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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Blizzard in the West, by Unknown
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Blizzard in the West
- Being as Record and Story of the Disastrous Storm which
- Raged Throughout Devon and Cornwall, and West Somerset,
- On the Night of March 9th, 1891
-
-Author: Unknown
-
-Release Date: September 17, 2013 [EBook #43758]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BLIZZARD IN THE WEST ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, Moti Ben-Ari and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
- Blizzard in the West:
- BEING
- A Record and Story of the Disastrous Storm
- WHICH RAGED THROUGHOUT
- Devon and Cornwall, and West Somerset,
- On the Night of March 9th, 1891.
-
-
- WITH ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- COPYRIGHT.
- _The right of reproduction is reserved._
-
-
- London:
- SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, HAMILTON, KENT & CO., LIMITED,
- PATERNOSTER ROW.
-
- Devonport:
- A. H. SWISS, PRINTER AND STATIONER,
- 111 & 112 FORE STREET.
-
-
-
-
- THE LARGEST
- FLORAL
- AND
- FRUIT
- ESTABLISHMENT
- WEST OF LONDON.
-
- W.G. HODGE, F.R.H.S.
- FLORIST
- AND
- FRUIT & VEGETABLE PURVEYOR,
- 49 GEORGE STREET, 17 UNION STREET,
- 90 OLD TOWN STREET,
- PLYMOUTH.
- AND
- _76 George Street, DEVONPORT_.
-
- Telegrams, "FLORIST," Plymouth. Telephone No., 80.
-
- NURSERIES: CROWN HILL.
-
- Specialities: Wedding & other Bouquets.
-
- FUNERAL WREATHS, CROSSES, &C.
- From 5/- to Two Guineas,
- Per Parcels Post to all parts of the Kingdom.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER
- I. INDICATIONS AND OBSERVATIONS.
- II. THE BLIZZARD.
- III. ON THE RAILWAYS.
- IV. AT SEA.
- V. IN TOWN AND COUNTRY.
- VI. IN PARK AND FOREST.
- VII. AFTER THE STORM.--THE WATER FAMINE IN THE THREE TOWNS.
- VIII. SOME STRANGE EXPERIENCES.
-
-
-
-
- SPOONER & COMPANY.
- FLOOR COVERINGS.
-
- S. & Co. beg to draw the attention of their customers to the
- large portion of their premises reserved for the exclusive sale
- of the above, ever increasing variety of
-
- BRITISH & ORIENTAL FLOOR COVERINGS,
-
- and for the development of which SPOONER & CO. have given their
- special attention, resulting in their having always on sale an
- unrivalled selection of
-
- AXMINSTERS, WILTONS,
- BRUSSELS, TAPESTRY CARPETS,
- KIDDERMINSTER CARPETS,
- FLOOR CLOTHS,
- LINOLEUMS, CORK CARPETS.
-
- Fully maintaining their reputation for Superior Designs,
- Durability, and excellence of Material.
-
- SPOONER & COMPANY,
- Complete House Furnishers and Art Decorators,
- =PLYMOUTH=.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-The record of the Blizzard of 1891 was undertaken in response to a
-generally expressed desire on the part of a large number of residents
-in the Western Counties.
-
-It would have been impossible to compile the work, imperfect as it is,
-without the assistance and co-operation of the editor and staff of the
-_Western Morning News_, who have been most active in its promotion.
-Assistance has also been kindly rendered by the editor and staff of the
-_Western Daily Mercury_.
-
-Thanks are also largely due to many others, who, besides furnishing us
-with interesting details and views, have offered us every facility for
-obtaining information.
-
-Valuable particulars in some instances have been afforded by Dr.
-Merrifield, of Plymouth, and Mr. Rowe, public librarian, of Devonport,
-who has also sent some of the views appearing in this book.
-
-To the artistic photographic skill of Messrs. Heath and Son, of George
-Street, Plymouth, Messrs. Denney and Co., of Exeter and Teignmouth, and
-Messrs. Valentine and Son, of Teignmouth, we are indebted for several
-of our illustrations. To the amateur photographers in various parts
-of the West who so kindly sent photographic views we tender our best
-thanks, and regret that space did not permit us to use a larger number.
-
-Much necessarily remains untold, but we have endeavoured to depict a
-very remarkable event as fully as the pages at our disposal permitted.
-
- _Devonport, April, 1891._
-
-
-
-
- NESTLÉ'S
- FOOD
- A Complete and Perfect Substitute for
- Mothers' Milk.
- *****
- OBTAINED THE GOLD MEDAL
- AT THE
- PARIS EXHIBITION, 1889.
-
-
-
-
-THE BLIZZARD IN THE WEST
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-INDICATIONS AND OBSERVATIONS.
-
-
-On the morning of the 9th of March, 1891, when inhabitants of the
-three westernmost counties in England set about preparing for the
-routine duties of daily life, nothing seemed to indicate that, with
-the approach of nightfall, the gravest atmospheric disturbance of
-the century--in that part of the world, at all events--would come to
-spread terror and destruction throughout town and country. The month,
-so far, had not been a gentle one. Following in the footsteps of a
-memorably genial February, March had been somewhat harsh and cold,
-without yielding the rain that was by this time greatly needed. There
-were rumours of "a change of some sort," of an approaching "fall of
-something," and other vaticinations of the same familiar character
-floating about, but in the west country these wise sayings fall so
-thick and fast and frequently as to possess little more significance
-than the most oft-repeated household words. When the day drew on,
-and signs of a rising gale were uncomfortably apparent on every
-hand, recollections of a promised storm from the Observatories of
-the United States began to be awakened, but it was found on sifting
-the matter, that if this were the disturbance indicated, it had come
-about a fortnight too soon. Students of "Old Moore's Almanack" were
-better informed, and it is probable that if this ill wind blew good
-to anybody, it was in the shape of discovery that by virtue of the
-truth of his forecast, a favourite and venerable prophet was deserving
-of honour at the hands of the people of his own country. Unhappily,
-however, there is nothing to show that advantage had been taken of this
-warning, in any practical sense. On the contrary, the blast came down
-swiftly upon a community that was almost wholly unprepared to receive
-it, and one of the saddest parts of the story of its fury will be the
-account of the devastation wrought among the unprotected flocks and
-herds.
-
-On referring to the remarks on the subject of the weather published in
-the local press, and obtained from official scientific authorities, it
-will be found that at an early hour on the morning of March 9th the
-barometer had been rising slightly, and that the day "promised to be
-fine." Other accounts hinted at the probability of some snow showers,
-and snow was reported as falling heavily in North Wales, but north and
-north-easterly winds, light and moderate, were anticipated. Nothing
-was said about a great fall of snow, accompanied by a hurricane fierce
-enough to send it down in powder, without even allowing time for the
-formation of snow-flakes.
-
-According to one Plymouth correspondent, whose observations are both
-reliable and valuable, the only intimation of the coming storm was
-by the barometer falling to 29·69 on the evening of the 9th, with
-an E.N.E. wind. The hygrometer was thick and heavy--a sign of rough
-weather. During the night the glass fell to 29·39. On Tuesday it fell
-to 29·180. Another account says that it has not, perhaps, occurred in
-the experience of many, except those who have known tropical storms,
-that the movement in an ordinary column barometer might be seen during
-the progress of a gale. Such, however, was possible in the case under
-notice. Though the glass had been falling during the day, yet there
-were no indications of any serious disturbance of the weather. On many
-occasions there have been greater falls in the barometer than on this
-occasion. When this storm was at its height, the barometer at Devonport
-was observed to be at 29·27, but in the course of half an hour pressure
-was indicated by 29·20, the rise being, of course, a considerable and
-sudden one. Within an hour of this register being made, a fall had
-again occurred to 29·25, and even a little below this was marked, at
-which point the column remained until the early hours of the morning.
-
-It is clear that during the whole progress of the storm the temperature
-was never very low. The great cold came from the strength of the wind.
-During the storm, and in the course of the severe days that followed,
-not more than five or six degrees of frost were registered, and on one
-day of the week, when there was snow on every hand, the thermometer
-never rose higher than freezing point. The wind, however, was terrific,
-its maximum force during the night being 10, and 12 is the highest
-possible. To this extraordinary velocity is due the fact that the
-visitation is best describable by the term "blizzard." With a less
-violent wind, there would have been a great fall of snow, as great
-probably as that of January, 1881, when difficulties and disasters
-painfully comparable with those of the present year were spread
-broadcast over not only the western portion, but the whole of England,
-but it would have been a snowstorm and not a blizzard, and many of
-the phenomenal aspects of the visitation under notice would have
-been absent. In the course of the present narrative many remarkable
-effects due to the powdery nature of the snow will have to be recorded.
-Before concluding the meteorological portion of the subject, and
-getting on with the story, it may be well to observe that according
-to the best authorities a blizzard is caused by the fierceness of
-the wind, which blows the cold into the vapour in the atmosphere and
-consolidates it into fine snow without allowing time for the formation
-of a snow-flake. We are accustomed to associate ideas of gentleness
-and beauty and stillness with the fall of snow. The blizzard, which is
-apparently--but, of course, only in name--a new acquaintance, shews us
-the reverse side of the picture, and suggests nothing beyond merciless
-fury and destructiveness.
-
-As to the quantity of snow that fell, accounts differ. There were
-huge drifts in most places; in others there was a comparatively
-level covering of many feet in thickness. The condition of a part
-of George Street, Plymouth, which received a very fair quantity, is
-artistically portrayed in the accompanying illustration, copied from a
-photograph taken on the morning of Tuesday by Mr. Heath, photographer,
-of Plymouth. According to observations made by Dr. Merrifield, of
-Plymouth, the value of whose scientific researches into the mysteries
-of matters meteorological are beyond question, the quantity of snow and
-rain that fell between Monday evening and early on Wednesday morning
-was ·68. This was registered at the doctor's residence, which stands
-125 feet above the level of the sea, and faces S.S.E. With the depth of
-snow in other places, this record will deal in due course.
-
-[Illustration: GEORGE STREET, PLYMOUTH.]
-
-During the whole time the blizzard was raging, the wind varied from
-N.E. to S.E. The changes were very rapid, but this was the widest
-range. Along the coast the greatest severity appears to have been
-experienced from a point or two eastward of Teignmouth to Falmouth Bay,
-many towns exposed to the sea having to bear their share of the burden,
-and unhappily many valuable lives being lost through disastrous wrecks.
-If a map of the three counties of Devon, Cornwall, and Somerset be
-consulted, it will be found that, taking this portion of the coast as
-an opening through which the broad shaft of a hurricane entered, now
-sweeping in a north-easterly, and now in a south-easterly direction,
-the area of country that has sustained the heaviest damage will be
-embraced, the intensity of the violence inflicted gradually diminishing
-the further one travels towards the east, north, and west. Dartmoor
-forms a kind of centre of the chief scene of desolation, and Plymouth,
-being well within the range, has suffered far more severely than any
-other large town in the three counties. To the eastward, in particular,
-it is clear that the effects of the gale are not nearly so serious,
-though the fall of snow was pretty abundant all over the southern part
-of England. Outside of Devon and West Cornwall there are no great lots
-of timber down, though here and there a fallen tree is observable.
-
-Unhappily the departure of the storm was not so sudden as its advent.
-The Tuesday following the night of tempest was an indescribably
-wretched day, and the barometer fell to 29·180. Wednesday brought
-sunshine and hope with it, and afforded the one bright spot in this
-gloomy record by showing up many effects of wonderful beauty in the
-snow-covered landscapes. Still the wind was never at rest, though
-the thermometer went up to 120° in the sun. Thursday followed
-with more snow, and occasional sharp and ominous squalls, and some
-apprehension was felt that a repetition of Monday's experience was in
-the air, but fortunately the week wore away without further calamity,
-and the work of repairing to some extent the damage done, and thereby
-making existence for man and beast possible, a task hitherto carried on
-under tremendous difficulties, was vigorously pushed forward.
-
-A letter, which will be found interesting, was, on the day after
-the storm, written to the editor of the _Western Morning News_, and
-published in that paper, by Captain Andrew Haggard, of the King's Own
-Scottish Borderers, now stationed at Devonport. The writer is a brother
-of Mr. Rider Haggard, and himself a novelist of repute. This letter was
-as follows:--
-
- "SIR,--The cyclonic nature of the blizzard that has been
- annoying us all so much, and causing such a frightful amount
- of damage during the last two days, may be judged by the
- following observations taken by several officers in the South
- Raglan Barracks on the evening of the 9th instant. From these
- observations it would seem as if for a time the South Raglan
- Barracks were in the exact centre of the storm, being left for
- varying periods in a complete calm in consequence. Here are the
- notes we made:--At 8·12 P.M. the storm was raging so furiously
- that the solid old Raglan was shaken to its foundations, the
- fire was roaring up the chimney as if in a blast furnace, and
- the noise made by the blizzard generally was such that it was
- difficult to hear one's neighbour speak. But at 8·13 suddenly
- came a complete lull. The elements ceased to wage war, the
- fire assumed its normal demeanour, and an officer who went
- out to see what had happened came in and reported that it was
- so calm he was able to light matches outside. For thirteen
- minutes did this calm last. At 8·26 with a roar like thunder,
- the wind returned, and once more we were dreading that the
- armies of the chimney pots would fall upon us in their fury.
- Only for twenty minutes, though, did the hurricane scream
- and yell, and as before make itself generally obnoxious. At
- 8·46 there was another absolute cessation of wind until 8·53,
- when it 'blizzed' worse than before. And shortly afterward
- everyone started forth to put out fires, when all the amateur
- meteorologists discovered to their grief that whatever the
- cyclone might do in the way of lulling occasionally down at
- the Raglan, on the top of Stoke Hill it blizzed all night with
- perfect impartiality.
-
- Yours truly,
- "ANDREW HAGGARD.
- "DEVONPORT, _March 10th_."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE BLIZZARD.
-
-
-Soon after daylight, on the morning of Monday, March 9th, over the
-whole of the West of England, the fine weather that had prevailed
-for several weeks past gave place to a most unpleasant condition
-of affairs. The temperature fell, almost suddenly, and in the
-neighbourhood of Plymouth, Devonport, and Stonehouse, snow was falling
-fitfully from about an hour before noon. There was a gradually rising
-wind, that assumed menacing proportions as the afternoon wore on,
-while the snow that had, for the first few hours, thawed as soon as it
-fell upon the yet warm ground, was rapidly forming a white covering on
-every position exposed to the sky. At six o'clock, in the three towns
-some four or five inches of snow lay upon the ground, and the wind
-had increased to a hurricane. Slates began to start from the roofs of
-houses, and chimneys to fall, and in a very short time the streets
-assumed a deserted appearance, and all vehicular traffic was stopped.
-Advertisement hoardings were hurled from their positions with some
-terrible crashes, and in many instances the splinters were promptly
-seized by a thrifty populace and taken away for firewood. Many trees
-were blown down in the early part of the night. In Buckland Street,
-Plymouth, a tree of sufficient size to block the roadway fell at about
-eight o'clock, and not long after another heavy tree fell from Athenæum
-Garden across Athenæum Street, the main road to the Great Western
-Railway Station, completely closing the thoroughfare. Our illustration,
-reproduced from a photograph taken by Mr. Heath of George Street,
-Plymouth, on the morning after the storm, gives a realistic idea of the
-condition of Plymouth streets, and of the quantity of snow that was
-blown about during the night.
-
-On Plymouth Hoe, iron seats were blown from their fastenings and
-rolled over and over, the ironwork in many instances being curiously
-bent. The statue of Drake, the Armada Memorial, and the Smeaton Tower
-looked, however, none the worse for the wild night. Perhaps, when the
-sun shone upon them on Wednesday they may be described as having looked
-better for the patches of glistening snow that clung to them in most
-picturesque form. Strange to say, the Pavilion Pier sustained no damage
-beyond a smashed pane or two of glass. Exposed as it must have been to
-the full fury of the gale, it stood the turmoil gallantly, and this
-fact speaks well for the soundness of the structure, and for the good
-workmanship and material used in its erection.
-
-Trees were uprooted or snapped short off at Woodside, the residence of
-Mr. Bewes, at Portland Square, and in many other parts of Plymouth. Of
-these irreparable losses much more will be said in the course of this
-record. Concerning the damage wrought among houses and homesteads,
-and the marvellous escapes from injury to life and limb, our limited
-pages would not permit of the chronicling of one hundredth part of
-those that were met with in the Three Towns alone during that night. At
-Clifton Place, Plymouth, a chimney fell through the roof into a bedroom
-occupied by three little girls, and completely buried them, two being
-so badly injured as to necessitate their removal to the hospital. In
-this instance the staircase was blocked by the débris, and access to
-the terrified children could only be obtained by means of ladders, and
-with the greatest difficulty.
-
-[Illustration: ATHENÆUM STREET, PLYMOUTH.]
