Читать книгу Taming the Flood: Rivers, Wetlands and the Centuries-Old Battle Against Flooding - Jeremy Purseglove - Страница 21
LEADING FIGURES IN THE BATTLE TO DRAIN THE FENS
ОглавлениеA Dutch engineer, believed to be Cornelius Vermuyden. © London Borough of Barking and Dagenham
Charles I. © National Portrait Gallery
Oliver Cromwell, painted in the year of the execution of Charles I. © National Portrait Gallery
The contemporary chronicler and advocate of seventeenth-century drainage, Sir William Dugdale.
Away with boats and rudder, farewell both boots and skatches,
No need of one nor th’other, men now make better matches;
Stilt-makers all and tanners, shall complain of this disaster,
For they will make each muddy lake for Essex calves a pasture.
The feather’d fowls have wings, to fly to other nations;
But we have no such things, to help our transportations;
We must give place (oh grievous case) to horned beasts and cattle,
Except that we can all agree to drive them out by battle.22
Battle was what they settled for. The dwellers of the Lincolnshire fens ‘fell upon the Adventurers, broke the sluices, laid waste their lands, threw down their fences … and forcibly retained possession of the land.23 The northern fens were to remain the preserve of fishers and fowlers for another 150 years. In Cambridgeshire, Sir Miles Sandys, an adventurer whose capital had been sorely overstretched by the drainage projects, wrote to his son that if ‘order not be taken, it will turn out to be a general rebellion in all the Fen towns’.24
General rebellion, indeed, but not only in the Fens. In 1638 the commoners found a champion of their causes in a local farmer whose career was ultimately to lead him far beyond the battles of the wetlands. In that year it was ‘commonly reported by the commoners … that Mr Cromwell of Ely had undertaken, they paying him a groat for every cow they had upon the common, to hold the drainers in suit for five years’.25 They appointed Cromwell their advocate at the commission of sewers in Huntingdon, and he ensured that a clause concerning the commandeering of common land was included in the catalogue of complaints known as the Grand Remonstrance presented to the king in 1641. The following year Civil War was declared, and drainage works fell into abeyance. In 1649 the war was over and the king executed, but that summer a surprising turn of events took place in the Fens. In May, Oliver Cromwell, erstwhile champion of the commoners, was named as one of the commissioners, together with the earl of Bedford, under a new Act for the Draining of the Great Level. He was to send a major of his own regiment to suppress the commoners’ riots; and in 1654 he issued an ordinance to protect Bedford and his works, himself receiving 200 acres of the drained land as a reward. After intensive wrangling over terms and money, during which the adventurers declared that it was ‘not fitt to depend upon Sir Cornelius Vermuyden any longer’, the latter was re-engaged in 1650.26 The following year, despite the midnight activities of ‘the meaner sort of Burwell’27 and other villages, he completed the New Bedford, or Hundred Foot, river, parallel to the Old Bedford built fourteen years before. The two massive channels run straight towards the Wash, enclosing a flood-land which still fills up in winter, as Vermuyden intended. They are his greatest monument. In 1653, after the remaining works had been completed by Dutch prisoners of war under Vermuyden’s direction, a service of thanksgiving was held in Ely Cathedral; and in the same year Vermuyden was employed by his earlier adversary, the lord protector, on diplomatic missions to the Netherlands. The fenmen and their fens were under control at last. Samuel Fortrey celebrated the achievement in verse:
I sing floods muzzled and the Ocean tam’d
Luxurious rivers govern’d and reclam’d.
. . . . . .
Streams curb’d with Dammes like Bridles, taught to obey,
And run as straight as if they saw their way.
. . . . . .
New hands shall learn to work, forget to steal
New legs shall go to church, new knees shall kneel.28
In the great struggle to extend cultivation to feed the growing cities, the peasantry had been defeated no less decisively than the Crown. From this turning point, enclosure and drainage were to shape both lives and landscape in the English countryside, up to the present day.
In 1658 Cromwell died, by appropriate irony, hastened on his way by malaria, probably contracted during his campaigns in the bogs of Ireland. About this time, Vermuyden vanished from public life, although it was not until 1677 that he died, full of years and riches, and was buried in St Margaret’s, Westminster.29 It is interesting to speculate on the possible reasons for his total obscurity during the intervening years of the Restoration. He certainly made many enemies, and not only among the commoners. In 1633 legal action was taken against him by his countrymen and co-adventurers at Hatfield Chase. His earliest ally had been Sir Robert Heath, who had promoted Vermuyden’s advancement at court, and had even managed to get him out of prison. When Heath, a staunch Royalist, fled to France under the Commonwealth, Vermuyden appears to have expropriated Heath’s share of a mine at Wirksworth, and Heath’s son was still petitioning for his rightful property in 1652. With the new regime in 1660, there must have been those who had old scores to settle. They may also have been quick to point out that Vermuyden’s ‘Great Design’ was already turning sour. He had been lampooned by contemporary dramatists. In Thomas Randolph’s play The Muse’s Looking Glass, a conversation takes place between an engineer named Banausus and a gentleman called Colax:
BANAUSUS. I have a rare device to set Dutch windmills Upon New-market Heath, and Salisbury Plaine, To draine the Fens.
COLAX. The Fens Sir are not there.
BANAUSUS. But who knowes but they may be?30
How true this still rings for modern consultants on the look-out for schemes for which no justification exists. Vermuyden had faced remarkable difficulties, not least the age-old problem of clients who want the profit at the end of the day, but who are not prepared to lay out sufficient capital to achieve it. Consequently, a linchpin of Vermuyden’s scheme, a catch-dyke skirting the eastern edge of the fens, was abandoned, to be constructed only in the 1960s.
Such inadequacies were made far worse by something which Vermuyden could not have foreseen: peat shrinkage. The people might be made to kneel, but the elements were not quite so easy to muzzle. The very efficiency of any improvement speeded up the lowering of the land as the peat dried and ‘wasted’ through the activities of bacteria and fungi. Today the surface of the peat fens lies only a few feet above or below sea level. Children playing in fen churchyards in the nineteenth century were able to reach down and touch the coffins exposed by the wasted peat.31 As the peat shrank, the critical outfall of the river Ouse into the North Sea inevitably began to silt up. By 1663 real problems were already apparent, and in 1673, four years before Vermuyden died, mighty floods inundated the Fens, forcing the inhabitants ‘to save themselves in boats’.32 By 1700 the full extent of the disaster had become clear, and in 1713, the Denver sluice, the key to the whole system, was washed out to sea. Not only in the Fens were the waters fighting back. An ambitious reclamation scheme on the south coast also came to nothing around this time. Between 1630 and 1646 Sir George Horsey had attempted to dam and drain the long tongue of water which still lies between Chesil Beach and the Dorset mainland. Winter storms swiftly obliterated his expensive engineering structures.33
Cornelius Vermuyden’s greatest monument, the two Bedford rivers, enclosing the Ouse Washes. The section below shows how the washland takes the winter flood-water. © Cambridge University Collection