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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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they pleased for their redemption Whereupon the said Participants not knowing otherwise what to do complained several times to Michael Monkton a Justice of Peace in those parts who not only refused to grant any Warrants or pursue any legal course for their preservation but on the contrary gave ●n●ouragement to the Riotors and upon an Indictment exhibited against some of them in the Sessions for these outrages which was found by the Jury some of the Justices there sitting thinking it fit to fine the Delinqnents at 4 or 5 marks a piece the said Monckton moved openly that their fines might be but six pence a piece and insisted so earnestly thereon that the fine imposed on them was no more than twelve pence a man Howbeit after this viz. in February 1650. upon a full hearing in the Exchequer a Decree was made for establishing the possession with the Participants which being published on the place in presence of divers of the said Inhabitants they having gotten the influence of the said Lilburne Wildeman and Noddel declared that they would not give any obedience thereto nor to any order of the Exchequer or Parliament and said that they could make as good a Parliament themselves Some expressing that it was a Parliament of Clouts and that if they sent any forces they would raise men to resist them and thereupon proceeded to the defacing of the Church at Santoft and within ten days time did totally demolish the Town it self with other Houses thereabouts to the number of fourscore and two habitations besides Barns stables and Out-houses as also a Windmill and destroyed all the Corn and Rape then growing on the said 3400 Acres the damage of all which amounted to fourscore thousand pounds as appeared by the Testimonies of sundry witnesses All which waste and spoil being done the said Lilburne Wildman Monckton and Noddel confederating together made an agreement with several of the Inhabitants of Epworth that in consiration of 2000 Acres of the said land so wasted to be given to Lilburne and Wildman and 200 Acres to Noddell they the the said Libburne Wildman and Noddel should defend them from all those Riots past and maintain them the said Inhabitants in possession of all the rest of the 7400 Acres before laid waste and keep them drie and in accomplishment of that agreement sealed Deeds accordingly VVhich being done the said Lilburne and Noddel with some others came to Santoft Church on the Sunday and forced the French Congregation from thence telling them that they should not come thither except they were stronger than they And after this the said Lilburne and Noddel went to another Lordship called Crowle where they agreed with some of the Inhabitants thereof to get their Commons again as Epworth had done advising them to impound the Tenants Cattell and that if any Replevin were brought they should impound them again and break down their Fences and eat up their crops and so tire them till they had attorned Tenants to them all which they did accordingly The Tenants therefore being thus terrified and seeing their condition no better than their Neighbours took Leases from Iasper Margrave and George Stovin two of Lilburnes Confederates who gave bonds of save them harmlesse by which practice and the former force the Petitioners became outed of their possessions in both these Mannours And at the making of those Leas●s Noddel declared openly in the presence of divers persons that he would lay xxs. with any man that assoon as Lilburne came to London there should be a new Parliament and that Lilburne should be one of them and call that Parliament to account Farther adding that they having now finished this of Lincolnshire meaning gotten the land from the Petitioners they would go into Yorshire id est the rest of the levell and do the like there and then they would give the Attorney General work enough to do And Noddel said at another time that now they had drawn their case they would print it and nail it at the Parliament dore and if they would not do them justice they would come up and making an out-cry pull them out by the ears And having thus possest themselves of the proportions above mentioned they dimised several parts thereof to sundry persons Lilburne himself repairing the House which had been built for the Minister and almost pulled down by the Rioters put his servants to reside and keep possession in it and imployed the Church for a stable and Barn A Narrative of all which barbarous outrages and high insolencies of the before-specified Lilburne Wildman and Noddel with their confederates were drawn up in writing by a Committee of the said Parliament to be represented to the House but that Parliament being dissolved by the power of the Army April 10th 1653. which was before this Report could be made by that Commitee the Council of State which was set up about ten days following did send for it and made reference thereof to a select Committee of the same Council who also farther examining the business and finding what had been so deposed and reported to be true signified as much to the said Council of State whereupon they did order that the forces of the Army quartering in the levell of Hatfield Chase or within the Counties of Yorke Lincolne and Notingham or any of them or any other that then were or might be in those parts should be aiding and assisting to the Officers of Justice and the said participants for setling and establishing the possession of the 7400 Acres of those late improved lands within the Mannour of Epworth in the said Report mentioned with the said participants and also for executing the Decrees and Orders of the said Court of Exchequer or any Courts of Justice touching their possession therein and likewise for preventing such Riots and outrages for the future And in respect of the great damage suffered by the said participants and their Tenants they farther ordered that the Commissioners of the great Seal for the time being should award a special Commission of Oyer and Terminer to the Judges of Assize for the said respective Counties to try the Ryotors and to punish them according to Law and Justice and to enquire of the damages suffered as aforesaid by the said participants and their Tenants to the end that they might have just reparations for the same VVhich order beareth date at White Hall the 31th of August 1653. But notwithstanding this the former Orders and Letters of the Parliament Council the said Inhabitants still continued in their riotous rebellious posture not giving any obedience thereto nor to the Decrees and Orders of the Court of Exchequer nor Precepts of the Court of Sewers standing in defiance and opposition to all Authority Upon another Petition therefore presented by the said participants and their Tenants together with a Remonstrance of the Commissioners of Sewers unto the Lord Protector and his Council an Order of reference was made upon the xvth