-
-On Mutley Plain, one of the most exposed situations in Plymouth, the
-storm raged with terrific fury, women and children being blown off
-their feet and half-suffocated with the rush of snow-laden wind, while
-such cabmen as had ventured abroad with their cabs, made their way back
-to more sheltered quarters with great difficulty. Numerous instances
-in this locality of strong men receiving severe contusions through
-being blown against walls and railings are recorded. At Alexandra
-Place, Mutley, a terrific gust of wind caught one of the chimneys of
-the house, sending it through the roof, and the only means of rendering
-the house habitable for the time was by stretching tarpaulins over
-the breach. There is no statement accessible of the number of fallen
-chimneys and damaged roofs that might have been discovered in the Three
-Towns alone during that night, and even if there were, to recount
-them all would only be to tell one sad story over and over again with
-wearisome monotony; but it is probably safe to say that scarcely
-one street in the whole of the district escaped without some house
-receiving injury. Fortunately the storm was at its height at about 8
-o'clock in the evening, an hour when bedrooms are usually unoccupied.
-Had the chief fury of the gale been spent some hours later, it is more
-than likely that numerous fatalities would have had to be recounted.
-
-At a shop in Fore Street, Devonport, a similar accident occurred, two
-children while lying in bed being badly crushed through a chimney
-falling. At the Main Guard, at the top of Devonport Hill, the windows
-were blown in, but the soldiers on duty fortunately escaped without
-injury, and were removed into the barracks. The roofs of the "Crown and
-Column," and of the wine and spirit store in the occupation of Messrs.
-Chubb & Co., both in Devonport, were seriously injured, while at
-Wingfield Villa, Stoke, the residence of the rector of Stoke Damerel,
-soon after 8 o'clock, a terrific squall burst upon the house and sent
-a large chimney stack crashing through the roof into the drawing room,
-doing great damage to some valuable furniture. Altogether, a lengthy
-chapter of accidents might be recorded as the result of the gale on
-Monday evening in Devonport. In a few instances personal injuries of
-a more or less serious nature were sustained, but it is not a little
-remarkable, that here, as elsewhere in the immediate neighbourhood,
-while there were many narrow escapes no case of a fatal character
-occurred.
-
-Among other narrow escapes at Devonport may be instanced that of a
-gentleman living in Albert Road, Morice Town. He went to a back bedroom
-on the top storey to nail up a board to prevent smoke from blowing down
-the chimney, when a sudden gust struck the stack and precipitated it on
-to the roof, which fell through the ceiling into the bedroom, burying
-him and carrying a portion of the floor into the back drawing-room
-below. The gentleman in question managed to extricate himself from the
-débris, and escaped with a severe shaking. In another case, a family
-occupying two rooms at the top of an old house in Cannon Street,
-nearly lost their lives. The occupier, his wife, and mother-in-law,
-were sitting around the bedroom fire when the roof fell on them. Their
-injuries were not of a serious character, but considerable damage was
-done to their furniture. It is estimated that about £50 worth of damage
-was done to the buildings at the back of Hope (Baptist) Chapel in Fore
-Street; a chimney falling bodily crashed through the roof, and carried
-one of the class-rooms and the gallery of the Sunday-school into the
-vestry. A chimney stack falling from No. 7, Chapel Street, destroyed
-a conservatory, and did considerable damage to the roof of the
-adjoining house, No. 6. A large portion of the roof of the South Devon
-Sanitary Laundry, Cornwall Street, was blown away, and the work of the
-establishment was temporarily disarranged in consequence. Extensive
-damage was also done to property at 10, Stopford-place, Stoke.
-
-One of the most miraculous escapes that occurred was that at the
-residence of Mr. Perkins (Lord Mount-Edgecumbe's surveyor) in Emma
-Place, Stonehouse. During the hurricane Mrs. Perkins heard the windows
-and doors rattling, and rushed up to the nursery to see that the
-windows were closed and doors fastened. The servant was closing the
-window, her mistress standing near the chimney breast, when there was
-a sudden crash. The servant clung to the framework of the window, but
-Mrs. Perkins immediately found herself buried in bricks and mortar.
-She was sitting on a portion of the floor near the window, with her
-legs dangling over an abyss; the floors having been carried away, with
-the exception of two floor boards, upon which, happily, she had been
-deposited. The snow found its way into the house, and although no one
-could distinguish her or the servant, she seems to have grasped the
-situation and called to her husband to bring a ladder to release her
-and the girl. This eventually was done, but the intense excitement of
-the moment may be well imagined. Mr. Perkins, having obtained a ladder
-and a light had the greatest difficulty in discovering the position of
-those above, but having done so, he released both from their perilous
-position, little thinking that the ladder was resting on fallen
-rubbish, the slightest shock to which would have precipitated all to
-the basement.
-
-During this night of disaster, probably the most calamitous incident
-that occurred on land, was a fire which broke out at about 8 o'clock
-at 4, Wingfield Villas, Stoke, the residence of Mr. Venning, Town
-Clerk of Devonport, and which resulted in the total destruction of the
-house and its contents, as well as in material damage to the adjoining
-villa. A chimney-stack facing the direction from which the wind blew
-gave way and, crashing through the roof of the nursery, carried with
-it a quantity of débris through the floor of the nursery into the
-drawing-room below. Through the aperture thus made the fire from the
-nursery grate, and it is supposed also a lamp, were carried, and
-speedily ignited the contents of the drawing-room. The fire, being
-fanned by the fierce gale, just then at its height, increased rapidly,
-and the premises were soon in a blaze.
-
-Owing to the elevated position in which the house stood the
-conflagration was visible at a great distance, and in spite of the
-weather, large numbers of people visited the spot, although the journey
-thither, under the circumstances, was one of the most difficult it
-is possible to conceive. To those who ventured on the walk, however,
-the sight presented was an extraordinarily impressive one. The flames
-raged like the blast of a furnace, and the mingling of smoke, sparks
-and snow-dust produced an effect that was as novel as it was terrible.
-Sparks from the burning building were carried immense distances, and
-beaten, with the snow-powder, against the windows of houses that faced
-the burning villa. Standing at a distance of nearly a mile, with eyes
-fixed on the blaze, it was impossible to believe that the roar of the
-fire could not be heard, so nearly did the howling and surging of the
-wind resemble the roar caused by a great volume of rushing flame.
-
-In connection with the fire several narrow escapes are recorded. Mr.
-Venning's daughter, about six years of age, had a perilous experience.
-She had been put to bed by her nurse, and, during the absence of the
-latter from the room for a few minutes, the chimney clashed through the
-roof into the drawing-room. Fortunately Mr. Venning's daughter received
-nothing worse than a severe fright, and she was quickly removed to a
-neighbouring house. The ladies who were in the drawing-room at the time
-of the crash were also greatly alarmed, and made a hasty exit from
-the building, being hospitably sheltered at Wingfield House by Colonel
-Goodeve, R.A., and also at the house of a relative, in Godolphin
-Terrace.
-
-The efforts of the firemen to prevent the spread of the flames, under
-circumstances of great difficulty, were crowned with a well-merited
-success. Water was not readily available, and when obtained was not
-abundant, but notwithstanding this a gallant fight was made, and
-although to save the one dwelling was impossible, the contents of
-the adjoining one were safely removed, and the structure itself was
-snatched from total demolition. In addition to the West of England
-and Devonport Fire Brigades, and a large staff of constables under
-the charge of Mr. Evans, the Chief Constable of Devonport, there were
-present Colonel Liardet, R.M.L.I., the field officer of the day, and a
-detachment of men belonging to the King's Own Scottish Borderers, under
-Captain Haggard. Several manual engines from the troops in garrison
-were taken to the scene of the fire, but, with one exception, they were
-not brought into use. A number of civilians were conspicuous for their
-energy in performing voluntary salvage duty. The damage resulting from
-this fire has been estimated at something like £7,000.
-
-On their way to and from the scene of the fire by way of Millbridge,
-many pedestrians from Plymouth had narrow escapes from being blown
-over the parapet of the bridge into the Deadlake. About half-past
-eight, when the fire had somewhat abated, the majority of the Plymouth
-spectators moved back with the intention of re-crossing the bridge,
-but the wind had increased in violence, and the water in the lake
-was so disturbed that the waves could be heard lashing against the
-bridge and on the shores. Some who ventured on the bridge were driven
-back, and consternation began to spread among the crowd, many women
-screaming loudly. To proceed to Plymouth by way of Pennycomequick was
-also a matter of difficulty, as the full fury of the gale blowing down
-the valley had to be faced. Many waited on the Devonport side until
-there was a lull, when some of them linked their arms in those of their
-friends for safety's sake and so crossed to Plymouth.
-
-During the whole of Monday night Her Majesty's vessels in the Hamoaze
-were in positions of great peril, and those holding responsible posts
-in connection with them underwent great anxiety. The _Lion_ and
-_Implacable_, anchored just above Torpoint, which form an establishment
-for training boys, under the command of Commander Morrison, dragged
-their moorings during the evening. The vessels were moored stern to
-stern, and connected by a covered gangway. The cause of the mishap
-was the parting of the starboard bridle of the _Implacable_. At about
-half-past nine signals of distress were made to the shore, and it was
-stated that the two ships had been driven ashore, and were in the
-mud off Thanckes. This, however, proved not to be the case, as the
-vessels never even touched the ground. As soon as the danger was known
-all available tugs at Devonport Dockyard were despatched with a view
-to taking off, if necessary, the hundreds of boys who were on board.
-At midnight, however, all apprehension for the safety of the vessels
-had been practically removed, although as the storm had by no means
-abated, the tugs were ordered to stand by all night in order to give
-any assistance that might be required.
-
-In the meantime there was great excitement in Sutton Harbour. Between
-eight and nine o'clock several of the trading vessels, trawlers, and
-fishing craft lying at anchor began to drag, and extra warps had to
-be got out, and the vessels secured. The sea in the harbour was very
-heavy, and at one time some fear was felt for the buildings along
-the quay, but no damage of this nature occurred. Some of the stores
-along the North quay were roughly handled by the wind, the roof of
-the new coal store of Messrs. Hill and Co. was blown off, and a
-similar accident occurred to the premises in the occupation of Messrs.
-Vodden and Johns, but generally speaking the damage on the quays was
-satisfactorily light. A good deal of anxiety was expressed as to the
-welfare of trawlers who were known to be in the channel, and, as a
-subsequent chapter will show, these fears were by no means groundless.
-The cutter of the harbourmaster, lying in Plymouth Sound was reported
-to be in a sinking condition during the night, and a tug was sent to
-her assistance. She had four men on board, who were removed for safety,
-but ultimately the cutter weathered the storm, and is still afloat.
-
-Under conditions like these the night of the ninth of March wore away
-in the Three Towns. To many the night was a long one, and crowded
-with all sorts of apprehensions. The wind, never for a moment silent,
-rose again and again to hurricane force, and the fine snow so swiftly
-covered the window panes that to look out upon the night soon became a
-matter of difficulty. There was no great feeling of security indoors,
-but to remain out for long was a matter of impossibility, and the
-imperfect and disconnected rumours of disaster that were disseminated
-created all the more alarm from the fact that they could not be
-investigated. Hundreds of households did not go to bed at all, while
-very many sat up all night because their bedrooms were in a state of
-hopeless confusion, or of absolute wreck. Some were without fire,
-through a defect having been brought about in the chimney, or through
-the chimney having fallen in altogether; and in those localities where
-the buildings were of the dilapidated or frail order the wretchedness
-for the night, and, indeed, for the week throughout, was very great.
-
-Not the least serious part of the gale was the number of friends
-missing from the Plymouth district. Quite early there was a breakdown
-of the telegraph wires, which made all telegraphic communication
-with other parts of the country impossible, and the late arrival of
-many trains into the west, and the non-arrival of others, led to
-much anxious conjecture as to the fate of those whose appearance in
-Plymouth during the night had been confidently expected. The first
-indications of telegraphic interruption were observed as early as
-half-past four on Monday afternoon, when communication with Tavistock
-was suspended. Following this, the reports of breakdowns from all parts
-of the two counties became very frequent until about seven o'clock,
-when communication with London and all places above Plymouth ceased.
-Penzance, and one or two Cornish towns could be communicated with
-for some time longer, but soon all operations were suspended, and no
-messages were received at the Plymouth office after eight o'clock.
-As a general rule the breakdown was caused by trees falling across
-the wires, or by the telegraph posts having been brought bodily to
-the ground. As will be subsequently seen, this condition of things
-prevailed to a great extent, and in some cases the telegraph wires and
-posts got upon the railway lines and prevented the progress of the
-trains.
-
-The interruption of the local train service commenced early on Monday.
-Trains due at North Road Station, Plymouth, between mid-day and eight
-o'clock in the evening were all considerably behind time, and the
-telegraphic and telephonic instruments being rendered useless, thus
-making communication with other stations impossible, the officials had
-an anxious period of waiting for information of belated trains. At
-about nine o'clock the "Jubilee," which left London at one o'clock,
-and should have reached North Road, Plymouth, at 7·30, came into the
-station. With the remarkable experiences of passengers by this, one
-of the last trains that reached Plymouth by either the London and
-South Western or Great Western lines from Monday night to Saturday,
-and other trains that failed to reach Plymouth at all, a subsequent
-chapter will deal, should space permit. A train from Tavistock, due
-at 8·40, did not appear until eleven o'clock, and the eight o'clock
-train from Launceston did not come at all. The "Alexandra," a train
-that left Waterloo Station at 2·40 arrived at nine o'clock, the driver
-stating that near Okehampton he had to drive through three feet of
-snow. These, however, are the trains that did arrive. There were many
-that did not, and in many scores of instances a member of a family was
-not heard of for days, although, happily, in the majority of cases, the
-missing one ultimately turned up with nothing worse than a severe cold
-and a great distaste for winter life in small Devonshire or Cornish
-towns.
-
-So far the state of affairs in the Three Towns only has been dealt
-with, but it will be readily surmised that adjacent towns, and more
-especially those in the neighbourhood of Dartmoor, and the more open
-parts of Cornwall, suffered very considerably. Generally speaking,
-the damage to house property was nowhere so great as in Plymouth and
-Devonport. In the country districts, as a matter of course, calamities
-of a most serious and special character were met with, and trees were
-felled, sheep buried, and oxen frozen in enormous quantities,--in some
-instances, also, human life was sacrificed, but in none of the other
-larger towns was the devastation so widespread as in the Three Towns.
-At Exeter, the fall of snow was said to be the heaviest for years, and
-by reason of its suddenness, even more severe than the storm of 1881.
-The drifts of snow in some places were of great depth. As at Plymouth,
-traffic as well as business was suspended, but there were no serious
-mishaps, the force of the wind, though great, being evidently not so
-fierce as was the case further west. Railway communication between
-Exeter and Plymouth was of course impossible, but there were on Tuesday
-four trains trying to run between Exeter and Taunton. The North of
-England mail, which should have arrived at Exeter at half-past eight
-was four hours late, but it did put in an appearance. The trains of the
-London and South Western Railway ran to Exeter from the North just as
-usual, throughout the week.
-
-At Torquay the storm was the severest experienced there for many
-years. There was a heavy fall of snow on the night of Monday, and on
-the following morning the ground was covered to the depth of a foot. A
-strong easterly wind was also blowing, and trees were uprooted in every
-part of the district. At the Recreation Grounds the roof was blown
-off the grand stand, and a huge tree blew across the railway at Lowes
-Bridge, near Torre Station. An engine of the up-train cut through this
-and traffic was suspended until the line was cleared by a breakdown
-gang on Tuesday. The trains from London and Plymouth failing to run,
-Torquay soon became isolated, and telegraph and telephone communication
-was early interfered with in consequence of the poles being blown down
-and the wires broken by the burden of snow. Considerable damage was
-done to the New Pier works by the heavy gale. Plant for moulding the
-concrete was washed away, as was also a portion of the masonry, while
-parts of the sea-wall were damaged, and a flight of stone steps leading
-to the sea-wall were swept completely away. Street traffic was so
-much impeded by the snow that on the Tuesday after the storm the Town
-Surveyor constructed a wooden snow-plough, and with this, drawn by two
-horses, the roads were cleared. All the public clocks in the town were
-stopped by the snow.
-
-Tavistock was one of the towns that had the severest experiences. The
-barometer fell rapidly on Monday morning, and at about eleven o'clock
-snow began to fall; while, as the day advanced, it was accompanied by a
-high wind, that, towards seven o'clock in the evening, increased to a
-hurricane. In Tavistock, and all along the Tavy Valley, the full force
-of the storm was felt, large trees being uprooted, houses unroofed,
-and chimney-stacks blown down in every direction. One of the latter
-instances occurred in West Street, where the occupant, a lady, had been
-suffering from a serious illness. The chimney-stack being blown over,
-the débris fell through the roof into the bedroom where the invalid was
-lying. Her attendant received some cuts on the head, but the invalid
-escaped the falling masonry, although she received a severe shock to
-the system through the incident. A waggoner employed at the Phoenix
-Mills, Horrabridge, was returning to Tavistock from Lifton on Monday
-night, in charge of an empty waggon and three horses, and when within
-two miles of his destination, found that through the violence of the
-storm he was unable to continue his journey. He took the horses out
-of the waggon, and made an ineffectual attempt to drive them home.
