vessells brought thither through a slow stream with gentle windes but now by much labour and no small cost there is with Wood Stones and Gravel a firm Causey made so that people may come to it on foot In length this Island doth extend almost unto two miles but in bredth not so much being environed with Alders Reedes green Canes and Bulrushes which do beautify it exceedingly and before it became inhabited was full
Up-were on the West Wickynhie grounds on the South and of Soham East 4297 The Fens and low grounds between Grant from Upwere to Clay hithe and Horningsey high grounds on the West the way from Quoy to Eambridge and Quoy and Bottesham high grounds on the South● the two Swafhams Reach Burwell Lanward and Fordham on the East and of Soham and Wickin North 11950 The Fens between the high grounds of Teversham and Hinton West of Fulburne South of great and little Wilbram East of Bottesham and Quoy North 1240 Between Grant from Harrymere to Ditton on the East of Ouse from Harrymere to Aldrich bridg on the North Hempsall Yram and the high grounds of Rampton West and the high grounds of Cottenham and Denney Abby South 9480 Hempsall and Ireham East of Aldrich Causey 823 The low grounds from St. Ives to Erith bridge on the South the Fens of Willingham and Over on the East the high grounds of Swasey Drayton and Stanton on the South and the high grounds of St. Ives West 3529 The low grounds below St. Ives on the North side of Ouse between the said River on the South and East and the high land of Bluntesham Hallywell and St. Ives on the North and West 1871 The total sum 307242 Acres Whereupon the said Commissioners sitting at Wisebeche aforesaid upon the day and year aforesaid the Lord Chief-Justice Popham being then and there present made certain Laws and Ordinances the extract whereof is as followeth Ordered first that Sir Iohn Popham Knight Lord Chief Justice of England Sir Thomas Fleming Knight Chief Baron of the Exchequer Sir William Rumney Knight Alderman of London and Iohn Eldred Citizen and Cloth-worker of London their heirs and assigns shall within the space of 7 years next coming at their own proper costs and charges drayn all the Fens and surrounded grounds between the old course of the River of Ouse as it now runneth from Erith bridg to Salters lode and Deping and within the land Eas hereafter mentioned And convey the said River of Ouse or the greatest part thereof from some place at or neer Erith bridg aforesaid unto such place between Salters lode and Mayden lode as the said Undertakers c. shall think meet Which conveyance to be made between the bottom of the two uttermost Banks 30 pole at the least and the Rivers to be 30 foot wide and 8 foot deep And the same utmost Banks to be each of them 30 foot wide at the bottome and 7 foot in height at the least and if that height will not do to carry away the water c. then to raise them higher That the like passage be made at the entrance of the Fens neer Peterborough for the conveyance of the River Nene from thence to Wisbeche And so likewise for the River of Weland from its entrance into the Fens at Waldram Hall untill it meet with Glen That Land-Eas from Erith to Stanground and thence to Waldram hall be made to defend the grounds within them and between the said new passage of Ouse and Weland from the Land flouds falling from the Upland-Countreys which Land eas to be from the utmost part of the Fence dike 6 pole at least That a drayn be made from Salters lode unto the Ham in March River to carry away the water which shall fall into the same Land eas c. That a new Bank be made from Erith bridg to Ely to defend the grounds between that and the same new passages from the overflowing of Ouse As also other necessary Sluses and Drayns within the precincts before-mentioned with Bridges c. for passage c. That the Undertakers shall have such sums of money as the Commissioners at their Session shall think fit from those persons who shall take benefit by this drayning and not contribute part of their Lands towards the charge thereof That the Undertakers shall allow for the drayn at Clows Crosse in ease of this charge to the Countrey That a Navigable Sluse be made at Salters lode And that Well-Creeke shall be inlarged and diked to London lode and thence through Neatmore to Wadingstowe and thence over the River of Wellenhee as directly as may be unto or above the Ham in March River And a Sluse with a bridg to be made at Wadingstow to keep so much of the River Neene as shall be needfull in its old course through both the Towns of Welle In recompence of which performance the said Undertakers to have one hundred and thirty thousand Acres of statute measure of Fen grounds at fivescore to the hundred to be taken out of the worst sort of every particular Fen proportionably by the Commissioners before the Feast of the Annunciation of our Lady next coming the whole number of surrounded Acres being 307242. And that the Undertakers their heirs c. shall enjoy all the said waters