Hue aud Cry as also for blood shed within his said Lordship at all times of the year After this viz. in the same third year of the said King Henry the sixth William Babyngton Sir Iohn Colvyll and Sir Henry Rocheforth Knights Will. Paston Tho. Derham and Iohn Mannyng were constituted Commissioners to view the Banks Sewers Ditches Bridges and Causeys betwixt UUalpole and Tilney and to determine all things therein according to the Law and Custome of this Realm as also to take so many Diggers and Labourers upon competent wages as they should think necessary for that service in regard of the great expedition which through the decay of those works was then required Several other Commissions were afterwards issued out in this Kings reign to the like purpose scil in 8 H. 6. to Sir Henry Rochefort and Sir Robert Clyftone Knights William Pastone William Goodrede Thomas Derham Simon Fyncham and Thomas Shuldham for all those Banks Sewers c. in the Towns of Upp●welle Outwelle and Enemethe betwixt the River which goth from Wellynhee to the Priory of Mullycourt and the River which passeth from Enemethe unto the said Priory and to proceed therein as abovesaid In 22 H. 6. to Sir Thomas Scales Kt. William Yelverton Hugh Prior of Wirmegay Thomas Trusbut Iohn Fyncham Thomas Salesbury William Willy and Raphe Geytone for those throughout the whole Province of Marshland and the parts adjacent from Marham to Wigenhale and to do all things therein according to the Laws and Customes of Romeney Marsh. The like Commission had the said Sir Thomas Scales William Yelvertone Thomas Trusbut William Eweyn and Thomas Salisbury in 30 H. 6. So also had Iohn Earl of Oxford Iohn Viscount Beaumont Iohn Heydone Iohn Fyncham and Iohn Bekyswell for all those betwixt the waters of W●lle and the water which leadeth from Welle to Salterys lode and Wygenhale In 21 H. 7 the said Bank called the new Pokedike was totally measured and then found to contain in length from the house of Iohn Pye at Salters lode unto the house of Iohn Bekeswell at Northdelf xviij furlongs and xxvij perches the repair thereof belonging as followeth viz. To the Tenants of the Lord Bardolf xxij perches To the Town of Wigenhale three furlongs xviij foot and four inches To the Towns of Tilney Islington and Clenchwardon three furlongs xviij foot and four inches To Tirington three furlongs xviij foot and four inches To Walpole three furlongs xviij foot and four inches To UUalton and Emneth three furlongs xviij foot and four inches To Walsoken three furlongs xviij foot and four inches To Iohn Bekyswell opposite to his house at North delf xv perches And from Northdelf to Mullycourt it contained in length xiiij furlongs and seven perches whereof the repair belonged as followeth viz. To Walsoken two furlongs xv perches five foot and four inches To UUalton and Emneth two furlongs xv perches five foot and four inches To Terington two furlongs xv perches five foot and four inches To Tilney with Islington and Clenchwarton two furlongs xv foot and four inches To Wigenhale two furlongs xv perches five foot and four inches Memorandum that upon the seventh day of Iuly 21 H. 7. every Acre of ground in Marshland was assessed at four inches for the maintenance of the said Bank But notwithstanding this care taken for repair thereof such was the wickednesse of some people that they divers times made breaches in sundry parts of it insomuch as complaint being made in Parliament Aº 22 H. 8. this ensuing Act was thereupon made WHereas before this time divers evill disposed personnes of their perverse and evill dispositions maliciously at divers and sundry times have cut cast down and broken up divers parts of the Dike called new Powdich in Marshland in the County of Norff. and the Broken dyke otherwise called Oldfield dyke by Marshland in the Isle of Ely in the County of Cambridge By reason whereof aswell by the great aboundance of the Salt water as also by the course of the Fresh water entring and coming into and by the said part of the said Ditches so broken and cast down the grounds and Pastures within the Countie of Marshland in the County aforesaid have bene divers and many times drowned and surrounded with the water aforesaid so that no profit thereof might be taken by the owners and occupyers of the said ground And the Inhabitants within the said Marshland and the Levell of the same many and sundry times have been not only put to importunate chardges and expenses to their extreme damage and costs but also to their grete undoings having lost much of their Cattel and Beasts then being and depasturing upon and within Marshland aforesaid to their grete damage and losse and to the grete decay of the Common welthe of the Country adjoyning to the same And also by reason of the same waters much people have bene drowned in their beds within their houses and have lost the most port of their goods being within the same For reformation whereof it is ordayned enacted and established by the King our Sovereign Lord by the assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in the present Parliament assembled and by the authority of the same that every such perverse and malicious cutting down and breaking up of any part or parts of the said Dikes or of any other Banks being parcell of the Rinde or uttermost part of the said Country of Mershland at every time and times hereafter from henceforth by any person or personnes committed and done otherwise than in working upon the said Banks and Dikes for the repairing fortifying and amending of the same to be taken reputed and adjudged Felony and that the offenders and doers of the same and every of them be adjudged and reputed Felons And that the Iustices of Peace of the said Counties of Norfolk and Cambridge in the said Isle at every of their Sessions within the said Isle and Counties to be kept by the authority aforesaid have full power to cause enquiry to be made after every such offence so at any time in form aforesaid hereafter to be committed and done and to award the like processe against every of the said offenders with like judgement and execution of the same if they or any of them be thereof found guilty by verdict or otherwise as the said Iustices have used and accustomed to do upon other Felonies being Felony at the common Law Which Statute was in 5 Edw. 6. by an Act of Parliament then largely made for the repeal of divers Treasons and Felonies cleerly repealed and made void But in 2 3 Ph. M. it was again revived In which year there were these ensuing Ordinances made upon the eighth day of April by the chief Inhabitants of this whole Country of Marshland and Town of Wigenhale touching the Old Powdike and Broken dike 1 That the said old Pow diche be sufficiently made