-Failing in this the waggoner walked into Tavistock, and at about ten
-o'clock returned to the spot where he had left his horses. By this time
-the snow was so deep that the horses could not be seen, and it was
-necessary to leave them until the following morning. Eventually they
-were dug out, and driven home, not much the worse, to all appearance,
-for their night in the snow. Tavistock being an important market town,
-and the centre of a large district, experienced great inconvenience
-through the interruption in railway traffic, and the impassable state
-of the roads. Wednesday, March 11th, was the monthly cattle fair day,
-but not a single animal was brought in. At the Fitzford Church the
-window was blown in. Like many other towns in the Dartmoor vicinity,
-Tavistock received more than one disastrous visitation during this
-memorable week, and its record of lost sheep and cattle, to which more
-extended reference will be made further on, is a very serious one.
-
-At Bideford, and in the surrounding country, the weather was more
-severe than any experienced since the winter of 1881. The barometer had
-been steadily going back all day on Sunday, and on Monday a cutting
-east wind blew with considerable force. Snow commenced falling at
-noon, and continued until the evening, when the streets and roads were
-covered to some depth. Then the wind rose to half a gale, whirling
-the snow into little clouds, which filled both doors and windows. All
-through the night the wind increased in force, until it blew a perfect
-hurricane. Icicles hung inches long from windowsills and launders of
-the houses. In the country, traffic was completely suspended, the
-snowdrifts being as high as the hedges. Farmers were consequently
-unable to get into market, and provisions went up considerably in
-price. The mail coach started for Clovelly and Hartland as usual on
-Tuesday morning, and managed to reach Clovelly. There, however, the
-horses had to be taken out, and the driver rode through the deep drifts
-to Hartland on horseback. The return journey was performed by another
-man in a similar way. All the mails were delayed, and rural postmen's
-districts were mostly impassable.
-
-At Teignmouth, Exmouth, Dawlish, and most other seaside places from
-the estuary of the Exe to the Start, the effects of the gale were
-severely felt on Monday night. At the former place the sea ran high,
-and the breakers fell with great force close to the landwash and over
-the promenade. Opposite Den House the roadway was undermined and washed
-away, and had it not been for the fact that an hitherto existing stone
-wall lay buried beneath the surface, which acted as a breakwater
-against the heavy sea, it is almost certain that Den House and Bella
-Vista would have been washed away. As soon as the tide ebbed, the wind
-veered towards the northward, and the sea went down. A gang of men were
-at once set to work to shore up the embankment, and fill in the cavity
-made by the sea. The Promenade towards the East Cliff was also washed
-up in several places. In the Exeter Road and at Brimley a large number
-of trees were blown down, and traffic was generally suspended.
-
-An illustration from a photograph by Messrs. G. Denney & Co.,
-photographers, of Exeter and Teignmouth, portrays one of the scenes in
-Exeter Road, which was impassable for a day or two.
-
-At Totnes, Brent, and in fact every town in Devonshire, damage of a
-more or less severe character was sustained. Space will not allow of
-a separate reference to each locality in the present chapter, but in
-dealing with occurrences that took place after the early force of the
-blizzard had been exhausted on that memorable Monday night and Tuesday
-morning, there will be found few districts that necessity will not
-compel us to bring under notice.
-
-[Illustration: EXETER ROAD, TEIGNMOUTH.]
-
-Reference has already been made to some towns in the North of Devon.
-Throughout the whole of this district the storm raged furiously,
-rendering communication with many parts impossible. Although snow did
-not commence to fall until Monday afternoon, by the evening of that day
-the drifts had reached a depth of several feet. The train which left
-Barnstaple for Ilfracombe at about half-past eight on Monday evening
-became embedded just below Morthoe station. At Ilfracombe a strong
-gale raged throughout Monday night, and the brigantine _Ethel_, of
-Salcombe, 180 tons went ashore at Combemartin, but in this instance
-no lives were lost, the crew having taken to their boats. In North
-Cornwall, a terrible snowstorm raged for twenty-four hours, resembling
-in many respects the great storm of the 18th and 19th January, 1881.
-The atmospheric pressure was about the same as then, and the storm
-burst from the same point. On the first day of the great storm in 1881,
-the temperature varied from 26 to 30 and on the second from 25 to 30.
-On the 9th of March in the present year it varied from 29 to 31½. The
-roads were soon blocked in all directions, trains on the lines ceased
-running, and no mails could be sent or received. Bude was cut off
-from the outside world, except by telegraphic communication. In the
-roads around Bude the snow was quickly as high as the hedges, so that
-traffic, even on foot, was rendered impracticable. Falmouth, Liskeard,
-Camborne, and indeed all other Cornish towns, had a rough night, and
-before our story is finished, like many towns in Devonshire, they will
-be found to have suffered severely. To approach them with any hope of
-successfully relating how they all fared on the night of Monday and on
-the Tuesday following, we must deal with the railways, for from railway
-travellers who were detained in certain places on the course of their
-journeys, and from the energetic officials who after heavy and anxious
-toil succeeded in releasing them, many of the most thrilling narratives
-have been obtained.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-ON THE RAILWAYS.
-
-
-Some incidents in connection with the suspension of the railway service
-on every line connecting Plymouth with the rest of the world have
-already been related. It is unnecessary to dwell at further length on
-the terrible mental and physical suffering entailed by this state of
-things. Facts need no comment that tell of passengers being snowed up
-in a train for thirty-six hours on a stretch, and others being unable
-to communicate with their friends for nearly a week, to say nothing of
-all that the engine-drivers and other officials had to endure.
-
-One of the first expeditions that set out into the dreary night in
-search of the cause of delay was undertaken by Mr. C. E. Compton,
-the divisional superintendent of the Great Western Railway Co., and
-other gentlemen, who went out on a pilot engine as far as Camel's Head
-Bridge between eight and nine o'clock on Monday night. The cause of the
-interruption in the telegraph system was here ascertained, the poles
-being blown down and lying across the line. Later in the evening Mr.
-Compton pushed on as far as Hemerdon, on the main line, where a similar
-state of things was encountered, and it was learned that at Kingsbridge
-Road and at Brent Station the snow had drifted to such an extent as
-to block the line. A train due from Penzance was known to be somewhere
-on the Plymouth side of Truro, but its exact whereabouts could not be
-discovered. There was some anxious looking out for the "Zulu" express
-from Paddington, due at Plymouth early in the evening, but the train
-was at Brent, with about ten feet of snow on the line, between it and
-Plymouth, and, as will be presently seen, the passengers were meeting
-with some novel and undesirable experiences.
-
-The mail train from Plymouth for London left Millbay Station at
-the usual time, 8·20, and Hemerdon Junction was reached with much
-difficulty. Here the first deep cutting had to be encountered, and the
-driver, approaching it at a reduced speed, observed that the drifting
-snow had practically blocked the entrance. The seriousness of the
-situation was realized by one and all of the passengers, and, although
-there was an anxiety on their part to get to their destination as soon
-as possible, they agreed that there was no alternative but to either
-remain where they were or return to Plymouth. The latter course was
-decided upon, and shunting was at once proceeded with. The drifts of
-snow rendered this work very difficult, and the frequent jerkings
-caused the passengers much inconvenience. Eventually the driver, after
-most skilful handling of the locomotive, succeeded in reversing the
-position of the engine, and a start was made for Plymouth. Much to
-the relief of the passengers, the latter place was reached, after a
-slow but sure journey, about half-past one next morning. The utmost
-consideration was shown the passengers by the station officials, and
-accommodation was found them for the night at the "Duke of Cornwall"
-Hotel and in the station waiting-room.
-
-All traffic on the London and South Western Railway below Okehampton
-ceased soon after eight o'clock on Monday night. One of the slow
-passenger trains from Okehampton was snowed up in a deep cutting
-between Meldon Viaduct and Bridestowe, one of the bleakest spots on the
-South Western system. The express due at North Road Station at 11·4 on
-the same night was stopped at Okehampton. The ordinary seven o'clock
-up-train was despatched on Tuesday morning from Mutley Station, and was
-drawn by three engines. Considerable danger attended railway travelling
-in consequence of the jolting and straining that occurred when the
-numerous obstructions were met with. All the points at the Tavistock
-Station were completely choked, and though for some hours a number of
-men were employed in an effort to keep them clear, the task was found
-impossible, and as a result the train that might have proceeded in the
-direction of Plymouth remained where it was as the engine could not be
-shunted to the Plymouth end of the train. The last up South Western
-train on Monday night was snowed up at Lidford, but the passengers were
-released. One of the vans of a goods train proceeding to Tavistock
-early on Monday evening was blown away.
-
-Serious as was the condition of things on all the railways on Monday
-night, on Tuesday matters became worse. During that day only two trains
-reached Millbay Station, Plymouth, and these, which came from Cornwall,
-should have arrived on Monday night. One account, of experiences as
-unique as they were unpleasant, is thus given by the _Western Daily
-Mercury_:--"The mail train from Cornwall, due at Plymouth at 8·10
-on Monday night, reached Millbay at 9·30 A.M., bringing some eighty
-passengers; amongst whom were Mr. Bolitho, banker, of Penzance, and
-Mrs. Bolitho, who were wishful of getting to Ivybridge to attend the
-hunt, and Mr. J. H. Hamblyn, of Buckfastleigh, who was _en route_ from
-Liskeard to Bristol Fair. All went well with the mail until St. Germans
-was reached at about 8 P.M. It was found that no further progress was
-possible, and that there was no help for it but to pass the night in
-the carriages under the shelter of the station. Mr. Gibbons, one of
-the assistant-engineers of the line, and Inspector Scantlebury, who
-were travelling in the train, resolved to walk to Saltash. The snow was
-not so very deep at this time, and the block was due principally to
-the wholesale destruction of telegraph poles. After a rough time of it
-the two officials reached Saltash, and afterwards pushed on to Camel's
-Head, where was the biggest block of all, fir trees and telegraph poles
-and wires being scattered about broadcast. Meanwhile at St. Germans the
-station-master (Mr. Priest) was doing his best to make the passengers
-as comfortable as possible. In fact, all of those who reached Plymouth
-after the night's adventure are loud in their praises of Mr. Priest.
-Messengers were despatched by him to the village, and loaves, butter,
-tea, and coffee were speedily bought up. At the station fires were
-lit in all the available grates, and very soon the passengers were in
-possession of hot tea and coffee, as well as bread and butter. This
-modest fare was repeated at intervals during the night, and it goes
-without saying was most welcome.
-
-"After spending something like ten hours at St. Germans the mail was
-able to leave at eight o'clock on Tuesday morning for Saltash, but
-here another delay of nearly two hours took place, in consequence of
-the block on the Devonport side of the Camel's Head bridge. To remove
-this a breakdown train had been sent out from Plymouth at 6 A.M. in
-charge of Mr. H. Quigley, the assistant divisional-superintendent. This
-train got as far as Keyham Viaduct without much interruption. Here an
-array of prostrate poles and fir-trees required removing, and then
-the breakdown train forged ahead slowly to the Weston Mills Viaduct,
-where there was a confused mass of poles and wires stretching from one
-side of the creek to the other. This accomplished, a move was made to
-Saltash, where the mail was met and safely escorted to Plymouth, which
-all were glad to reach, after a novel but most unpleasant night's
-adventure."
-
-[Illustration: ROAD BETWEEN ST. CLEER AND LISKEARD.]
-
-The difficulty that beset those that attempted to travel by road the
-above view indicates, and is from a photograph by A. Leamon, Esq., of
-Liskeard.
-
-One of the passengers in the train snowed up between Princetown
-and Plymouth in the evening mail has related the following
-experiences:--"We left Princetown at 6·30 P.M. on Monday--the regular
-time--with five bags of mails. The snow beat in our compartment through
-closed doors, ventilators, and windows so much, that in a few minutes I
-had two inches of snow on my umbrella. We stuffed paper, handkerchiefs,
-and cloth into every hole or crevice we could find, and this remedied
-matters a little. The coach we were in was a composite one--of four
-third-class compartments, one second class, one first class, and
-one guard's, and we were all in one compartment. Well, the wind was
-blowing great guns, and we passed through two large drifts just after
-leaving Princetown, but it required some heavy pulling. We had just
-been congratulating ourselves on having been lucky in getting so
-nicely through the storm, when we suddenly stopped, and we knew we had
-stuck in the snow. The engine driver came and said, 'I was afraid of
-it; we have got over a bar, and we cannot go on. We ought not to have
-started.' The ladies became alarmed, and with that the driver, fireman,
-and guard went to the front of the train with shovels to try and dig
-a way for her, but it was no good. It is true that the place where we
-stopped is on a bit of decline, but the engine was choked with snow.
-The guard, having told us that we could not get on without assistance,
-proceeded in the direction of Dousland to get help. He had been gone
-about an hour, when he returned with the mournful intelligence that he
-had lost his way, and that it was no use for him to attempt to reach
-Dousland, as the snow blinded him. We decided to make ourselves as
-comfortable as we possibly could under the painful conditions to which
-we were subjected--six men and two ladies huddled together in one
-compartment--the cold being most bitter, and none of us having anything
-to eat or drink. We lived the night through, but in what way I can
-hardly tell.
-
-"In the morning the wind was blowing as strong as ever, and the snow as
-it fell melted on the window panes, and the lamp--our only light--was
-extinguished at 7 A.M. Just at this time the guard and fireman left
-us, saying they were going to try and reach Dousland with the 'staff,'
-so as to let them know of the disaster, and see what help could be
-rendered. It is true that the fireman was lame, but I understand they
-had fearful trouble, as he was sadly knocked up and his foot badly
-lacerated. Some little time afterwards the driver, who has, I believe,
-been seriously ill, announced his intention of going to Dousland. We
-then felt in a particularly sad condition, feeling our only hope was
-gone now that the driver had abandoned us. The storm was raging as
-fiercely as on the previous night, but at 3 P.M. we were agreeably
-surprised to find three packers, who had tramped up from Dousland
-with refreshments for us, knock at our door. We were heartily glad to
-receive the refreshments, which, I believe, were sent from the railway
-company to us in our forlorn position--although it only consisted of
-cocoa, bread and butter, and cake, with a bottle of well-watered brandy
-to follow. We found there was enough for us to have one piece of bread
-and butter and one piece of cake each. This was not a very substantial
-bill of fare for people who had had nothing to eat for over twenty
-hours, but we were thankful for small mercies. There is one thing I
-forgot: the packers were very kind, and brought us out the guard's lamp
-from his van, which we afterwards lit. One of the party, I think Palk,
-asked if the packer thought we could weather the journey back. The
-packer replied, 'It will take you about two hours.' This was enough for
-Palk, who said he thought he was better where he was. Besides, we asked
-him to stay and not desert us in the time of trouble.
-
-"We then awaited the result of events. The wind was fearful, and we
-were all bitterly cold. We were nearly dead in the afternoon, and drank
-all the brandy by eight o'clock. If it had not been for that some of
-us would have given way. The weather was milder after midnight. About
-seven o'clock this morning one of us looking out of the window saw Mr.
-Hilson, of Horsford, farmer, whose farm is only about 250 yards from
-where our train was lying, picking sheep out of the snow. We whistled
-to him, and on his coming to us he was told of our predicament. He
-expressed his astonishment that he knew nothing of the accident. We
-do not see how he could have, because the snow had been so blinding
-in character until that day that it was impossible to see anyone
-ahead. He offered us the use of his farm, and we joyfully accepted
-the same, leaving the train after being in her for 36 hours. Poor
-Mrs. Watts was much distressed and we had to assist her down. We had
-breakfast at Mr. Hilson's, and then four of us--Hancock, Viggers, Palk
-and Worth--started to walk to Dousland, which we could see ahead of
-us. We got on fairly well over the snow, which was very deep in some
-places. We could not keep our eyes open owing to the snow when we left
-Princetown, and when we asked the station-master for tickets he said,
-'You can have them, but I cannot promise you will get there.' It did
-not strike me at the time, but if a station-master had any doubts as
-to the safety or otherwise of a train he should not allow the train to
-travel. It is true the wind was in our favour when we started. Mrs.
-Watts is very bad indeed, and also the engine-driver and stoker. The
-engine of the train when we left was completely covered with snow,
-and the snow had drifted as high as the carriage, with a blank space
-between the body and the wheels. All the compartments into which I
-looked before I left her--although the windows and ventilators were
-closed and doors locked--were full of snow above the hat-racks. It was
-the most horrible experience of my life."
-
-[Illustration: EXPRESS TRAIN, G. W. RY., TEIGNMOUTH.]