Fishings and Banks of and within the Rivers with the Indikes and Land-Eas and liberty to take sufficient menure for the repairing of the said Banks c. which Rivers Banks Indikes c. to be accounted parcell of the said 130000 Acres so assigned to them And that the said Undertakers shall make good all drowned parcells out of their own proportions or in value in case the drayning be not made perfect to the Land-owners Of which quick dispatch his Majesty being advertised he wrote to them again from Theobalds upon the xxiiith of the same Month of Iuly by which Letters he commended their endeavours in the work and progress made therein and taking notice of some opposition which had been made by certain people thereto not knowing out of what spirit it proceeded desired them to take special care to suppress the spreading of all false rumours that might give distast to the Countrey touching their proceedings therein and with those who were then imployed by his Majesty in that service as also to examine the grounds of all such rumors and to punish the Offenders giving advertisement to his Majesty and the Councel of any mutinous speeches which might be raised concerning this business so generally intended for the publick good Shortly after this viz. upon Monday Aug. 5th Mr. Hunt Ric. Atkyns and others laid out the ground where the River through Neatmore should go by a straight line to Mumbes dikes end but misliking the way on Tuesday they veiwed New ditch and in the Northeast end thereof by the Pow dich laid out the Ditch to be led line-right from thence to the Cross at Upwell Towns end And upon Wednesday about 8 of the Clock the work began in the presence of Mr. Hunt who cast the first spit the wrong way Mr. Helon Mr. Totnall Mr. Hamon Mr. Iohn Fyncham Mr. Richard Atkyns and others And was prosecuted so well as that upon the xxith of December following being the Feast day of S. Thomas the Apostle the Bank at the Cross at Upwell towns end was opened and the River
presently begin the same and finish it so as to make the grounds fit for Meadow Pasture or ●arable within the compass of six years from 1 Oct. following unless the Commissioners should approve the cause of deferring it any longer 2. That suddain overflowings in places remote from the Out-falls should not be adjudged a not Drayning nor Meers Lakes Pooles and Forelands left by Art and Approbation for Receptacles Nor any part of the ground out of which he was to have his proportion 3. That there should be 95000. Acres set out by six Commissioners respect being had to Commoners accommodations before Michaelmass then next following 4. That the Earl and his associates might be incorporated for ever to make Laws Ordinances and Orders and to have power over the lands assigned but no other towards the maintaining of the works 5. That the whole 95000. Acres should be lyable to the first finishing of the work and 40000. towards the maintaining and the 40000. to be subject in case of neglect to the Commissioners of Sewers 6. That when 30000. Acres should be finished the Earl to have his proportion out of it 7. That the private Indikes for partition be made by advice of the Earl and by direction of the Commissioners 8. That the Commissioners shall set out convenient High-wayes and passages by land throughout the Levell 9. Provided that the Port and Haven of Kings Lynne be preserved and the Navigation Passage and High-wayes in upon or about all the Navigable Rivers namely Ouse Grant Neene Welland and Glene to be preserved and no prejudice annoyance hurt or hindrance to be done to them And if any such prejudice annoyance hurt or hindrance upon complaint thereof and of the Commissioners whereof the Vice-Chancellour of the University of Cambridge ....... shall be 3. if they will be present to return abate ....... and amove all such prejudice annoyance c. so that the antient Navigation passages and High-wayes may be preserved 10. For the safety of Holland and Hundred of Wisbeche Clows Crosse Drayn to be kept within soyl or Banks and in case of any prejudice then six Commissioners to reform the excesses and the Earl to make recompence 11. That the new Rivers Cutts and Dreyns the Banks Forelands and inside of the Banks not exceeding 50. or 60. foot to be the Earles paying such recompence as the Commissioners should think fit the old ones to remain as they were 12. No passages upon the Banks but for the towing of Boats 13. That the Earl might take Earth dig Drayns and Cutts upon the lands next adjoyning making recompence 14. That the Commissioners should assist the Earl to suppress ryots insolencies and disturbances 15. Such as should receive benefit by the work and yet no parties to it if their land be taken within the allotment of the 95000. Acres to pay to the Earl as the Commissioners shall assess upon pain to forfeit double 16. That the Earl might hold the 95000. Acres in free socage at xl per annum fee ferm and if any other Rents be issuing that pay be charged upon other lands 