Photographed in 1910

 

THE GREAT FLOOD OF 1910

by Rex Needle
 

FLOODING is one of our major natural disasters and recent events in England have demonstrated how it can dramatically change our lives. Despite the heavy rain of past months, the town has escaped the worst of the crisis although the low lying areas of eastern England that we know as the fens have had their share of misfortune in past times. 

Bourne has always been an agricultural community and flooding was a frequent occurrence before the fens were drained, the most serious recorded instance being on 5th November 1571 when Lincolnshire was struck by one of the worst storms in history.  

The roads into the town were turned into rushing torrents and the market place soon became a vast lake. The 16th century English chronicler Raphael Holinshed recorded that the flood water in Bourne rose "to midway of the height of the church walls" during a tempest which affected many houses and buildings on the eastern side of the town and thousands of sheep in nearby fields were drowned.  

The worst cases of flooding in our recent history have all been caused by rivers bursting their banks during periods of heavy rain. There were four such occurrences during the late 19th century, in November 1852 when the north bank of the Bourne Eau broke between two and three miles from Bourne and in April 1872, December 1876 and October 1880, when the north bank of the River Glen gave way near Tongue End. The last incident was by far the worst with torrential rain falling for 24 hours, also flooding houses in North Street and around the Queen’s Bridge, while on the main Bourne to Stamford Road at Toft, a man driving a horse and cart was washed away and drowned. 

The flooding became known as "The Bourne Fen Inundation" and on Friday 26th November 1880, it engulfed the entire South Fen, an area of about 3,000 acres of land, much of it containing newly cut corn which floated out of the fields while a variety of farm implements were washed away. The land was submerged to the depth of up to seven feet, corn stacks, buildings and houses surrounded by one vast expanse of water. Looting was rife and cash rewards were offered for the apprehension of the culprits. A gang of 50 to 60 men were employed and large quantities of timber, thousands of sacks filled with earth, and consignments of stone were used on repair work although three feet of water remained on the land for several weeks. 

Flooding in the fens in various degrees continued into the 20th century and in the winter of 1910, the River Glen again burst its banks at Tongue End, inundating the South Fen near Bourne and covering the main Spalding road towards Twenty with flood water.  

This disaster, occurring during the first week of December, subsequently became known as "The Great Flood of 1910" and for more than a month, the entire fen was one vast sea of floodwater. Emergency repairs continued day and night as attempts were made to repair the damage with workers filling the breached bank with sandbags but despite labouring for long hours, they had little success and farmers were forced to wait until the water subsided naturally although it was four weeks before it drained away and a complete picture of the damage emerged.  

The Marquess of Exeter, one of the principal landowners, returned half a year's rent to each of his tenants while churches and chapels organised collections and in the weeks that followed, concerts and whist drives were arranged to boost the fund. The relief work continued for several months but it was to be more than a year before the land returned to its usual productivity and many of the smaller farmers never recovered from the financial loss. 

On 12th January 1911, farmers and landowners gathered at the Corn Exchange to assess the damage and to set up a distress fund. Compensation claims from farmers tenanting 1,500 acres of land totalled almost £10,000, over £1 million at today's values. Subscriptions began immediately with £100 from the Earl of Ancaster with other amounts ranging from £50 to 2s. 6d. from wealthy landowners, businessmen and ordinary people in the locality and a committee was set up to distribute grants to the more deserving cases.  

There has been serious flooding in recent years but nothing to equal the disaster of 1910, mainly because of improved sewerage and drainage services. In August 1912, a downpour flooded the road outside the police station, then in North Street. In October 1960, three inches of rain fell in ninety minutes and most streets in the town were soon under water, with cars stranded at the kerbside. Bourne Grammar School was holding its annual Speech Day at the Corn Exchange and as guests left to go home, they found floodwater swirling around the entrance. Senior pupils volunteered to wade through it and carry some of the elderly people to dry ground while hundreds more waited inside for the water to subside. 

There was further flooding in 1968, 1980 and in 2002 when, after a month long dry spell, rain fell on Tuesday 15th October and the downpour lasted for more than 18 hours, accompanied by high winds. The paved area behind the Town Hall where the weekly markets are held was flooded to a depth of several inches but fortunately, it had subsided by the time the Thursday stallholders had arrived.  

In 2004, torrential rain also caused widespread flooding, closing shops and streets which were several inches under water within an hour. The town centre was badly affected and firemen were called out to pump water from premises in North Street and West Street. A spokesman at the Meteorological Office suggested that the town had been hit by a tornado while Lincolnshire fire brigade reported 200 calls for help. 

We have no control over the weather and heavy rain serves as a warning that the threat of flooding is always with us, especially in such low lying areas as the terrain around Bourne but we count ourselves lucky not to experience the meteorological extremes of many other countries.

NOTE: This article was also published by The Local newspaper on Friday 27th July 2012.

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