-
-Great anxiety was felt in Exeter and Plymouth on account of the sea
-wall which carries the line of the Great Western Railway Company from
-Dawlish to Teignmouth. In past years this piece of line has suffered
-very severely, and rumours were in circulation that it had been
-washed away in some places. Happily, however, it was found, as soon
-as communication became opened up once more, that the line remained
-intact, the damaged portion of the sea wall being a carriage-drive
-close to the town. One of our views, from a photograph by Messrs.
-Denney & Co., photographers, of Exeter and Teignmouth, gives an
-admirable idea of the force of the sea in this district, during the
-progress of a gale from the south-east.
-
-Difficulties and dangers on all the lines of railway multiplied as time
-went on, and the horrors of the Monday night, of which the foregoing
-narratives present only a partial view, were succeeded by some sad
-instances of loss of life, besides great damage to the property of the
-respective companies, and as a matter of course, a heavy falling off in
-their traffic returns. The returns for the week, following March 9th,
-on the Great Western system, showed a decrease of £12,980 as compared
-with the corresponding week of the previous year, and the South-Western
-Railway's decrease amounted to £3,662--all but £650 of which was lost
-from the non-conveyance of passengers and parcels. This was regarded
-as especially unfortunate in the case of the South-Western Railway,
-as its traffic returns had previously been going up week by week, and
-in the eleven weeks of the year had increased by £12,120, as compared
-with the first eleven weeks of 1890. In addition to these losses heavy
-expenses were incurred by all the companies by the efforts made to
-clear away the snow, by means of snow ploughs, and the employment of
-large gangs of men. The inadequacy of the snow ploughs, which dated
-in England from the time of the heavy snow-fall in the early part of
-1881, for clearing away heavy drifts, has been generally admitted. The
-ploughs are quite competent to get rid of from 4 to 5 feet of snow, but
-their capacity is not equal to depths ranging as high as 18 feet, such
-as were dealt with in some places between Newton Abbott and Plymouth,
-on the Great Western system, to say nothing of other sections and
-branches. The ploughs, which are kept at Swindon, have an iron ram
-in front, projecting like that of an ironclad, with a "cutter." The
-attention of engineers has, however, been now directed to a new kind
-of machine, with a revolving, spade-like apparatus, having a powerful
-shaft, and a propeller that is designed to scatter the snow with which
-it is brought into contact, and throw it clear of the rails on which
-the engine is travelling. The work of cutting out engines that had been
-absolutely embedded was very arduous, and in one case, lamentable loss
-of life accompanied the other misfortunes brought about by the storm.
-
-One or two instances of striking and unprecedented experiences of the
-night of Monday must be recorded before this part of the subject, which
-is, in itself, enough to fill a volume, is dismissed.
-
-Passengers by the train which left Queen Street Station, Exeter, on
-Monday evening at 6·38, and was in connection with the 2·20 from
-Waterloo, had an exceptionally rough time. The train, a slow one, had
-to make its way across Dartmoor from Okehampton to Tavistock, and on
-starting, the guard, Mr. Moore, had orders to proceed as far as he
-could. After cutting through the snow for some miles the train reached
-Okehampton, and then attempted to brave the force of the storm that
-was sweeping down from the Dartmoor hills. It got over the Meldon
-Viaduct safely, and then it was attempted to go on over Sourton Down,
-but in going through Youlditch cutting it ran into a snow-drift, and
-about three miles to the west of Okehampton it was brought to a stop.
-Efforts were made to run back to Okehampton, but the rapid drifts of
-snow, which were from ten to twenty feet in height, prevented this
-being done, and it was soon seen that there was nothing left but to
-remain until help of some kind could be obtained. There were only
-eleven passengers, including two ladies and two children. The ladies
-and children, who were well supplied with wraps, were bestowed as
-comfortably as circumstances would permit in a first-class carriage,
-the male portion of the party, with the guard, Mr. Moore, the driver,
-Mr. Bennett, and the fireman, Mr. Oates, trying to find some warmth
-in the guard's van. This, however, was a matter of impossibility, the
-bitter wind and the fine snow finding its way into the compartment,
-to the great discomfort of the occupants. The engine fire was kept
-alight, but was useless to impart warmth to the unfortunate party. It
-was only on the following day, and just before relief arrived, that Mr.
-Bennett had succeeded in getting a fire in the van by means of boring
-holes in one of the engine-buckets, filling the bucket with coal and,
-after much difficulty, kindling a flame, which the draught obtained
-through the holes soon increased into a most welcome blaze. Mr. John
-Powlesland, auctioneer, of Bow, was one of the belated travellers, and
-was especially assiduous in his efforts to do all he could for his
-fellow-sufferers.
-
-When the train first showed signs of becoming embedded, a telegram
-was sent from the nearest signal-box to Exeter for assistance, and
-two engines were sent down. These approached within three-quarters of
-a mile of the snowed-up train, but could not be taken nearer on that
-line. They were then, with some difficulty, shunted on the up-line,
-with the view of pushing their way to the carriages in that manner, but
-the only result was that they became snowed-up in their turn.
-
-As day approached Mr. Moore and Mr. Oates made their way to the Sourton
-Inn, which stood at no great distance, for the purpose of obtaining
-food, but their endeavour met with but slight success, the inn being
-also snowed-up, and the occupants having but little in the way of
-provisions that they could spare. No help arrived until Tuesday, at
-mid-day, when a search-party, headed by Mr. Prickman, the Mayor of
-Okehampton, and consisting of some half-a-dozen gentlemen of that
-locality, succeeded, after a difficult journey, in reaching the train.
-They took with them food and liquid refreshment, and were most heartily
-welcomed by the imprisoned travellers. By this time the train was
-entirely buried on one side, the engine having forced the snow on the
-left side up to a height of fully twenty feet. Only a small portion of
-the engine and carriages was visible, and the scene is described as a
-remarkable one.
-
-The travellers were at once conducted by their rescuers to Youlditch
-Farm, where Mr. Gard treated them with much kindness, and took care of
-the ladies and children. The gentlemen subsequently made their way on
-to Okehampton, where they were detained for several days. The guard,
-engine-driver, and fireman were not able to leave the train until the
-following day, when a breakdown gang was employed to cut a passage for
-the train through the snow--a task that occupied nearly the whole of
-the week.
-
-[Illustration: SNOW DRIFT, ROBOROUGH DOWN, DARTMOOR.]
-
-On the Launceston branch of the Great Western Railway, the down-train,
-which left Tavistock at seven o'clock on Monday evening, remained
-embedded in the snow outside Horrabridge for several days. Between
-the Walkham Viaduct and Grenofen tunnel very heavy work had to be
-done, a deep cutting being not only choked by the snow, but quite a
-score of trees having been blown across the rails. The accompanying
-illustration, depicting a snow-drift in this locality, from a
-photograph by Mr. Sheath, of George-street, Plymouth, conveys an
-excellent picture of the heavy masses of snow that had accumulated on
-this part of Dartmoor.
-
-A passenger by the train which left Penzance at 6·25 P.M. on Monday and
-arrived at Plymouth at 3 P.M. on Tuesday, has supplied an interesting
-account of the blockage near Grampound Road. The train, containing
-about a dozen passengers, was only a quarter of a mile above Grampound
-Road Station when it encountered a drift of snow fully twenty feet
-high. It was impossible to proceed or to retreat, for the blinding
-storm had drifted more snow on to the line behind, so that passengers
-left the train and crossed some fields back to the village, and found
-shelter at the Grampound Road Hotel. It was then about 10·30 P.M. The
-guard Kelly remained on the train, and the under-guard Hammett walked
-back to Grampound Road and wired to Liskeard for a relief engine. He
-then walked on to meet an engine which had been sent for from Truro,
-and returned to the train on it. A relief gang arrived from Lostwithiel
-under engine-driver Harris, and the men dug at the drift until eleven
-A.M. on Tuesday, when the train was able to proceed. One of the workers
-described the cold as so intense that the snow froze on the men's
-clothes, practically encasing them in ice, and the under-guard Hammett,
-who had been at the work for over twenty years, said he never had such
-an experience, and even in the terrific storm of 1881 the snow was not
-so blinding.
-
-Another passenger who travelled by the 6·50 Great Western up-train
-from Plymouth on Monday returned by a somewhat roundabout route, and
-he thus described his experiences: Hemerdon was reached without
-any delay on the journey, but at that point the train was drawn up
-for about three-quarters of an hour, to allow a down-train to pass.
-It then proceeded slowly in face of a terrific gale, accompanied by
-blinding snow. After leaving Cornwood, a grating sound on the roof of
-the carriage suggested broken wires, and this was followed by a jerk
-and a stoppage, and the interesting announcement that one coach and
-the engine were off the rails, and embedded in a snowdrift. There was
-nothing for it but to wait, and the "wait" lasted the whole night.
-There was nothing to eat for anybody, and the forty or more passengers
-(amongst whom were several ladies) had to make their night watches as
-comfortably as was possible under the circumstances in the Langham
-cutting! It seems that the driver and one of the guards succeeded in
-reaching Ivybridge, about a mile away, in the late evening, but no
-notice of the proximity of the village was given to the passengers. On
-Tuesday morning a small party from Ivybridge, under Messrs. Brown and
-Greenhough, two engineers superintending the alterations to the line
-in the neighbourhood, came to the rescue of all who were willing to
-face the blinding storm. Only four consented to go, and they were very
-thankful to exchange the cold comfort of the railway carriage for the
-hearty hospitality offered by these gentlemen in Ivybridge.
-
-The officials here do not seem generally to have been equal to the
-exigencies of the situation, no notice of their whereabouts being
-given to the passengers, nor any organised attempt made at rescue or
-provisioning, but a porter and a packer from Ivybridge station arrived
-about daybreak with whisky and brandy. When the four passengers
-referred to were leaving at about 9·30 on the Tuesday morning, bread
-and butter and tea were being dispensed. Many of the remaining
-passengers were hospitably accommodated by Miss Glanville at her house
-close to the half-buried train, the ladies being assisted thither by
-the engineers and their party. Another train was detained at Ivybridge
-Station, and the passengers from it were lodged in the village.
-
-In West Cornwall three trains were snowed up. The train which left
-Plymouth at five o'clock on Monday night and should have reached
-Penzance at 8·45, arrived there at eleven. The "Dutchman" which should
-have, in the ordinary course of things, followed within fifteen
-minutes of this train, did not arrive at all, and news soon reached
-Penzance that the fast train was snowed up, but in what spot was only
-ascertained with much difficulty. A train was at once got ready, and
-on it Mr. Blair, the station-master, Mr. Ivey, the superintendent of
-the locomotive department, Mr. Glover, and a breakdown gang, proceeded
-to Camborne, which was reached about noon on Tuesday, it having taken
-about nine hours to accomplish a journey of thirteen miles. All the
-way along huge drifts of snow were met with, completely blocking
-the passage, and at frequent intervals the way had to be literally
-cut through the drifts by the men of the breakdown gang. Thus, with
-great difficulty, Hayle was reached, and from thence to Camborne the
-task became almost overpowering. Here the open country favoured the
-accumulation of snow, and the drifts were immense. In a deep cutting,
-close to Gwinear Station, was encountered a drift of about eighty yards
-long and nine feet deep.
-
-On at length reaching Camborne it was discovered that the missing 8·45
-train had left Redruth at about ten o'clock on Monday night--an hour
-and a half late. The storm was then at its height, and the snow was
-driving with such force that only very slight progress could be made.
-The train passed Carn Brea safely, but when within sight of Camborne
-Station, close to Stray Park, the engine left the metals, running on
-the south side, and finally bringing up at a hedge against which it
-lay on its side. Fortunately, at the time of the occurrence, speed was
-slow, and nothing more serious than some damage to the rolling stock,
-and the inconvenient detention of the twenty or thirty passengers
-occurred. These included five ladies, who were taken to the house of
-Mr. Maurice Reed, the Station Master at Camborne, the gentlemen of the
-party having good opportunities of finding comfortable quarters in the
-hotels of the town. Another train was embedded in fifteen feet of snow
-on the Helston branch line from Gwinear Road to Helston, and the guard,
-engine-driver, and stoker, with their one passenger, were compelled to
-abandon the train and seek shelter in a neighbouring farm-house.
-
-While great inconvenience and discomfort was caused by the blizzard
-on the Cornish railways as a whole, no fatalities were reported, and
-the work of clearing the lines, great and arduous as it was, was
-accomplished in less time than in the districts above Plymouth, and in
-the vicinity of Dartmoor. Communication between Plymouth and Cornwall
-was opened up some days earlier than that with Totnes, Exeter, and
-other towns. The scene here depicted shows the depth of snow in this
-neighbourhood, and is from a photograph by A. Leamon, Esq., of Liskeard.
-
-[Illustration: MAIN ROAD BETWEEN LISKEARD AND TORPOINT.]
-
-Above Exeter things were not so bad. In the Tiverton district the
-effects of the blizzard were rather severely felt, and communication
-between some towns was for the time cut off. The railway authorities
-were very active, and gangs of men were sent up from Exeter on Tuesday
-to clear the lines, but they could do little more than keep the points
-clear for shunting, watch the signals, and fix detonators where
-required, the driving snow being so blinding, and the coldness of the
-bitter wind so intense. The difficulties of the neighbourhood commenced
-on Monday evening at the Whitehall tunnel, when the pilot, in front of
-the express, got off the line. Daylight came before a gang of packers
-sent from Taunton could effect a clearance, and instead of passing at
-ten o'clock on Monday night, the express only struggled into Tiverton
-Junction, with two engines attached, at half-past six on Tuesday
-morning. The night mail, and the North mail followed some hours after,
-and managed to get through to Exeter, but after that, until Wednesday
-morning at eleven o'clock, no train could leave the junction.
-
-After being snowed up for some hours at Burlescombe, the first part
-of the newspaper train reached Tiverton at half-past ten on Tuesday
-night. The train was stopped at the home signal, and so intense was the
-cold that the machinery was, in a few minutes, frozen, and the train
-could not enter the station. The ladies--mostly for Plymouth--who were
-in the train, were carried on chairs by porters and packers to the
-adjacent Railway Hotel, where they, and some of the male passengers,
-were able to obtain beds for the night. The train remained in the
-same position until Wednesday morning. In a siding also stood a slow
-train, which should have reached Tiverton on Tuesday at ten in the
-morning, but which did not get in until the afternoon. The passengers
-by this train were transferred to the first down-train that was got
-out from Tiverton on Wednesday. The second part of the newspaper train
-remained at Burlescombe all Monday night. The store of provisions in
-the hamlet was already exhausted, and although as much as a guinea was
-offered for a bed by some of the passengers, neither food nor sleeping
-accommodation could be obtained. A very uncomfortable night was passed
-in consequence, and many of the ladies suffered severely from hunger
-and exposure.
-
-H.R.H. the Duke of Edinburgh, on his way to Devonport, was snow-bound
-at Taunton on Tuesday night, but with about two hundred other
-passengers, was able to proceed on his journey at the end of the week.
-
-His Royal Highness afterwards conveyed to the Directors of the
-Company his appreciation of the courtesy and attention he received
-from the officials and servants of the Great Western Railway, on his
-journey during the gale and snowstorm, and during his detention at
-Taunton, on March 11th and 12th, and particularly thanked the Taunton
-station-master for his services.
-
-At Brent, one of the most exposed railway towns on Dartmoor, the Zulu,
-from London, which was due at Plymouth at 8·55 on Monday night, came to
-grief, and a number of passengers spent several days of that week in
-this very bleak locality. Especial discomfort appears to have prevailed
-here, probably on account of the difficulty of obtaining assistance or
-information from any neighbouring town, and from the limited resources
-for personal comfort that the town afforded. There can be no doubt
-that the experiences of the first two days and nights must have been
-wretched in the extreme. After two hours waiting in the carriages, in
-a state of considerable doubt as to what was to happen, the travellers
-found themselves at length at the Brent station. Here there was neither
-refreshment nor accommodation, but the hotels of the town were made
-for. Quarters were difficult to obtain, however, as a large number of
-contractors men working on the new line of railway were residing in the
-place. On Monday night many passengers lay upon the floor, using their
-overcoats for pillows, and their rugs for coverings. A Mr. Stumbles, a
-commercial traveller, who was one of the Brent unfortunates, gave an
-account of his experiences to a representative of the _Western Morning
-News_, which has led to much subsequent controversy, and to a shower of
-letters, conveying many diverse opinions, being sent in to the editor
-of that paper. It appears that there were about forty passengers in the
-train, and that many of these remained at the station all night, either
-in the train or in the waiting-room. Next day Brent was visited, and
-refreshments were bought at, as Mr. Stumbles says, famine prices.