17. That the King should release any benefit which by the Law of Sewers made 19. Iac. or by any other law might accrue to him and approve of this Law and that it may be confirmed by Decree in Chancery and Council of State and by Act of the next Parliament 18. That 12000 of the 95000 acres be assured to the King for his Royal assent and laid out upon the lands belonging to the Manour of Whittlesey and the Marshes there adjoyning 19. And that for allotments out of small parcels lesse than 30 Acres there the Earl to divide and accept what 6 Commissioners should assess These things being thus setled the said Earl taking in divers Adventurers as Participants with him therein they cast the whole so allowed for their recompence into twenty parts or lots each lot consisting of four thousand Acres whereof himself was to have three shares or lots Oliver Earl of Bullingbroke one Edward Lord Gorges one Sir Robert Heath Knight one Sir Miles Sandys Knight and Baronet two Sir William Russel Knight and Baronet two Sir Robert Bevyll Knight one Sir Thomas Terringham Knight two Sir Philibert Vernat one William Sams Doctor of Law one Anthony Hamond Esquire two Samuel Spalding Gent. one Andrew Burwell Gent. one and Sir Robert Lovet Knight one And thereupon he the said Earl and those his Participants did by Indenture of fourteen parts covenant with each other that if any one of them or their assignees after notice should fail in the payment of such moneys as from time to time should be imposed on them in pursuance of that agreement for carrying on the said work that then it should be lawfull to and for the rest of the said parties or their assignes to supply the same or to admit some other person or persons to have the share of such defalture paying the sum imposed on the said share and that all such parties as aforesaid by himself or his assignes so failing should be wholly excluded and for ever debarred from demanding or receiving all or any such sum or sums of money as any such person or persons had formerly disbursed for and towards the said undertaking VVhich agreement so made the said Earl and his Participants or such unto whom several proportions of those lots or shares were by them assigned began the work and in order to the carrying off the superfluous water wherewith the Level was so much annoyed caused these several Chanels to be made viz. 1. Bedford River extending from Erith to Salters lode Lxx foot wide and xxi miles in length this being intended for taking off the high flouds from the River of Ouse having at each end thereof a Sluse of great strength 2. Sam 's Cut from Feltwell to Ouse being about six miles in length and twenty foot in bredth 3. A Cut to drain the River of Mildenhall in Burntfen neer Litleport two miles long and fourty foot wide 4. Bevill's Leame being a Cut from Witlesey meer to Guyhirne about ten miles in length and xl foot in bredth 5. Morton's Leame before-mentioned new made 6. Peakirk Drayn ten miles in length and 17 foot in bredth 7. New South Ea from Crowland to Clows crosse 8. Hill's Cut neer Peterborough about two miles in length and 50 foot in bredth 9. Shire Drayne from Clows crosse to Tyd and so unto the Sea Moreover besides these Cuts and Drayns he caused two Sluses to be made at Tyd upon Shire Drayne to keep out the Tides as also a Clow at Clows Crosse for the fresh water And likewise a great Sasse on Welle Creeke with a Stone Sluse at Salters lode upon Bedford River to keep out the Tides and Sluses at Erith for the fresh But above all that great Stone Sluse below Wisbeche at the Horshoo to hold the Tides out of Morton's Leame which cost about eight thousand pounds And to the end they
Marshes there 104. a. Sedgmore 111. Suffolk 298. Surrey The Marshes on Thames 65. b. Sussex Marshes 87. b. Pevensey Marsh. The Laws and Ordinances for conservation thereof 95. a. Yorkshire 136. b. West Riding 115. a. H●lderness 130. Banks and Sewers Abatement in Tenths and Fifteens by reason of the great chardge in their repair 131. b. 258. a. Allowance by the King towards their repair 121. b. 254. a. Commissions and Statutes of Sewers Observations thereon 369. Commissioners of Sewers their compulsorie power in case of neglect in performance of their Ordinances and Laws 60. a. 66. a. 347. a. Distresses taken by their authority of such as observe not their Decrees 21.23 b. sold 250. a. Land sold by them for neglect in paying of Assesments 63. a. 74. a. 82. b. Their power to make new Trenches and Banks in case of necessity 139. b. 243. b. 298. a. 371. a. b. c. To imprest Labourers for repair of Banks and Sewers 33.46 a. 47. b. 59. a. 60. b. 61. b. 78. b. 80. a. 100. b. 122. a. 135. b. 160. b. 204. b. 240. a. To make a Statutes and Ordinances according to the Law and Custom of this Realm and the Custom of Romeney Marsh 47. b. 48. b. 58. a. Custom of the Marsh observed in repair of Banks and Sewers 44. b. 45. b. 46. a. b. 47. a. b. 78. a. Land gained from the Sea to whom belonging 237. b. 239. a. Ouse sive Wellenhee The antient passage thereof to the Sea by Utwelle and Wisebeche 246. a. 248. a. 249. a. 256. a. 299. b. 300. a. 302. b. 333. a. 394. a. b. 395. a. b. 396. a. The Great Level Observations touching it viz. what it was at first 171. b. How it became overflowed by the Sea 172. a. Holland and Marshland how first gained from the Sea 174. a. How the main Level came first to be a Fen 175. b. The rise course and outfalls of the several Rivers passing through it 176. a. How those their outfalls became obstructed 182. a. Of the vast extent and great depth of the Fresh waters occasioned by those obstructions of their outfalls 179. a. The general drayning thereof when first attempted 375. The chief contents of the Bill handled in Parliament anno quarto Regis Iac. touching the general Drayning 386. Tides Their flowing higher in Humber by four foot than formerly 132. a. ERRATA PAge 9. l. 52. farther p. 10. l. 10. the Belgique p. 44. a. l. 32. S. Nicholas p. 57. l. 30. Marshes p. 143. b. in margine ligulâ p. 159. a. in margine penès Comitem p. 192. a. l. 6. celeri p. 200. a. l. 24. Jurors p. 709. a. l. 9. xxxiiii Chapt. in marg vide cap. 38. p. 211. b. l. 20. Camvill p. 244. a. l. 12. xxxiiii th Chapt. p. 299. a. in marg Cap. xlvi p. 300. b. l. 29. xlvi Chapt. A Note of the Contents of the Surrounded Grounds in every particular Lordship in the Level of Ancoime from Bishopbriggs to Ferrebriggs in Lincoln-shire undertaken to be Drayned by Sir Iohn Monson The Lordships on the East-side The Lords of the Mannors or chief Owners that adventured or Consented for the Proportions   Acr. Ro. Perc. KIngerby 25 0 0 Sir Thomas Puckering Lord consented Owersbie 350 0 0 Sir Iohn Monson Lord Adventured Thornton 208 1 11 The Bishop of Ely South-Kelsey 419 2 34 Sir Edw. Ascough Lord Adventured North-Kelsey 1214 2 3 Mr. Chamberlain Consented for Mr. Barde Kadney Hosham and Newstead 2010 1 39 Sir Will. Pelham Lord Adventured Kettlebie 0379 2 01 Will. Tirwitt Esq Lord Adventured Wrawbie cum Brigge 0645 1 08 Elsham 0807 2 11 Sir Sam. Oldfeild Lord Adventured Worlettbie 1369 3 13 Sir William Elvish Lord Consented Bondbie 0881 0 27 Sir Tho. Williamson Lord Adventured Saxbie 1122 0 29 Sir Mich. Wharton Lord Adventured Horstow 0517 2 16 ... Dorrel Esq Lord Adventured Ferrebye 0275 0 27   The Lordships on the West-side The Lords of the Mannors that Adventured or Consented for the Proportions   Acr. Ro. Perc. Glentham 0099 3 34 Ed. Turney Esq Lord Consented Bishopp Norton 0325 1 18 Ed. Whichcote Esq Consented Atterbie Snitterb Waddingham 0885 2 10 The King chief Lord. Waddingham per se 0707 2 12 Sir William Thorold Lord Consented Redburne 0819 0 34 Sir Thomas Stiles Lord Adventured Hibaldstowe 0927 1 07 Scawbie 0571 1 16 Mr. Nelthroppe Consented Caistroppe 0582 2 01 William Anderson Esq Adventured Broughton 1084 3 03 Applebie cum Thornham 1645 1 10 Step. Andersou Esq Lord Adventured Roxbie 0573 3 37 Sir Ed. Molesly then Lord Consented Winterton 0860 0 11 The King Chief Lord. The true but short state of Sir Iohn Monsons Business 1 The Towns are 26 2 The Lords of Mannors that adventured were 14 3 The Lords of Mannors that consented were 10 4 So as the Lords that were the chiefest and greatest Owners in 24 of the Towns were either Adventurers in or Consenters to the Dreyning and none of the rest opposed before the work was finished and adjudged 5. That Sir Iohn Monson undertook it as a Servant to the Country upon the desires of the Commissioners of Sewers and divers others leaving every man free to adventure for his own that thought it a bargain of advantage or otherwise to leave it upon him to undergo the hazard and lay down the money for their parts As appears by The Commissioners Certificate and their Petition to the King The two Exemplifications under the great Se●l And to shew that the Drayning hereof is of a publick advantage to the Kingdom and hath been the endeavours of the most Eminent Persons concern'd in it since King Edward the first 's time the Records following will make it appear a Esc. 16. E. 1. n. 47. b Esc. 16. E. 1. n. 47. c Pat. 18 E. 1. m. 30. in dorso d Pat. 23. E. 1. m. 15. in dorso e Pat. 6. E. 2. p. 1. m. 17. in dorso f Pat. 6. E. 2. p. 1. m. 17. in dorso g Pat. 3. E. 3. p. 1. m. 31. in dorso h Pat. 19. E. 3. p. 1. m. 18. in dorso i Pat. 23. E. 3. p. 1. m. 6. in dorso k Pat. 30. E 3. p. 2. m. 11. in dorso l Pat. 36 E. 3. p. 1. m. 6. in do●so m Pat. 39. E. 3. p. 2. m. 31. in dorso n Pat. 40 E. 3. p. 1. m. 34. in do●so o Pat. 15. R. 2. p. 1. m. 37. in dorso p Plac. coram Rege term T●in 4. H. 4. rot 13. Linc. q Pat. 6. H. 5. p. 1. m. 21. in dorso r Pat. 22. E. 4. p. 1. m. 22. in dorso s 5. Sept. 12. Jacob. t 2. Aug. 13. Car. u 16. Julii 8. Car. w U●t Maii 10. Car. x 19. Julii 10. Car. y Ult. Martii 11. Car. z 24. Aug. 11. Car. A a 27. Oct. 14. Car. ●b 19. Feb. 14. Car. C c 4. Maii 14. Car. D d Exemplifyed 24. Feb. 15. Car. ANNO XIII Caroli II. Regis In Parliam apud