-
-The account referred to goes on to say:--"One gentleman bought a bottle
-of brandy, for which he had to pay 6_s._, the inns charged us double
-price for ordinary meals, and some establishments refused to supply us
-at all, probably thinking that a famine was impending. We returned to
-the station as best we could, through the great drifts of snow, and,
-with such provisions as we could buy, did the best we could, cooking
-such things as bloaters in the station waiting-room. Our scanty
-supply, I must say, was most generously supplemented from the small
-stores which the railway officials, such as signalmen and others,
-had with them. There were a number of sailors and soldiers amongst
-the passengers, and most of them were without means. One gentleman
-gave them a sovereign, and ladies from Brent also brought them money,
-tobacco, and provisions during our stay. On the following monotonous
-days we spent our time in smoking and in conversation, and also in
-'chaffing' the station-master, whom we christened 'Dr. Parr.' On
-Wednesday an enterprising amateur photographer from Brent took several
-views of our snowed-up train, with the eighteen or twenty passengers
-who stuck by it perched in various prominent positions upon it. We all
-united in praising the minor officials, and the men in charge of the
-train, for remaining faithful to us, and excused the want of sympathy
-of 'Dr. Parr' on account of his age. The driver kept the fires of his
-engine going all the time, but his boilers had to be filled with water
-by hand, and in this work valuable assistance was readily given by
-the soldiers and marines in the train. Just before we were enabled to
-leave Brent, we were visited for the first time by the clergyman of the
-parish, and our final leave-taking was celebrated by three sarcastic
-cheers for 'Dr. Parr' and for 'Brent.' The passengers in this train
-included Lieutenant Rice, of the Essex Regiment; Mr. R. Bayly, J.P., of
-Plymouth (who succeeded in getting through to his home on Wednesday)
-Miss Sykes, and a nurse who was travelling from Scarborough to the
-South Devon and East Cornwall Hospital, Plymouth."
-
-It is only fair to the station-master at Brent, and to the residents
-of the town generally, to repeat that this description has been
-extensively contradicted, and among others, by Mr. Robert Bayly, of
-Plymouth, who was another of the detained passengers. Mr. Stumbles,
-however, has adhered to his description, and in more than one instance
-his version has been supported. Among other interesting details of the
-week in Brent, is the account of the arrival of the first newspaper, a
-copy of the _Western Morning News_, which was brought over from Totnes
-on the Thursday morning by an adventurous policeman, who successfully
-undertook the dangerous walk. This paper was eagerly sought after, it
-having been the first account of the doings in the outer world seen
-since Monday, and one of the enforced sojourners in Brent is said to
-have paid five shillings for the use of the paper for one hour. The
-fortunate possessor of the journal declared that he had been offered
-two pounds for it, and had declined to trade.
-
-At Totnes a number of passengers were detained, among them being a
-reporter of the _Western Morning News_, who went to the town on Monday
-to report a meeting, and was only released on the following Friday
-night. A number of passengers who left Friary Station, Plymouth, by the
-3·47 P.M. South Western train on Thursday, were taken into Tavistock on
-the following day, after having spent the night at Lydford. Instances
-innumerable of the same character occurring on the Launceston and other
-lines could be related, but as their points of interest bear such a
-strong resemblance to each other, it is unnecessary to proceed further
-with them.
-
-Thursday, March 12th, was a day of very severe weather, and the efforts
-of the hundreds of men working on the various lines to clear the snow
-and also to release some of the buried trains were seriously retarded.
-By the end of the week, however, things were beginning to assume their
-normal aspect, and the trains were running with tolerable punctuality.
-The telegraph service, in a deplorable condition of collapse throughout
-the week, was restored, and the masses of accumulated correspondence
-in the post offices were sent on to their destinations. The labour of
-clearing the lines was as dangerous as it was arduous, and unhappily
-an accident, proving fatal to one man, occurred during the operations
-on the Great Western Railway at Ivybridge. Work was being carried on
-at this spot under the superintendence of Mr. C. E. Compton, and a
-number of men were engaged in getting an engine on to the line, when
-a train dashed round a curve among the workmen killing one, named
-William Stentiford, of Plymouth, and seriously injuring two others. The
-lamentable occurrence was purely accidental, and that this was the only
-fatal occurrence during the whole of the operations of this most trying
-week indicates the care that was taken by all those engaged on the
-railways from the highest officials downwards. Such an experience was
-never before met with, and it was a matter of congratulation that those
-in power were able to cope with the difficulties as well as they did.
-No doubt some practical lessons were learnt during the operations, and
-should such a visitation unhappily occur in the West of England on any
-future occasion, the experience gained during this terrible week will
-not be without value.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-AT SEA.
-
-
-Sad and disastrous as were the effects of the blizzard on land on the
-night of Monday, March 9th, they were in most cases of a nature more
-or less reparable. At sea, however, the case was different, and from
-the afternoon of the day on which the storm commenced to the end of the
-week wrecks, resulting in the loss of over fifty lives, were strewn
-along the coast from Start Point to Falmouth. In most cases, such
-was the fury of the gale, but little help could be afforded from the
-shore. Generally, to launch a boat or to use a rocket apparatus was
-out of the question, and those on the shore, anxious to send help to
-the doomed vessels, had great difficulty in escaping from being blown
-into the sea. In many instances gallant services were rendered, and
-all that courage and self-sacrifice could do with the hope of saving
-life was accomplished; but the time was one of no common peril, and on
-the Tuesday lives were lost in full view of the cliffs upon the rocky
-fringes of which the vessels had been driven.
-
-In Plymouth Sound, and the Hamoaze, well protected as they are from the
-gales of winter, much damage was done on Monday night. In addition to
-the accident to the _Lion_ and _Implacable_, and the critical position
-of the Queen's harbour-master's cutter already briefly described,
-the _Julia_, a small coastguard cutter, moored inside Drake's Island,
-parted her moorings during the early hours of Tuesday morning, and went
-ashore on Bottle Nose, a point eastward of Devil's Point. She was badly
-knocked about, but there were no men on board at the time. Whilst the
-heavy squalls were on Tuesday morning the _Impregnable_, training-ship
-for boys, Captain Harris; the _Cambridge_, gunnery school ship, Captain
-Carr, and the _Achilles_, battle ship, all dragged their moorings, but
-not to any alarming extent. Staff-Captain Burniston, who, with the
-dockyard tugs under his command, was afloat during the whole of Monday
-night, and on Tuesday, under very trying circumstances, succeeded in
-getting out fresh anchors and hawsers to make the vessels secure for
-the night, a course which was wisely adopted, as the hurricane showed
-no signs of abating, there being, on the contrary, another great fall
-in the barometer. The men who were on board the tugs on Monday night,
-speak of the weather as being the worst that they ever experienced, and
-the manner in which they did their work under such trying circumstances
-was, as was the case so frequently throughout that, and several
-succeeding days, most praiseworthy.
-
-Considerable damage was done during Monday night to many of the hookers
-belonging to the fishermen of Kingsand and Cawsand. The full force of
-the blizzard was experienced in Cawsand Bay, and ten of the hookers
-which had been moored up for the night were driven ashore and sunk. The
-only boat which rode out the storm was a craft owned by Mr. Andrews
-of Cawsand. A pilot boat went ashore in one of the little coves just
-south of the coastguard station, and a small fishing vessel was wrecked
-close under Lady Emma's Cottage, at Mount Edgcumbe.
-
-The captain of the Norwegian galliot _Falken_, from Shields, with coal
-for Portugal which was found on Tuesday off Fowey, by the tug _Belle of
-Plymouth_, half full of water, and with her sails blown away, stated
-at the time that on Monday his vessel was caught in a kind of small
-cyclone, and that whilst about twenty miles south-west of Start Point
-he had a strange experience. The vessel was being driven along at a
-furious rate by a north-easterly gale, whilst ahead, within sight, a
-westerly wind was blowing. This bears out the theory of the cyclone
-to some extent, as on other parts of the coast the gale was found
-to blow only from the north-east or south-east, in rapid changes.
-The Channel was very rough at the time, and the vessel was greatly
-endangered. On Tuesday the boats were smashed, and the sails carried
-away. Pumps were manned, and kept working so long as the crew could
-hold out, the endeavour being to reach one of the ports. It was while
-the _Falken_ was in this condition that the _Belle_ came opportunely
-to her assistance, and towed her into Plymouth harbour, where she was
-laid up alongside Bulteel's Wharf, in the Cattewater, to discharge
-her cargo and be repaired. Several of the Lowestoft boats, and other
-fishing vessels which had been out in the Channel on the Monday night,
-returned to Plymouth on Tuesday, and reported having experienced very
-bad weather. The sudden squalls encountered were terrific, and the
-oldest fishermen on board declared that they had never experienced
-such violent weather on the Devonshire coast.
-
-During the height of the storm the schooner _Alice Brookall_, from
-Swansea to Jersey with coals, ran ashore at Mutton Cove, near Godevy
-Hayle. She ran so far in that the crew--five in number--managed to
-drop from the bowsprit on to the rocks. The poor fellows had to pass
-the night exposed to the fury of the storm, with no other protection
-than they could mutually afford each other by huddling together. At
-daybreak they climbed the cliffs, and managed to reach the shelter
-of a farm-house. The vessel soon went to pieces. The schooner
-_Perseverance_, of Preston, Dandy, master, from Swansea to Salcombe,
-with coals, ran ashore a mile east of Hayle Bar. The crew of four
-remained by her during the night, and landed at daybreak. Both vessels
-experienced fearful weather on the way down Channel, the sea running
-mountains high. No one knew of their position until twenty-four hours
-after they struck.
-
-At Exmouth, Dawlish, and Teignmouth, although the force of the wind was
-great, and all three towns sustained damage, there were no calamities
-at sea. Great injury was done to the pleasure and fishing boats at both
-of the latter places, but Teignmouth was not so unfortunate as Dawlish
-in this respect. Its harbour is almost land-locked, and from the beach
-where the boats are moored, as well as from the quays, the eye glances
-north-west and south-west upon a beautiful picture of river scenery,
-of which the distant Dartmoor Hills and the Haldon Heights form the
-background. The accompanying illustration, from a photograph by Messrs.
-Valentine & Son, of Teignmouth, taken during the week of the blizzard,
-depicts one part of this scene in as wintry a garb as any it has worn
-during the last half century. The village of Shaldon, on the opposite
-side of the Teign, lies exposed to a S.E. gale blowing across the
-low-lying sands of the Teignmouth "Point," and here the owners of
-fishing and other craft had much to lament in the way of destruction to
-their floating property.
-
-[Illustration: TEIGNMOUTH JETTY, WITH HALDON HEIGHTS.]
-
-In Torbay a French brig, the _Emilie_, of Cherbourg, was driven ashore
-at Hogg's Cove, under Berry Head, at about four o'clock on Tuesday
-afternoon. The coastguards and Royal Naval Reserve, under the direction
-of Mr. Drayton, chief officer of coastguard, and assisted by a large
-number of fishermen, got out the rocket apparatus, and the crew, eight
-in number, were quickly landed. They were at once invited to the house
-of the Misses Hogg, at Berry Head, and provided with refreshments. The
-vessel was badly injured, and became a total wreck.
-
-The ketch _Sunshine_, of Faversham, from London to Exmouth, with
-manure, was fallen in with on Thursday at noon, by the Brixham
-fishing ketch _Inter-Nos_, Berry Head bearing north-west, and distant
-twenty-five miles. She had her mainsail blown away, and her boats
-and water-casks washed overboard. When fallen in with, the crew were
-without water to drink, and their vessel was labouring heavily in the
-trough of the sea. The _Sunshine_ was taken in tow by the _Inter-Nos_,
-£250 being agreed upon for the service, and both vessels arrived at
-Brixham on the same night. The fishing ketch _Gertrude_ arrived in
-Brixham on Thursday, having on her deck the boat of the _Crusader_, of
-Aberystwith, which she had picked up in the channel with eight hands on
-her, and landed at Falmouth on Friday. The ketch _Annie_ also arrived,
-with sails blown away, and her ballast shifted. The _Olive & Mary_ and
-the _Pickwick_, ketches, had their sails blown away and their bulwarks
-damaged. All the crews described the gale as the heaviest they had
-ever been out in, and one skipper stated that he had seen four vessels
-founder without being able to render assistance. Later news has not,
-however, verified this story.
-
-Some trawlers were reported during the week as missing from Brixham,
-but in course of time anxiety on their account was removed, and they
-either reached home or news of their safety was received from other
-ports to which they had run for shelter. Some Plymouth trawlers were
-also in difficulties, and it was feared that they had been wrecked, but
-in a few days their whereabouts was ascertained, and it was discovered
-that they had escaped with somewhat severe damage.
-
-Start Point was on Monday night and again on the succeeding Tuesday a
-scene of some heartrending disasters. Many vessels, including the iron
-steamer _Marana_, 1,682 tons register, belonging to Messrs. George Bell
-and Co. of Liverpool; and the full-rigged ship _Dryad_, 1,035 tons
-register, owned by J. B. Walmsley, of Water Street, Liverpool, were
-totally wrecked within a short distance of each other, resulting, it is
-calculated, in an aggregate loss of over fifty lives. The _Marana_ left
-Victoria Dock, London, at 11 A.M. on Sunday, March 1st, with a crew of
-twenty-eight. She was bound for Colombo with a cargo of sleepers, but
-was proceeding first to Swansea for coal. Whilst going down Channel
-on Monday night she encountered the gale which, charged with blinding
-snow, was blowing heavily from the S.E., and struck on the Blackstone
-Rock, at Start Point. Seeing that the vessel must go to pieces very
-shortly, the officers and crew took to the boats, most of them having
-life-belts on. The starboard lifeboat, in charge of the boatswain and
-with twenty-two men on board, proceeded in the direction of Prawle
-Point, and was almost immediately followed by a smaller boat in which
-were the captain, the chief engineer, the mess-room steward, and three
-seamen. The latter boat was soon separated from the lifeboat, and was
-never seen again. The lifeboat got under the coastguard station at
-Prawle, but the appearance of the coast was threatening, and the crew
-pushed off again. Almost immediately a sea struck the boat and capsized
-her. A bitter struggle for life on the part of the twenty immersed
-seamen succeeded, and those who had clung to the boat managed to get
-her righted, and clambered on board, but soon after she was again
-turned over. Once more she righted, and eventually drifted on to the
-Mal Rock to the east of Prawle Point, where the four occupants--all
-that remained of the crew of the vessel--contrived to get on to the
-rocks.
-
-After a while they climbed the cliff, three of them carrying the fourth
-survivor, who was suffering from exhaustion and injuries, and after
-heavy toil they managed to get near to Prawle. Here two of the men
-agreed to remain with the shipmate, who to all appearance was fast
-succumbing to exhaustion, while the other went into the village for
-help. The man, like his three surviving comrades, was a Swede, and
-consequently unable to make himself understood, but Mr. Perry, Lloyd's
-signalman at Prawle, and the coastguardsman on duty, supplied him with
-food and clothing, and then went to search for traces of the wreck
-which had clearly taken place not far off. It was not until long past
-midnight that the mates of the Swede were discovered, and then it was
-too late to save the exhausted man, who died almost immediately after
-their arrival. The remaining survivors were taken into Prawle, and
-under kind treatment soon recovered.
-
-Mrs. Briggs, wife of one of the lighthouse keepers at the Start, says
-that she was looking out of her window a little after half-past five
-o'clock on Monday evening, when she saw the steamer pass very close
-to the east side of Start Point as if she had come out from the bay.
-Seeing her great danger, and thinking it was impossible for her to
-clear the rocks running off from the Point, she hastened to another
-window, from which she had a view of the Blackstone Rocks. She then saw
-the steamer broadside on to the rocks. She at once gave an alarm to
-Mr. Jones, the head-keeper, who hurried out to give any assistance in
-his power, but within a very few minutes the vessel parted in two, the
-stern part sinking near the rocks, while the fore part washed away and
-sank a short distance to the west of the Start.
-
-Mr. Crickett, chief officer of Coastguards at Hallsands, has stated
-that he received intelligence of the casualty at 6·40 P.M. by a
-messenger sent by Mr. Jones, of the Start Lighthouse, who said the
-vessel had struck the rocks about 500 yards south-east of the Start.
-He immediately despatched a messenger to Prawle, a distance of nearly
-five miles, for the life-saving apparatus. Another messenger he sent
-to Torcross to Mr. Ridge, the chief officer of Coastguards there, and
-Mr. Crickett then proceeded to the scene of the wreck, but on arriving,
-nothing could be seen of the vessel, as she had totally disappeared,
-and she was supposed to have gone to pieces five minutes after she
-struck. The coastguard at Hallsands say that they saw the _Marana_
-fully an hour before she struck, and she was then near the Skerries
-Bank, off the Start, acting in such a manner that they considered her
-steering gear was out of order. They saw her come into the bay and
-afterwards go out again, and watched her very closely, but they thought
-she had gone clear of the Start until they heard otherwise from the
-lighthouse-keepers.