heirs or such person or persons and their heirs as he or his Executors should nominate by their writing enrolled in one of the said Queens Courts of Record at Westminster or by his the said Iacobus his last Will and Testament in consideration of such recompence should have and enjoy the one moytie thereof to be severed from the residue within two years next after the said winning thereof by four or mo discreet Commissioners to be nominated and appointed by the Lord Chancelour of England or Lord keeper of the great Seal for the time being and being so severed Lots to be cast for concluding of each proportion to either parties After which about two years Queen Elizabeth issued out a Commission to Thomas Wotton George Moulton and others bearing date at ............ 7 Eliz. to enquire whether the said Iames Aconcius who so undertook the inning of those Lands lying in the Parishes of Erith Lesnes and Plumstede marsh had in pursuance of the said Act of Parliament so held at Westminster 12 Ian. 5 Eliz. accordingly performed the same and for which he was to have the inheritance of the one moytie of the said Land so won and inned Whereupon the said Commissioners certified ult Ian. 8 Eliz. that six hundred Acres thereof were then won and inned with Walls Banks c. from the water and floud of the River of Thames according to the tenor of the before-specified Statute All which is more particularly taken notice of by another Act of Parliament made in the 8th year of Queen Eliz. reciting that whereas the said Iacobus did win some part thereof which was by the violence of the flouds shortly after lost and being not able to recover the same he did depute Iohn Baptista Castilion one of the Grooms of the said Queens privy Chamber Iohn Gresham Mercer Francis Robinson Richard Young Grocers Simon Horsepoole and Henry May Drapers Citizens of London at their costs and chardges to inne fence and win the same or some convenient portion thereof by authority of which deputation they the said Iohn Iohn c. did inne and win part thereof containing about six hundred Acres whereof a division was made and the one part called the Eastmarsh alotted to the said Iacobus and his assigns and the other called the Westmarsh to the owners c. Which part called the Eastmarsh he the said Iames assigned to the before-mentioned Iohn Iohn c. in consideration of their chardge which amounted to five thousand pounds Whereupon it was enacted that the said Iohn Baptista Castilion and the rest of the undertakers above-mentioned should have and enjoy the same to them and their heirs for ever to be held of the chief Lord of the Fee by such services as it was formerly held And moreover that they should have power to inne and win the rest of the surrounded grounds from the tenth of March next ensuing during the space of eight years and being so won to enjoy a moytie thereof to be divided by Lots as in the former Act. And in 14 Eliz. by an Act of Parliament then made which recited the former Acts and that six years of the eight years before limited were expired and yet the work not finished it was farther enacted that he the said Iohn and the rest of the undertakers should have eight years more from the tenth of Iune following the date thereof for to accomplish their work in and to have the moytie thereof so won and divided as aforesaid And after this viz. in 23 Eliz. by another Act of Parliament at that time made and reciting all the before-mentioned Acts as also that whereas since the making of the Statute in 14 Eliz. the said said Iohn Gresham constituted one Thomas Allen to be his assignee and the said Henry May constituted Walter Fisher his assignee to and for the said affairs and whereas six years parcel of the said eight years were almost expired the 8th of May in 14 Eliz. and thereupon eight years more added to that term as abovesaid And moreover that since the making of that Statute in 14 Eliz. all the parts of the said undertakers were come to the hands of the said Iohn Baptista Castilion and of Thomas Smith George Barn the said Richard Young Thomas Fisher Ferdinando Pointz Iames Guichardine and Roger Iames And whereas the said eight years were fully expired and that the inning thereof had by flouds and tempests been hindred that it could not be finished without longer time It was therefore enacted that it should be lawfull for the parties abovesaid to inne the same within two years after the end of that present Session of Parliament and then to enjoy the moytie by such partition as aforesaid and to take such Reed and Earth upon the premisses for the inning thereof as should be most needfull And in consideration that they should maintain the Banks of the same by the space of one whole year after the wining thereof it was further enacted that they should have an half of the eighth part of the other half so won as aforesaid to be divided as aforesaid And moreover that in consideration of the great chardges in and about the same the premises should be dischardged of all titles whatsoever for the space of seven years next after the inning fencing and winning of the same And that all Shelves and Forelands then being or that afterwards should be betwixt the said Banks and the River of Thames should be kept and maintained at the common chardge of the said owners and Inners their heirs and assigns and that no Earth or Reeds should be taken from the said Shelves and Forelands or other thing to any use than for the repairing of the Banks for defence of the said Marshes upon penalty of five pounds for every such offence to be forfeited to the said Inners or owners or any of them who by the said Act were authorized to sue for the same by Action of Debt Bill plaint or information in any Court of Records c. In the 4th year of King Iames upon a Petition then exhibited in Parliament for inning and winning of certain Marsh grounds lying in the drowned Marshes of Lesnes and Fants in this County which had been of long time overflowed it was enacted that William Burrell of Ratcliff in the County of Midlesex Gentleman who had covenanted with the owners of those surrounded grounds by Indentures made betwixt them and him dated the seven and twentieth of February Aº D. 1606. for the consideration in the said Indenture expressed to do his best endeavour therein should have power to enter upon the work and to take Reed and Earth in any part of the said drowned Marsh so as he the said William nor any imployed therein under him should digg within xx Roods of any wall already made within that Marsh And that immediately after his accomplishment of the same he the said William his Heirs and assignes to have the one
choak● up did endanger the drowning the adjacent Marshes and that the clensing thereof pertained to the heirs of the said Richard And lastly that there was a certain Sewer called Ozflete pas●ing from the water of S. Thomas unto the Thames stopt up also for want of clensing to the great annoyance of the Lands of Iohn Capsho and Robert Allard which Sewer ought to have been scoured by the said Iohn and Robert It was therefore ordained by the before-specified Justices that the said Sir Iohn le Latimer and the rest of the persons so presented as aforesaid should be distrained to make good the several repairs above-mentioned so belonging unto them In 26 E. 3. Will. Thorpe Iames H●fee and Will. de Fifhide were appointed 〈◊〉 view and repair the Banks a●●he Stewes and in other places adja●●●●● by the breach whereof divers ground● and meadows lay then totally drowned And in 37 E. 3. Edmund Chelreye Thomas Morice and Michael Skillyng had the like appointment for those Banks neer the said Stewes which were opposite to the Mannour House of Iohn de Mo●bray Before which Commissioners divers presentments were then made touching those Banks and Sewers neer the same Stewes where divers persons being found faulty paid fines to the King others acknowleged that they ought to repair them by the perch and others had made good what belonged to them to do whereof the Prior of S. Iohns of Ierusalem was one who had two Mills there and other lands to the value of xl per annum The like was certified of Sir Iohn de Moubray Knight and Elizabeth his wife daughter and heir of Iohn de Segrave In 42 E. 3. Iohn Lovekin Will. Ta●ke Will. de Neudigate an● oth●rs had the like assignation for the Banks c. extending from a place called D●nielissewalle in this County of Surrey to Roddis●orne in Kent And in 48 E. 3. Robert Bealknap Will. Halden Roger Dygge and others for the same Banks betwixt Danyeleswalle and the Land of the Prior of S. Marie de Overe and about a medow called Cro●chemede by which Commi●sion ●h●y ●ere directed to proceed according to the Law and Custome of this Realm of England In 4 H. 5. Iohn P●eston Sir Iohn D●ayton Knight Thomas Rothewell junior Thowes Drewe Richard Wydeforde and Thomas Coventre were constituted Commissioners for the view and repair of the Banks Ditches c. all along the Verge of the Thames on both sides from Reading to Oxford which were then broken in many places with appointment to proceed therein according to the Law and Custome of England The next year following Iohn Preston Iohn Martyn Iohn Corf Iohn Appulton Robert Skyrne and Nicholas Conyngston had the like Commission for those Banks c. betwixt Depford strond and Bermundsey wherein they were directed to act according to the Custome of ●he Marsh and the Law and Custome of this Realm In 22 H. 6. Sir Iohn Burcestre Knight Ric●ard Bamme Richard Com●e Will. O●●urne Adam Lynelord Iohn Martyn Iohn Malton and Will. Kyrton were assigned to view all those Banks on the side of Thames and marshes adjoyning aswell within the Lordships of South Lambehithe North Lambehithe Lambehithe mershe and Parysh-garden as in Southwerk Bermundsey Retherhithe Depford stronde Peckham Hacham Camerwell Stokwell Clopham and Newyngton in the Counties of Surrey and Kent which were at that time broken and in decay and to take order for the repair of them As also to make necessary Laws and Ordinances for the safeguard