-
-John Nelson, one of the survivors, said in the course of his evidence
-at the inquest held on the first eight bodies recovered from the
-wreck:--"On Monday, 9th inst., I had tea at five o'clock, and went to
-my bunk. It was the first mate's watch. As I was turning into my bunk
-I heard someone shout out, 'Land right ahead.' It was blowing a bit
-stiff in the afternoon at three o'clock, and as the gale increased
-the canvas was taken in. The vessel struck almost immediately after I
-heard the shout, and the engines were going full-speed at the time. I
-came out and stood in the forecastle door. The captain was then on the
-bridge. The vessel struck first at the bow. When I came on deck she
-struck aft as well, knocking her propeller and rudder away. The captain
-then gave the order to get the starboard lifeboat ready for launching.
-All the three officers were on the bridge. The wind was blowing hard,
-and the waves were dashing all over the ship. It was daylight, but the
-Start light was lit. We could see the land plainly enough, although
-it was thick with heavy rain. There were two lifeboats, one on each
-side of the ship, and two smaller boats. We lowered the lifeboat and
-got into it, some 20 or 22 being in it, and got away from the ship on
-the starboard side. The boat was in charge of the boatswain, and the
-second and third engineers and the chief steward were in the boat. We
-left on board the captain, the three mates, the chief engineer, and the
-mess-room steward. Just as we were turning to get clear of the rocks,
-we looked at the ship, and saw the captain and the others leave in the
-other boat on the starboard side. They got safely away from the ship.
-After the vessel struck we hoisted a red pennant with a white ball as
-a signal of distress. When we got away it was getting dark, and we saw
-nothing of the other boat afterwards, but supposed they were following
-us. We pulled in shore to a kind of bay, but not thinking it safe to
-land, we went out of that. We could see nothing but rocks on our coming
-down, and in getting out of the bay our boat capsized. There was a
-very heavy sea running up against the rocks. We got hold of the keel
-of the boat, some twelve or fourteen of us that remained, and then the
-boat turned over again. After that only four or five of us remained
-sticking to the boat. We stuck to the boat until she broke up on the
-rocks. When I let go the boat I could feel the rocks with my feet, and
-I then walked on shore. There were four of us that came on shore, but
-I could see nothing of any others. When we got on shore we walked to a
-brake and got shelter. We had to help Rasmossen up, as he had no boots
-on. He was living half an hour before the coastguards found us, but we
-had been on shore a long time before they found us--about five or six
-hours."
-
-Many of the bodies of the unfortunate men were washed ashore within a
-few days, and not far from the spot where the vessel went down. All
-of them were not identified, as the survivors had joined the ship too
-recently to be acquainted with all the officers and crew.
-
-Another serious calamity in Start Bay occurred during Monday night,
-and not many hours later than the wreck of the _Marana_, when the
-ship _Dryad_, bound for Valparaiso, with a crew of 22 hands all
-told, went ashore about a mile to the eastward of Start Point. When
-the ship went on shore Mr. Hewett, with the life-saving apparatus,
-had left Hallsands for Prawle, from whence rumours of disaster had
-been brought, and he had got as far as Chevilstone Cross when he was
-overtaken by a mounted messenger despatched by the chief officer of
-the coastguard at Torcross, who desired him to return to the Start to
-the assistance of the _Dryad_. He got to the scene of the wreck at
-half-past two in the morning. By that time the vessel had broken up,
-all her masts having gone overboard, and but little of her could be
-discerned in the darkness. The place where she struck was right under
-the high land of the Start where the cliffs are very precipitous. With
-regard to this vessel, the coastguardsmen say that they saw no signals
-of distress whatever, and it has been considered probable that she was
-proceeding with a fair wind down Channel, and no land being visible in
-the snow-filled gloom of the night, those on board were unconscious of
-their proximity to the land until they found themselves on the rocks.
-In this case there was, perhaps, no time to show distress signals, and
-the ship may have been some time ashore before she was discovered by
-the coastguards.
-
-About midnight on the ninth, the storm was at its height, and all men
-of Start Bay agree that they never remember such a violent storm, the
-water of the bay being one mass of foam, it being almost impossible
-to look to the windward. Mr. Jones, the head keeper of the Star
-Lighthouse, says he was standing in the yard by his home a little after
-midnight, looking in the direction of the Bay, when he saw right under
-the headland, and close to the Start, what he considered to be a ship's
-lights. He called the other keepers, and as well as they were able they
-got down to the place where they saw the lights. It was at the risk of
-their lives that they went down the cliffs, and it was only by holding
-on to each other they were prevented from being blown away. When they
-got down they could not discover a vestige of anything, neither did
-they hear a cry of any sort. The coastguards at Hallsands also saw
-lights, and fired off a rocket and burned a blue light to warn the ship
-of her danger, but the vessel's lights were only seen a few minutes
-before they disappeared.
-
-In spite of all the efforts of those on shore no trace of a ship could
-be seen, and it was not until daybreak the next morning that a man
-was discovered lying on a low rock, known as John Hatherley's Nose,
-some 500 yards from the spot where the _Dryad_ ultimately proved to
-have struck. Help was at once sought for, and Mr. Briggs, one of the
-keepers, and Mr. Pollyblank, the coastguard, then returned to the rock
-with ropes. They threw the rope on to the rocks, which fell only about
-a foot away from the sailor. He saw it and then slid down, evidently
-with the intention to secure the rope, but he seemed to be afraid,
-and instead of slipping on the lower ledge of the rock where the rope
-was, he climbed on the top of the rock again, and laid himself flat on
-it on his face and hands. He then seemed to lose his hold, and slid
-down, holding on to the rocks for several seconds, when he fell head
-over heels, and was washed away and drowned. Those trying to rescue
-him, seeing how exhausted he was, had fetched a ladder to get to him,
-and Mr. Briggs fastened a rope to himself to swim out to him, but in
-the meantime he was washed away. He was a young man. Grave doubts
-were expressed as to what vessel he came from, for it seems almost
-impossible he could have got to the rocks from the _Dryad_; and there
-was some wreckage visible near the rocks that did not appear to have
-belonged to the _Dryad_. The coastguards at Hallsands said distinctly
-that the lights they saw were a steamer's lights, whilst there is no
-doubt that the lights the lighthouse-keepers saw were those of the
-_Dryad_. Only a piece of the bow of the _Dryad_ was discovered in the
-morning, but a large mass of broken wreckage was discovered along the
-coast, and tons of it were washed out to sea by the next tide. Eight
-bodies were recovered, and friends of those composing the crew of the
-_Dryad_ journeyed to Hallsands for the purpose of identifying their
-friends or relatives. There were no survivors, and consequently no
-details are known, but a statement has been made that the channel pilot
-had warned the captain that the ship's compass was two points out.
-
-Whilst Mr. Crickett and some of the coastguards under his charge at
-Hallsands were at the Start Point on the night of the 9th, trying
-to render assistance to the stranded steamship _Marana_, they saw a
-light in the bay, and they answered it by burning a blue light, and
-one of the coastguards was sent back to try and discover the place the
-light proceeded from. On the remainder of the coastguards returning
-to Hallsands shortly after, a light was seen near Beesands, and on
-reaching that place they found the schooner _Lunesdale_ stranded.
-Mr. Ridge, the chief officer of coastguards stationed at Torcross,
-had arrived with some of his men, and they, with the assistance of
-the Beesands fishermen, were trying to effect a communication with
-the vessel. The captain was in the fore starboard rigging, and the
-remainder of the crew, four in number, were in the starboard mizen
-rigging. All these men were thus on the weather side of the ship, and
-the captain not being so exposed from his position as the others,
-succeeded with the utmost difficulty in getting round to the other,
-or shore side of the vessel. A fisherman named Roper, of Beesands,
-then at the risk of his own life, made a desperate effort to save the
-captain. He got a line with a lead attached to it, and threw it close
-to the captain's feet, the latter succeeding, after a frantic effort,
-to fasten the line to a lifebuoy, and attached himself to it, and was
-then safely hauled on shore. The other seamen were not so successful
-in changing their positions, and in their endeavours they were washed
-away and drowned. All this time the seas were breaking right over the
-vessel. The coastguards and fishermen remained by the vessel for nearly
-an hour afterwards, shouting to see if they could get any response
-from the crew, but getting none, all hope of saving them was given up.
-When it was found that the Prawle life-saving apparatus, in charge
-of Mr. Hewett, could be of no service to the _Marana_, a message was
-left at Start farm for it to be brought on to Beesands to the help of
-the _Lunesdale_, but it arrived too late to be of any service. The
-_Lunesdale_ was a three-masted schooner of 141 tons register, owned by
-Messrs. James Fisher & Sons, of Barrow, and was bound from London to a
-Lancashire port.
-
-While efforts were being made at Beesands to save the crew of the
-_Lunesdale_, a schooner named _Lizzie Ellen_, 73 tons register, and
-belonging to Mr. Samuel Coppack, of Chester, with a cargo of clay from
-Charlestown for London, went on shore just opposite Hallsands. In spite
-of the tremendous force of the wind and the blinding spray and snow
-six fishermen, named T. Trout, George Stone, Robert Trout, James Lynn,
-William Mitchell, and John Patey, at the imminent peril of their lives,
-made a gallant effort to rescue the crew of the vessel, which consisted
-of four hands. With great difficulty, and by the aid of ropes, these
-men succeeded in lowering themselves to the bottom of the cliff. By
-throwing lines on board the schooner the mate and the third hand were
-saved, but the captain and the boy were lost. The captain, Robert Dood,
-urged the boy, who was crying bitterly, to jump over into the sea, with
-the chance of being drawn on shore, but he could not persuade him to
-take the leap. At length the captain jumped himself, but at the wrong
-time, and he was carried out by a receding wave. The boy, Frank Davis,
-also perished.
-
-For some time after this week of tempest, all along the coast from
-Prawle to the Start, could be seen broken wreckage. Such was the fury
-of the gale that everything seemed split to matchwood. It is supposed
-that other wrecks than those of which some knowledge has been obtained
-occurred on this eventful night. Mr. Crickett, a coastguardsman, picked
-up on the following Saturday a board bearing the words "Nymph of
-T----," it being broken off at the letter T, and it is conjectured that
-this may belong to one of the vessels referred to. A painful sequel
-to the wreck of the _Marana_ occurred on Wednesday, March 18th, nine
-days after the catastrophe. A molecatcher of Prawle found at about
-half-past eleven, in a field half a mile from a village named Furze
-Brake, and about a quarter of a mile from the sea, the body of a man.
-The corpse was lying flat upon its face, and was clothed in an oil-skin
-coat in addition to the ordinary kind of seaman's dress. A life-belt
-was lying close by, and the locality was not more than a hundred yards
-from the spot where the two survivors from the _Marana_ had been found
-supporting to the best of their power their dying comrade. Unknown to
-the other survivors this man must have succeeded in reaching the shore,
-but only to die. Undoubtedly he walked in search of help and shelter
-until he sank from exhaustion, and was covered with a fall of snow
-thick enough to screen his body from view until a thaw had set in.
-
-The inquests held on the bodies of those unfortunate seamen who lost
-their lives in the vicinity of the Start have had the effect of a
-communication being made to the Board of Trade as to the necessity
-of life-saving apparatus being placed at Hallsands. In the face of
-a hurricane of almost unprecedented force, many gallant and eager
-attempts were made to save life, but with only a very limited measure
-of success, owing as much to the want of suitable appliances as to the
-rugged character of the coast, and the merciless fury of the gale.
-
-Along the coast, in the neighbourhood of Falmouth, which from its
-exposed position was fully open to the strength of the blizzard, there
-were more disastrous wrecks, and here also the loss of life was great.
-The most serious calamity occurred at about half-past one on Tuesday
-morning, and was that which, at Penare Point, near Helford River,
-befell the four-masted steel ship _Bay of Panama_, of London, 2,282
-tons register. This vessel, owned by the Bullock's Bay Line, was from
-Calcutta, with a cargo of 17,000 bales of jute for Dundee. The captain,
-David Wright, of Liverpool, his wife, all but one of the six officers,
-four apprentices, and six of the crew, were either frozen to death in
-the rigging or drowned. This made a loss of eighteen lives out of a
-company of about forty all told.
-
-At the village of St. Keverne, not far from Penare Point, it became
-known at about noon on Tuesday that a wreck had occurred at the mouth
-of the Helford River, and from there the first news of what had
-occurred was conveyed into Falmouth, with great courage, and in the
-face of tremendous difficulties, by Mr. J. H. James, of Old Vicarage,
-St. Keverne. At one o'clock, Mr. James started on his pony for Helston
-in the midst of a terrible snowstorm. His intention was to telegraph to
-Falmouth, but all the wires were down, and communication was impossible
-except on foot. This he undertook, and by dauntless perseverance at
-length accomplished; but his experiences during the journey are among
-the most thrilling personal incidents connected with the gale. After
-proceeding for about two miles, he could only get along by crawling on
-his hands and knees through the snow, and his face had become coated
-with snow, and icicles hung from his ears. He at last found shelter
-at a wayside cottage, and at daybreak next morning again set out,
-reaching Falmouth at 9 o'clock, and giving information to Messrs. Broad
-and Sons, who sent out steamers to the scene of the wreck. The _Bay
-of Panama_ was discovered with her head to the north, broadside on to
-the sea, and jammed under the Nare Head, close against the cliff. Her
-mainmast was gone, and the sea was making clean breaches right over her.
-
-Fortunately for the survivors clinging to the stranded ship, before Mr.
-James had started on his adventurous journey to Falmouth, on Tuesday
-morning, the rocket apparatus, in charge of the coastguard, who were
-aroused by Mr. Nicholls, of Penare, had reached the scene from Helford.
-The first rocket fired threw a line right over the ship, and within
-fifteen minutes the whole of the survivors were safely on shore.
-Chief boatman Fisher, of the coastguard, went on board the vessel
-after the hands taken off to see if any one was left alive, but his
-self-sacrifice was without result. Accounts of survivors, including
-those of Mr. Fred Evans, boatswain's mate, Mr. Charles Higgins,
-quartermaster, and Mr. Beresford, apprentice, relate that the _Bay of
-Panama_ was 111 days from Calcutta when she struck. There had been
-forty-two days of severe weather before reaching the western end of
-the English Channel, and here severe snowstorms and heavy squalls were
-encountered. At half-past eleven on Sunday night they sighted a light,
-and being in a position of danger they burned several blue lights, the
-captain thinking the light came from a steamer. The vessel was now
-drifting to leeward without a stitch of canvas on her, and the captain
-soon expressed the opinion that they were to leeward of the Lizard and
-clear of all land. At half-past twelve the watch went below, put on
-some clean clothes, and got into their bunks. The captain remained on
-deck, his wife being in her cabin.
-
-Within an hour from this time the ship struck and began rapidly to
-fill. Most of those who had been below went forward, though the
-forecastle had been burst in, and was flooded. Seas were breaking
-over the vessel, and nearly all the officers were early swept away.
-The second officer went to fetch a rocket, and was never seen again.
-Attempts were made to get a line on shore, and one seaman is said
-to have volunteered to swim the distance, but the former was found
-impracticable, and in the latter case the other seamen held their
-comrade back. Some of the crew took refuge in the rigging, and at
-daybreak the second quartermaster died there, the mate died an hour
-after, and the boatswain, in a state of delirium, jumped from the
-mizzen-top into the sea and was drowned. Just before six o'clock in the
-morning, the after-end of the ship broke in two, the mainmast having
-previously fallen. It is said that, at the time the rescuing party
-arrived on the scene, six men were frozen in the rigging. The survivors
-were taken to St. Keverne Farm, which they reached at half-past ten
-on Tuesday morning, and where they were kindly treated. They remained
-there until four in the afternoon, when they were conveyed to Gweek
-in a 'bus. From here it was absolutely necessary for them to walk to
-Falmouth through the snow, and as many of them were thinly clad,
-and had no boots, their trials were not over until Falmouth was
-reached, where Messrs. Jewell and Burton, and Mr. and Mrs. Weir, of
-the Royal Cornwall Sailors' Home, treated them with all the kindness
-and attention they so much needed. Most of the bodies from the _Bay of
-Panama_ were recovered, that of the Captain's wife having been found
-lying on the shore early on the morning of the wreck.
-
-Though this was the most serious wreck near Falmouth, it was far from
-being the only one. Reports of wrecks and loss of life continued to be
-received for many days following the beginning of the gale on Monday.
-Near Porthoustock, on Monday night, the sloop _Dove_, of Topsham, was
-lost, but in this case the crew were saved. The _Dove_ left Exmouth
-Bight on March 8th, arriving at Plymouth Breakwater early on Monday
-morning. Just after daybreak, in company with several other vessels,
-she left for Falmouth. There was a strong wind blowing, which, as time
-went on, increased with much violence, and was followed by a blinding
-snowstorm. The captain and mate of the _Dove_, who were both at the
-helm, could, they said afterwards, scarcely see their hands before
-them. At about three o'clock in the afternoon the vessel was near the
-Manacle Rocks, and off Porthoustock Cove, and here, while in a most
-critical situation, the tremendous sea lifted the little craft clean
-over the rocks, and she was washed up on the beach. The skipper threw
-his little boy overboard, he and his mate following in the same way,
-and all were rescued by those persons on shore. Near the same spot, the
-ketch _Aquilon_, of Jersey, and the ketch _Edwin_, were reported lost
-with all hands.
-
-The steamer _Stannington_, from Newport to Exeter with a cargo of
-potatoes, broke her shaft on Monday off the Longships, and was towed
-into Falmouth on Wednesday afternoon. The barque _Frith_, of Lorne, 333
-tons, from Hamburg to Glasgow, in ballast, was in a critical condition
-on Tuesday, about ten miles south of the Lizard. She slipped from the
-tug towing her, and was on her beam ends, and fast making water, when
-she was picked up by the S.S. _Anglesea_, of Liverpool, and towed into
-Falmouth. A German steamer, the _Carl Hirschberg_, from Hamburg to
-Cardiff in ballast, drove ashore at Portscatho. The schooner _Agnes and
-Helen_, of Beaumaris, went ashore on Tuesday morning in Bream Bay. A
-steamship named the _Dundela_, from St. Michael for Hull, with fruit,
-was totally wrecked at Portloe, near Falmouth, on Monday night. All the
-crew, except a boy named Taylor, who was lost, were brought ashore over
-the rocks by the aid of the fishermen and coastguard, who contrived
-to get a line from the shore to the vessel. The brig _Crusader_, of
-Aberystwith, from Carnarvon, with slate for Hamburg, was abandoned
-at one o'clock on Tuesday off Trevose Head, with seven feet of water
-in her hold. The _Crusader_ left Carnarvon at nine o'clock on Monday
-morning, in fine weather. It remained fine up to six o'clock the same
-evening, when severe weather was encountered. At nine o'clock, off the
-Bishop, it was blowing a gale, and the brig was fast making water.
-The pumps were kept going until one o'clock on Tuesday afternoon,
-when it was found impossible to keep the water under. The brig was
-therefore abandoned, having seven feet of water in her hold. The
-captain and crew, seven all told, took to the boat, in which they were
-tossed about for nineteen hours, enduring great privation. The weather
-was bitterly cold, and the men were almost frozen. One of the crew,
-Thomas Owen, succumbed to his sufferings at four o'clock on Wednesday
-morning. "Another two hours in the boat," remarked Captain Williams,
-"and we should have all perished." To keep the boat from being swamped,
-she rode with sea-anchor out, and everything was thrown overboard,
-including spare clothes. At eight o'clock on Wednesday morning, when
-thoroughly exhausted, they were fortunately picked up by the fishing
-smack _Gertrude_, about thirty miles off the land, and arrived at
-Falmouth on the same day. The crew were received at the Sailors' Home.
-
-The crew of the Netherlands barque _Magellan_ were taken into Falmouth
-on the evening of Sunday, March 16th, the vessel having foundered on
-the previous Thursday in the Channel, in lat. 47·48 N., long. 6·53 W.
-
-A large number of minor accidents at sea occurred on this part of the
-coast, and while the Channel outside contained numerous traces of
-floating wreckage, disabled vessels of all descriptions were either
-being towed or making their way into Falmouth. Rumours of missing
-vessels were being continually received, and the time was one of great
-anxiety. All the help that could be given was needed for those who
-had escaped with their lives, and others who were known to be still
-at sea, probably in situations of peril, and this assistance was very
-willingly afforded. Most efficient and welcome aid was rendered by the
-local Branch of the Shipwrecked Mariners' Aid Society to the distressed
-crews. The captain and crew of the _Crusader_ (six men), the crew of
-the _Agnes and Helen_, the crew of the _Dungella_ (eleven men), and
-the survivors of the crew of the _Bay of Panama_ (sixteen men) were
-provided with free railway passes to their several homes, and each man
-supplied with food for the journey, by the hon. agent of the society at
-that port (Mr. F. H. Earle), who also boarded, lodged, and otherwise
-provided for the crews of the two first-named vessels, the men being
-more or less destitute. The homes of the men were Bangor, Aberystwith,
-and other places in Wales, and London, Liverpool, Hull, and Great
-Yarmouth. At a public meeting held in the public hall on Tuesday
-evening, many promises for subscriptions towards a fund in aid of the
-boatmen were received.
-
-Some dissatisfaction was expressed that during the wrecks at
-Porthoustock and Porthalla, on March 9th, when about thirty lives
-were lost, no life-boat had been launched, and the National Lifeboat
-Institution sent to St. Keverne, about a fortnight after the
-occurrence, Commander Biddors, R.N., who made inquiries into the
-matter. It appeared on investigation that some of the life-boat crew
-did not readily respond to the call signals, their explanation being
-that they did not hear or see them. When they arrived at the life-boat
-station the storm had increased, and it was dangerous to put to sea.
-A proposal for the provision of a smaller life-boat, requiring fewer
-oars, has been submitted to the life-boat committee.
-
-Off Scilly, several accidents occurred, but they were neither so
-numerous nor attended with the same fatal results as those on the
-coast further east. The ketch _Aunt_, Bude, was taken into Plymouth
-in a disabled condition, and with only two of the crew that remained
-severely ill from frostbites. On Saturday morning, 14th March, when
-in latitude 7·20 W., and longitude 48·7 W., about 233 miles S.SW. of
-Scilly, the _Astrea_, Captain Burton, sighted the _Aunt_ some miles off
-with her sails down and flying a signal of distress. She bore down upon
-her, and Captain Burton sent alongside a boat's crew, who found the
-captain, H. Hines, and a sailor named Jewett wrapped in the mainsail
-in a shocking state, and scarcely able to speak. Their hands and legs
-were also so much swollen from frostbites and exposure that they could
-not handle anything or lift themselves up or stand. Brandy and medicine
-were administered to them, and after a time they sufficiently recovered
-to be able to inform their rescuers that the _Aunt_ was ten days out
-from Sandersfoot with coals. Four days before a lad named Stapleton had
-died from exposure, and his body was thrown overboard.
-
-A serious collision, resulting in the loss of twenty-two lives,
-happened during the week of the gale about 140 miles south-west of
-Scilly, at 9 o'clock on the evening of Friday the 13th March. Two
-vessels, the _Roxburg Castle_, of Newcastle, a steamship of 1,222 tons
-register, and the _British Peer_, ship, 1428 tons, came into collision
-just as the gale that had been blowing all the week was moderating, and
-the steamer was struck with considerable force by the _British Peer_
-a little abaft the funnel. She was almost cut in two, and filled so
-rapidly that in about ten minutes she sank, losing twenty-two out of a
-total of twenty-four hands. As a further result of the collision, the
-_British Peer_ had her bows stove in, and carried away her bowsprit,
-jibboom, and head gear. The forward bulkhead held good, and kept the
-vessel afloat. After the collision nothing could be done to save the
-lives of the crew of the _Roxburg Castle_, although their piteous cries
-for help were plainly heard on the _British Peer_. Captain Tyrer, a
-splendid swimmer, whilst in the water combated the waves, took his
-clothes off in the water, and was picked up by the _British Peer_, as
-was also one of the seamen, an A.B. The drowned men are reported to
-be principally from Newport. After the _Roxburg Castle_ had sunk, the
-_British Peer_ was fallen in with, about ninety miles south-west of the
-Wolf Rock, by the steamship _Morglay_, of Southampton, Captain Hughes,
-from Cardiff to Marseilles, and towed to off the Manacles, where she
-was transferred to the tug _Triton_, and taken into Falmouth harbour.
-Captain Tyrer was very much knocked about during his swim to the
-_British Peer_.
-
-The Hamburg American Company's steamship _Suevia_, 2,440 tons, had a
-narrow escape in the Channel on Monday night. The _Suevia_ passed the
-Lizard on Monday morning, and there were then evident indications of
-a coming storm. At 11 A.M. the wind began to blow heavily from the
-north-east, and at 2·30 P.M. it raged with hurricane fury, accompanied
-by a blinding snowstorm. The seas ran very high, and the ship laboured
-heavily. At about three o'clock, when eight miles east of the Start
-Point, the engineer reported that the lower pressure piston rod had
-given out, and that in consequence the machinery was disabled. An
-endeavour was then made to work the other engine, but unsuccessfully,
-and sail was then put on the vessel. By this means she was prevented
-from driving ashore during the terrific squalls that were blowing
-dead on the land. After a night and day of great danger, a schooner
-was sighted on Tuesday afternoon, which the captain of the _Suevia_
-considered went down in one of the squalls. On Wednesday the steamer
-_Acme_ was fallen in with, and on her the chief officer proceeded
-to Falmouth for assistance. During Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday,
-efforts were made to repair the machinery, and these meeting at last
-with some success, by early on Friday the vessel was headed up channel,
-and proceeded at a slow pace until the Eddystone was sighted. The
-passengers of the _Suevia_ were landed at Plymouth, from whence they
-were sent on to Hamburg. The distance the _Suevia_ drifted from the
-scene of the accident until Friday at noon was 125 miles, and it was
-very fortunate that they were able to keep clear of the coast. Steamers
-from Plymouth, London, and Falmouth, the latter with the officer of the
-_Suevia_ who had gone on shore for help, were looking for the vessel,
-but happily their services were not required. But for the excellent
-seamanship and mechanical skill of those on board, another dreadful
-calamity would doubtless have been added to the long list already
-recorded.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-IN TOWN AND COUNTRY.
-
-
-ASHBURTON.--Enormous drifts fell at Ashburton during the blizzard,
-and most of the roads were completely blocked. At Holne Turn, half a
-mile from the town, there was an enormous drift a quarter of a mile in
-extent, and varying in height from eight to twenty feet. Railway and
-postal arrangements were pretty well adjusted by the end of the week,
-and business began to proceed as usual. There were some serious losses
-of stock by farmers in the neighbourhood, and apple-orchards were
-greatly injured. Masses of snow lodged in the branches of the trees,
-and broke them down, many of the younger trees having every branch
-broken off close to the stump. In sheltered valleys the drifts of snow
-were so great that scarcely a tree escaped injury. Bakers who supplied
-country residents were unable to go out to them with their supplies.
-
-BARNSTAPLE.--The chief town of North Devon had a very harsh experience.
-Traffic was for some time suspended, but the inconvenience in this
-respect was not nearly so great as in the south of Devon and in
-Cornwall. In the districts around Barnstaple there were very heavy
-losses of sheep and lambs. Farmers near Morthoe were particularly
-unfortunate, nearly two hundred sheep and lambs belonging to them
-having perished. Through roads and railways being blocked the markets
-were greatly interfered with, and this, besides cutting off from many
-of the country people their weekly supplies, was a great loss to the
-tradespeople of the town.
-
-BIDEFORD, which has already been referred to, did not suffer so
-severely as many other North Devon towns. Railway communication with
-Ilfracombe was entirely suspended throughout Tuesday, the 10th, but
-as the weather moderated the line was cleared without any very great
-amount of inconvenience having been experienced.
-
-BODMIN.--In this important western town there was an almost entire
-cessation of traffic from Monday afternoon until the closing days of
-the week. The telegraphic and train services were suspended, causing
-the usual amount of loss and distress. Business on the Tuesday was
-entirely suspended, snow falling heavily all day, and a large quantity
-of snow in the street stopped all vehicular traffic. The drifts were so
-high that residents who had driven from the town on Monday could not
-return, and great anxiety was naturally felt for their safety. It was
-found on the following day, however, that in all cases, the travellers
-were safe. Not infrequently they had been obliged to take the horses
-out of their vehicles, leave traps or carriages in the roads--often
-under the snow--and seek shelter in the nearest farm-house. There were
-very serious losses of sheep in this district. Among others, losses
-of this description were sustained by Mr. Rowse, of Llancarpe, Mr.
-Glanville, of Pen Bugle, and Mr. G. Spear, of Bodmin. Many sheep were
-rescued, but only after great difficulty. On Thursday night there was
-again a heavy snowstorm, accompanied by a gale of wind, but it was
-neither so severe nor of such long duration as the blizzard of Monday
-and Tuesday.
-
-BRENT.--This moorland town has grown famous through the snowing up at
-its gates of the "Zulu" express, from London, on the memorable Monday
-night. Snow fell there from Monday afternoon to Wednesday morning. A
-snow-plough with three engines arrived from Newton Abbott on Thursday
-morning, but for some time it was not very effective, the snow being
-so high on either side of the line that as soon as the way was fairly
-clear the banks in the rear of the plough toppled over, and the line
-was once more blocked. The depth of the snow in the town was so great
-as to be frequently above the windows and doors of the houses. A road
-cutting scene was photographed at the time by Mr. Rowe, of Devonport,
-to whom we are indebted for the view. The loss of cattle here was very
-great, nearly every farmer having suffered. A large number of cattle,
-sheep and ponies in the possession of residents of the neighbourhood
-grazed upon the adjacent moor, and many of the former, at all events,
-perished. Mr. Linerdon, of Yelland, lost cattle to the value of over
-£100; Mr. Pinney, of Diptfort, dug out 100 sheep from the snow; while
-Mr. Heath, of Brent Mills, Mr. Vooght, of Lutton, and Mr. S. Northmore
-were heavy losers. Mr. Luscombe, of Hall, Harford, had on the moor
-600 Scotch cattle and 1,200 sheep, a large proportion of which he
-has not yet recovered. Mr. J. Smerdon, of Brent, and Mr. Hurrell,
-of Bradridge, lost sheep; and Miss Maunder, Mr. B. Hingston, and Mr.
-J. Hard lost ponies. Until Saturday the residents of Binnicknowle,
-a village about two miles from Brent, and largely dependent upon it
-for supplies of food, were unable to obtain provisions. On that day,
-however, a party of labourers succeeded in cutting a footway and thus
-communication was opened up.
-
-[Illustration: CUTTING A ROAD AT BRENT.]
-
-BRIXHAM.--This historic fishing town, which has before now witnessed
-some dreadful instances of the disaster to life and property that
-furious gales with blinding snowstorms can bring about, was not on the
-occasion of the blizzard of 1891 allowed to pass off very lightly.
-There was no loss of life, but some rather serious injuries happened
-to the trawlers at their moorings. At daylight on Tuesday it was seen
-that many of these had fouled each other, by dragging their anchors.
-In the inner harbour most of the craft had broken adrift, running
-against the quays and other places, and doing themselves all kinds of
-damage. One trawler, named the _Alice_, which broke adrift at high
-tide, was carried up to the head of the harbour with her bowsprit eight
-feet in over the Strand, close alongside the Prince of Orange statue.
-About 200 feet of the breakwater was washed away, and its pedestal was
-lost. Timber in large quantities was washed away from the yards of the
-principal shipbuilders, and in addition to the wreck of the French
-brig, and others before mentioned, a boat was driven on the rocks at
-Fishcombe, and the Seamen's Orphan Home lifeboat went ashore, and was
-badly knocked about. In the town many houses were unroofed, and slates
-flew about, serious damage being also done to a wall and embankment in
-Higher Street. Large quantities of glass-roofing were smashed in, and a
-good deal of glass was destroyed at Newmarket Hall. Many farmers lost
-sheep and lambs in the snow-drifts.
-
-BUDE.--The outside world and Bude were not so thoroughly estranged
-during the days succeeding the storm as was the case in some other
-instances, telegraphic communication remaining unbroken. All the other
-inconveniences of the blizzard--absence of mails, presence of immense
-drifts of snow, and similar discomforts--were freely experienced. There
-was an anxious time among the shipping interest in the port, many of
-the coasting vessels being at sea at the time the hurricane was raging.
-These vessels did not all escape without calamity, but, on the whole,
-the damage wrought to the shipping of Bude was not great.
-
-CALSTOCK.--The mining town of Calstock received some rough treatment
-during the Monday and Tuesday of the storm, and damage was here and
-there done to house property, but as far as the town was concerned it
-may be safely said to have escaped marvellously well. Bearing in mind
-its exposed position on the river bank, and the many tall chimneys
-that rear their heads from the hillside, it is singular that no smash
-of any magnitude has to be recorded. This is all the more remarkable
-when the tremendous destruction that occurred in the district, and even
-close to the town, is considered. On the opposite side of the river,
-the tracks leading through the woods to Buralston Station were rendered
-nearly impassable by the number of trees that fell, and the whole wood
-through which the path runs was a complete wreck. Mr. James, at the
-Passage Inn, from which the ferry leaves to cross to Calstock, was
-very unfortunate, his loss being a severe one. In addition to great
-damage to his rose-trees, for which his house has for many years been
-famous, the well-known blossom-covered wicker bower, standing to the
-left of the house, was blown bodily away into the orchard, and almost
-simultaneously his cherry and apple trees began to fall. Of these he
-lost fifty-six.