and preservation of them according to the Laws and Customes of Romeney Marsh And mor●over to impr●st so many Diggers and Labourers to be imployed th●rein upon comp●●ent salaryes as should be necessary in resp●ct of the great necessity at that time for the speedy dispatch of that work The like Commission and direction had Iohn Bamburgh Richard Bamme Richard Drax and Philip Leweston in 25 H. 6. for the Banks in the same Lordships and places And in 31 H. 6. Sir Iohn Burcestre Knight Richard Waller Esquire Will. Laken Philip Leweston and others had the like for the view of all the Banks from East-Grenewiche in Kent to Wandesworth in Surrey So also had the said Sir Iohn Burcestre Sir Iohn Cheyne Knights Richard Waller Esquire Will. Laken and others for those betwixt West-Grenewiche and Wandesworth aforesaid viz. to the Sluces call●d Harescluse R●therhithe Suthwerke Bermondsey Parysga●dyn L●mbehythe Lambehythe mersh Batersey Wandesworth Clopham Pekham and Camberwerwell The like Commission for the same Places and to proceed accordingly had Sir Iohn Bourgchier of Barners Knight Sir Iohn Burcestre Sir Iohn Cheyne Knights and others in 33 H. 6. So also had Sir Raphe Iosselyn Knight Mayor of the City of London Sir Walter Moile Knight Sir Iohn Burcestre Knight Nich. Gaynesford Esquire Iohn Wode and others in 5 E. 4. And likewise Sir Richard Fenys Lord Dacres Iohn Abbot of Bermundsey Henry Prior of S. Marie Overey in Suthwerk Will. Crosse Master of the Hospital of S. Thomas the martyr in Suthwerk and divers others in 14 E. 4. CAP. XV. HAving now done with the Marshes on the South part of Thames I come to those on the North side lying in the Counties of Midlesex and Essex beginning with Middlesex where the first mention I find of any thing in this kind is that in 26 E. 1. Robert de Retford and Henry Spigurnell were assigned to view and repair the Banks and Ditches in Stebbenhethe and the parts adjacent After this viz. on Wednes●ay next after the Feast of S. Martin the Bishop in 18 E. 2. there was an inquisition taken at the Hospital of S. Kathrines neer the Tower of London before Will. de Broke and Robert de Kellesey then the Kings Justices for view of the Banks Ditches c. lying betwixt the said Hospital and the Town of Chadewelle and for repair of the same before whom the Jurors did present upon their Oaths that a certain person of antient time Lord of the Mannour of Stebenhethe before-mentioned whose name they knew not did by his industry recover a certain Marsh there containing about an hundred Acres of Land which Marsh was then drowned by the overflowing of the Thames and at the time of the said presentment so made had Banks Ditches c. and did so lye betwixt the said Hospital and Shadwelle but through the want of their repair was then frequently overflowed and in divers places drowned to the great damage of the people in those parts Which Lord of the said Mannour of Stebenhethe did afterwards grant by Charter to certain of his free men xlij acres and a half of Land with the appurtenances severally by parcells to be held by them and their heirs by certain services for ever and to repair and maintain the said Banks Ditches Sewers c. viz. each man upon his own proper ground bordering on the said River of Thames of which xlij
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
at least which was a very great work 2. The Middle Levell also they defended from Peterborough water by a large Bank made from Peterborough to Wisebeche this being raised upon the foundation of that which the King begun excepting a little turn in Waldersey Bank From the River Ouse they likewise defended it by a great Bank extending from Erith to Salters lode on the North VVest side of Bedford River and made another new River parallel to the said Bedford river from Erith to Salters lode aforesaid containing an hundred foot in bredth and imbanked it with Banks on borh sides of threescore foot wide at the bottom ten at the top and eight foot in height The other new Drayns which he and his Participants made or repaired within this Levell being these viz. Uermudens Ea Hamonds Ea Stony Draine Nene old Chanel Pophams Ea Marshland Cut Moores Drayne Witlesey Dikes and some other small ones And the Sluses those at Salters lode Pophams Ea and Marshland Cutts 3. For scou●ing the South Levell from the overflowings of Ouse they raised also a great Bank from Over to Salters lode The lesser Rivers viz. of Grant Mildenhall Brandon and Stoke being defended by smaller Banks From Salters lode to Stow bridge they likewise caused a large River of one hundred and twenty foot wide and ten foot deep to be cut for the more speedy conveying away of the waters which River is now called Downham Ea As also two great Sasses at Salters lode for the passage of Boats and other great Vessels with three Sluses at the end of Downham Ea And divers small Drayns viz. Grunty fen Drayn the In-Drayn to the Bank of the Hundred foot River Reach lode and many others So that having accomplisht the whole work within the compass of five years the said Level was by a Decree of Sewers made at Ely on the 25th of March Anno 1653. adjudged to be fully drayned Whereupon the said Earl and his Participants had possession of those ninety five thousand Acres awarded to them CHAP. LV. Lindsey Levell Extending from Bourne to Lincolne OF this though I might have not incongruously discourst under my title of Kesteven and Holand yet forasmuch as 't is in truth a part of the great Levell before-mentioned however not so now taken notice of in Common reputation I have thought it more proper to speak of it here The first general attempt towards the Drayning of this part of the Country whereof I have taken notice was upon a complaint of the Inhabitants at a Session of Sewers held at Sempringham in the 8 year of the late Queen Elizabeth's Reign the Earl of Lincolne high Admiral of England with several other persons of quality being then Commissioners Whereupon a general Tax was laid for repairing and enlarging the Drayns and Sewers to carry off the waters which then annoyed these parts But little was done to any purpose herein as it seems for it appears that at another Session of Sewers held at Swinstede in the 17 year of that Queens Reign the Country complained that they were drowned more than formerly so that the Commissioners then decreeed that those Drayns which the Duke of Suffolke and others had ordained to be begun about the latter end of King Henry the 8 time as also some others should forthwith be set upon and laid a Tax accordingly But no payment of that Tax being made the work proceeded not Nor was there any farther considerable attempt therein whereof I have heard till the 5 year of the late King Charles of blessed memory that Sir Anthony Ireby Knight Sergeant Callice and other Commissioners finding all former essays fruitless by reason that the Inhabitants would never pay the Taxes and that the lands being surrounded had no Cattel upon them for distress and considering that the King as 't is observable in all the Statutes of Sewers was to give direction in works of this nature they did by their Letters represent to his Majesty the necessity of Drayning these lands and the Commodity which might accrue thereby humbly beseeching him to recommend some person of Honour to contract with them as Undertaker for performance of that work The King therefore understanding their design to be for the Drayning of all the surrounded Fens on the North side of the River of Glen in this County of Lincolne referred the view of those lying on both sides the Rivers of Fosse and Wythom from beyond the City of Lincolne to Kyme Ea unto Sir Henry Vane Knight Sir Robert Carr Baronet and others who in order to that good work did in a Session of Sewers held at Sleford 26 Febr. 8 Car. where were also present and Commissioners Robert Earl of Lindsey Theophilus Earl of Lincolne the Lord Willoughby Sir Henry Fines and others lay a Tax of xiij s. iiij d. the Acre for the scouring and clensing of the said Rivers and all Gotes and Drayns c. within those precincts to be imposed upon all the Landholders in the said low grounds and to be paid before the ix of April then next following And for the better furthering and compleating thereof the said Commissioners meeting again at Boston upon the second of March then next ensuing reciting their Decree so made at Sleford did extend their said Tax of xiijs iiijd the Acre to the other parts of that Level Nevertheless little was done therein as it seems till about three years afterwards but then the said King by his Letters Patents bearing date at Westminster 2 Aprilis in the xi year of his Reign directed unto George Earl of Rutland and others Commissioners of Sewers for the said Level recommended unto them Robert Earl of Lindsey Lord high Chamberlain of England a person of very great honour to be the sole Undertaker for the drayning of the whole Whereupon the said Commissioners at another Session of Sewers held at Sleford upon the second of Iune then next following proceeded to a treaty with his Lordship for that purpose and agreed with him to accept of twenty four thousand Acres in recompence of his chardges therein which was then accordingly decreed the work being to be perfected within the space of six years next ensuing the feast of St. Michael th'archangel then following And after this viz. in a Session of Sewers held at Boston the 29. of March the next year ensuing recitall being made of that Decree made at Sleford whereby the said Earl of Lindsey for the considerations therein expressed was to have those twenty four thousand Acres of land to be indifferently allotted out of the several Fens c. to enjoy to himself and his heirs for ever viz. as soon as ten thousand Acres or more should be drayned to have his portion thereof forthwith assigned As also the like recitall that upon consideration of the same Decree and other former preceding Decrees and Ordinances made at a ●ession of Sewers held at