-
-One curious incident happened at the grounds of Mr. James, in the
-apparently narrow escape of a couple of geese. The geese were sitting
-behind a barn, with twenty-two eggs under them. During the storm of
-Monday, the barn having been badly knocked about, and the whole
-orchard in a state of wreck, the fate of the geese was not held in
-much doubt, and the depth of the snow in the place making salvage
-operations very difficult, their place of concealment was not reached
-until Thursday after the storm. The snow being cleared from the back
-of the barn, however, the geese were found still sitting in the same
-position as that in which they had last been seen. With the exception
-that they had evidently worked their heads about, keeping the cavities
-large enough to give them breathing room, it was quite clear that they
-had not attempted to move. Warm food and hay were at once given to
-them, and they were made as comfortable as possible, and in due course,
-eleven goslings were hatched from the twenty-two eggs upon which the
-parent geese had sat through such a trying time. The young geese are
-now as sturdy as could be desired, and Mr. James is naturally very
-proud of them for having seen the light in spite of such difficulties.
-The mother geese will also, in all probability, be preserved as
-curiosities for some time to come.
-
-On the other side of the river a shed belonging to Mr. Goss's
-shipbuilding yards was blown down, and cattle-sheds were unroofed and
-carried great distances by the force of the gale. At Danescombe Bottom,
-at the foot of Kelly Rock, an iron schooner, the _Naïad_, 250 tons,
-owned by Captain Samuels of Calstock, was blown over on her beam ends.
-The river banks, against which the masts of the vessel struck, only
-prevented her being turned completely over. After considerable labour
-she was righted, but was found to have sustained some damage. At the
-Rumleigh Brick-works, and at the yards of Mr. Roskelly, builder, of
-Albaston, much injury was occasioned. The mineral and goods line, the
-property of the East Cornwall Mineral Railway Company, running from
-Calstock to Kelly Bray, near Callington was blocked with a drift of
-snow some eight feet deep, and work was stopped for two days. At the
-end of that time it was cleared by a gang of the company's own men
-acting under the direction of Captain W. Sowden. On the same property
-about fifty yards of fencing were completely levelled. Honeycomb House,
-about two miles from Calstock, was damaged to the extent of about £100;
-Mr. Gill, of Tray Hill, lost over 100 apple trees, and Mr. German 250
-fruit trees. The heaviest damage to trees was at Cotehele Woods, the
-property of the Earl of Mount Edgcumbe, and overlooking Calstock, which
-would appear to have received the full fury of the blast. The terrible
-night passed here, and the extent of the destruction to timber, will be
-found dealt with at length in the chapter on Parks and Forests.
-
-CAMBORNE.--The change at Camborne would appear to have been an
-unusually startling one, since a few days before Monday, butterflies
-were to be seen flying about. Snow commenced to fall in the district
-at two o'clock on Monday afternoon, and this soon developed into the
-blizzard. The storm is described as the greatest and the most severe
-known by the oldest residents in the parish. The telegraph wires were
-blown down, and, lying across the streets, threw several horses down.
-The houses were so covered with snow as to be almost unrecognizable,
-and in many places the drifts were over six feet deep. Ornamental,
-and other trees in the town were completely spoiled, and traffic was
-suspended. Anxiety was at one time felt in the town for the safety of
-four young girls, dressmakers, of Beacon village, who left the town
-on the Monday evening, but it was afterwards learned that they were
-all in safety. In Burse-road and Pendarmes-road the shrubs and trees
-were broken down, and lay overhanging and obstructing the footpaths.
-Passages had to be cut to get to the houses, half as high as the houses
-themselves. A 'bus running between Camborne and Truro was snowed up
-near Pool, and left in the road; and near it was an abandoned organ,
-the peripatetic performer on which had been unable to bear it with him
-to a place of safety.
-
-At a village about a mile and a half from Camborne drifts of snow were
-observed thirty feet deep. In the town the Board schools were closed
-for the week. All communication with surrounding towns was, as a matter
-of course, cut off for several days. At Beacon and Troon, adjoining
-villages, people were taken from their bedroom windows by means of
-ladders; and in one case, at a funeral, the coffin had to be slid down
-over a snowdrift. At Breage a woman was found dead in the snow. Farmers
-were busy in every direction rescuing their cattle and sheep from the
-exposed positions, but the losses in the neighbourhood were very great,
-hundreds of sheep being buried. Among others who suffered in this way
-were Mr. Carter, of Troon, who lost nearly twenty sheep and lambs; Mr.
-Hickens, of Tregear; Mr. Glasson, of Crowan; Mr. Josiah Thomas, of
-Roskear, Tuckingmill; and Mr. P. Thomas, of Camborne. Several donkies
-and ponies in the district perished. The little villages of Penponds,
-Kehelland, and Pengegon, presented a wretched appearance, and at
-Penponds especially it was impossible to distinguish any hedges. Mr. E.
-Rogers, who had undertaken to carry out some funeral arrangements at
-this village, was obliged to take the coffin over hedges and ditches
-in order to get it to the house. At Pengegon, where the water-supply
-is solely obtained from wells and springs, it was found necessary to
-use melted snow for domestic purposes. The old thatched farmhouse of
-Pengegon, on the Wednesday, when the sun shone, presented a strikingly
-beautiful appearance, and was a prominent feature of the landscape.
-
-The village of Treslothan also shared the effect of the storm. Trees
-were damaged and blown down in large numbers, and even as late as
-Good Friday snow nearly a foot deep lay on some of the paths. A large
-amount of damage was also done to trees and shrubs at Reskadirmick,
-the abode of Captain W. C. Vivian, the beautiful carriage drive to
-the house being terribly disfigured. At the factories and mines
-business operations were, for some time, entirely suspended, and it is
-calculated that during the week quite a thousand persons of both sexes
-were enforcedly idle. Work might have gone on at the factories, but
-in many cases the operatives were unable to leave their homes. At the
-mines there was great anxiety, it being feared that the engines would
-stop for want of coals. Passages were, however, in time cut through,
-and not more than two or three engines actually ceased working.
-Cuttings were made from the railway station to South Condurrow and
-Wheal Grenville mines, a distance of more than a mile. So urgent was
-the need for coal at West Seaton mine on Saturday, the 14th, that forty
-miners were sent to help the labourers from Portreath to make a road
-from the railway to the mine. The Wheal Grenville and Newton mines
-were stopped for want of coal for some days. At Dolcoath, however,
-considerable difficulty was experienced on the floors in getting a
-sufficient supply of water to work the stamps, owing to the leats
-being blocked. At the fire stamps, in particular, both engines for a
-time ceased work, and operations were not again renewed until late on
-Tuesday afternoon. The openworks suffered considerably, as it took
-nearly the whole of the week to clear away the snow from the frames
-and huddles. The miners themselves were greatly inconvenienced owing
-to some of their homes being situated at a distance from the mines,
-and their being unable to get to their work; while many who had been
-working underground during the afternoon, found, on coming to the
-surface, that they could not reach their residences. At Crowan, the Rev.
-H. Molesworth St. Aubyn, organized and worked hard with a body of men
-to help in opening up communication with Camborne.
-
-CAMELFORD.--At this place experience, for almost the entire week, was
-very bitter. The residents were absolutely shut in from Monday to
-Friday. The last sign of the outer world was when the North Cornwall
-Coach, notwithstanding the snow already accumulated on the moors,
-passed through on its way from Launceston to Wadebridge. The market
-on Thursday was a dead failure, no live stock being obtainable, and
-carcases very scarce. There were many narrow escapes met with, but no
-actual loss of life occurred. As the week passed away provisions became
-very scarce, and there was a growing alarm. On Friday, however, four
-persons on horseback, unrecognizable from the quantity of snow that
-covered them, entered the town in single file. The party consisted of
-Mr. George Martyn, late of Trewen, Manager of the North Cornwall Coach
-Company, Mr. Hicks, one of the clerks at Wadebridge, and the coachman
-and guard of the coach which had gone through on Monday. The party,
-who brought with them a very welcome copy of the _Western Morning
-News_, held an interview with Mr. Evelyn, the Town Clerk of Camelford,
-and subsequently, under the direction of the road-surveyor, a body of
-men was organized to cut through the three miles of snow-covered road
-between Camelford and Wadebridge, for the purpose of opening up a means
-of obtaining provisions from the latter place. This was ultimately
-accomplished, and by Tuesday, March 17th, the North Cornwall Coach was
-once more able to run to Launceston, and the Mail, from Camelford to
-Boscastle, also ran. Hundreds of sheep were lost, the drifts of snow
-being so high that much time was lost in getting at those that were
-buried beneath, and they were taken out dead in large numbers. Mr.
-Pethick, Mr. Inch, Mr. Lobb, and Mr. Greenwood, in addition to many
-farmers, suffered severely in this respect.
-
-CARGREEN.--At this riverside village, situated on the banks of the
-Tamar, the gale of Monday and Tuesday caused great havoc among the
-fruit-trees. Mr. E. Elliott, of Landulph, lost about three hundred
-apple-trees, many of which had been planted by himself thirty years
-before.
-
-DARTMOUTH.--At Dartmouth the storm was severe, and all telegraphic
-communication was cut off during the week of the gale, but by the
-following Sunday a staff of telegraphic engineers had restored
-communication with Exeter by a single wire, and also with Brixham. On
-one night during the week a wall gave way at the Castle churchyard and
-fell on to the rocks beneath, carrying with it several tombstones, and
-disturbing the coffins in the graves. At the market on Friday morning
-buyers arrived in the town by train, from all parts, for the purpose
-of buying provisions, but their journey was fruitless, as the farmers
-had not been able to get into the town, the roads being impassable for
-vehicles. Railway traffic was only partially suspended, but the first
-through communication to Kingsbridge was not effected until Monday the
-16th, when Mr. Sanders, driver of the Dartmouth coach, managed, with
-the assistance of Mr. Cross, of Strete, Mr. Watson, of Chillington, and
-a number of volunteers, to get a conveyance through from Dartmouth.
-They had to cut their way through about two miles of snowdrifts, which
-in many places, were upwards of six feet deep. When Mr. Sanders and his
-party got to Frogmore they invited the co-operation of the villagers,
-offering money and beer for help. This, however, was declined, but
-the party arrived in Kingsbridge shortly before three o'clock, about
-two hours later than the usual time of the arrival of the Dartmouth
-coach. Messrs. Cross and Watson rendered admirable service. The only
-papers delivered between Dartmouth and Kingsbridge since Monday the
-9th, were the copies of the _Western Morning News_ and _Western Daily
-Mercury_ distributed by Sanders along the line of route on Thursday
-and Saturday. Among other damage enormous destruction was done to the
-plantation at Blackpool, almost the whole of the young trees being
-spoiled.
-
-DAWLISH.--During the progress of the storm at Dawlish on Tuesday,
-the Ladies' Bathing Pavilion, which stood on the beach in front of
-the Marine Parade, was carried away by the sea, and almost entirely
-destroyed. The pavilion was erected by a limited liability company in
-1880, and the annual income accruing from it had reached between £70
-and £80. The fishermen and others of this attractive watering-place
-sustained great losses by the destruction of fishing and pleasure
-boats. At the Coastguard Station the boathouse was partially unroofed,
-and large blocks of granite were hurled a great distance. As on
-Plymouth Hoe, the iron seats on the sea-wall were rolled over and
-broken. Houses in various parts of the town lost chimney-tops and
-slates, and some large trees, standing in the grounds of the Manor
-House, were stripped of their branches. At Dawlish Water, a cow,
-belonging to Mr. Dufty, was killed by a falling tree. Discomfort was
-experienced by the few passengers who travelled from Exeter to Dawlish
-on the night of Tuesday, by the train which should have reached the
-latter town by about eight o'clock. On reaching the boathouse, near
-Powderham Castle, a block in the shape of a snow-drift was encountered,
-and the passengers made for a hut which was found not far off, and
-a fire being got alight, they remained there until five o'clock on
-Wednesday morning, when a relief engine and snow-plough, with a
-carriage, arriving, they were conveyed to their destination.
-
-ERMINGTON.--Roads everywhere here were completely blocked for a week,
-and neither supplies of provisions, letters, nor newspapers were
-received. The farmers were great sufferers, scores of sheep having
-been buried in the snow, which in some places was fifteen feet deep.
-The work of digging out the sheep commenced during the bright weather
-of Wednesday, when many ewes were found to be dead, the lambs, in some
-cases, being found alive by the side of the dead mothers. Instances
-were met with as late as Saturday where sheep got out of the snow fresh
-and vigorous, after having been buried since the Monday. At Kingston,
-near Ermington, nearly thirty sheep belonging to one farm were blown
-into the sea, and from Ringmore, another village in the same district,
-350 sheep were lost.
-
-EXETER.--In addition to the interference with railway traffic, and the
-collapse of telegraphic communication between the capital of the county
-and the other portions of Devon and of Cornwall that has been already
-briefly described, great inconveniences were experienced in the city
-and all the surrounding villages through the violence of the wind and
-the depth of the drifts of snow. Several accidents to house property,
-in the way of falling chimneys and walls, occurred, but nothing of
-a particularly serious nature was heard of. Business was partially
-suspended, and the streets were almost entirely deserted. Great
-interest was felt in connection with the railway blocks further west,
-and various exciting rumours were circulated from time to time, many
-of them being, fortunately, without foundation.
-
-EXMOUTH.--In the outlying districts in the neighbourhood of Exmouth,
-a peculiarity in connection with the late blizzard that also struck
-observers in many other parts of Devon and Cornwall, was very
-noticeable. This singularity was that localities, commonly regarded
-as the most sheltered, suffered most severely. In such situations the
-drifts became impassable, and the cottagers were without fresh supplies
-of provisions until footways were cleared across fields. The narrow
-lanes were filled with snow. Near the Littleham Church the drift was
-so deep, that a tunnel was made sufficiently wide and high for carts
-to pass through. At one part of the road leading from Lympstone to
-Withycombe, a lane had to be cut for a considerable distance, the drift
-being five or six feet deep. By the end of the week the Exmouth streets
-were all clear, and business was going on much as usual.
-
-FALMOUTH.--Some of the disastrous effects of the blizzard at this
-sea-port have already been recounted, but Falmouth was unfortunate
-in other respects, besides being the scene of so many wrecks with
-attendant loss of life. The weather has been described by residents
-as the heaviest experienced in the district since 1853. Scarcely a
-house exposed to the gale escaped injury, and in many cases property
-suffered severely. Were there space to record them, innumerable
-instances could be given of roofs being blown off, chimneys having
-fallen, and marvellous escapes of residents having occurred during
-these accidents. At the well-known "Curiosity Shop" of Mr. Burton, a
-slate from some opposite premises went through a large window, and
-two vases within, valued at £85, narrowly escaped destruction. The
-back premises of Mr. Webber, jeweller, which overlooked the harbour,
-were completely washed away, and all the fowls in the fowl-house were
-drowned. In the rope-walk several fine Cornish elms were uprooted, one
-of them cutting through a neighbouring roof. Telegraph wires also were
-broken by the falling timber, and many huge limbs of trees were blown
-down outside Grove Hill. Between Monday night and noon on Wednesday
-no train arrived at or left Falmouth, and telegraphic communication
-being cut off the inhabitants knew nothing of what was transpiring in
-other parts. It was not until the Saturday evening that telegraphic
-communication was re-established with Truro, and two hours later a wire
-was got through to London. Messrs. Fox & Co., shipping agents, having
-urgent telegrams to send to London, despatched them via France and
-Spain. The London morning papers despatched on Tuesday reached Falmouth
-on Saturday night, by which time postal affairs were commencing to be
-put in order. All along the quays the damage to small craft of every
-kind was immense, and the shore was strewn with wreckage and crowded
-with damaged boats. At one spot on the market-strand, between the
-King's Arms and the establishment of Mr. Grose, a big sail boat was
-driven ashore, followed by a coal hulk belonging to Messrs. Vivian &
-Sons, the latter knocking down a wall. The S.S. _Carbon_, belonging
-to the Falmouth Coal Company, sank at her moorings in the harbour,
-and the Harbour Board's steamer, _Armenack_, had a narrow escape of
-being wrecked. About a dozen well-known residents had trawlers,
-sailing-boats, and punts damaged or totally wrecked, but these form
-only a small proportion of the losses by the gale. Among the fishermen
-distress was great, and, as already stated on another page, a fund for
-their relief was inaugurated without loss of time.
-
-FOWEY.--At this sea-port very severe weather was experienced. The whole
-country round was covered with snow, and communication by telegraph,
-except to Lostwithiel and St. Austell, was impossible. Fowey does not
-appear to have experienced much of the effects of the gale on Monday
-night and Tuesday, but a strong wind with snow showers, visited the
-town on the following Thursday. There were no casualties, and no great
-loss of sheep, as, though many were buried in the snow, nearly all were
-recovered.
-
-GRAMPOUND ROAD.--Here snow commenced falling at about noon on Monday,
-and continued with only a few minutes' cessation for twenty-four hours.
-The blizzard nature of the storm was most severely felt, and among
-other distressing events hundreds of sheep were lost. All telegraphic
-communication was completely stopped. The last up-train from Penzance,
-due at Grampound Road at about twenty minutes past eight in the
-evening, was blocked by the snow a quarter of a mile west of the
-station. The passengers were got out, and, under the guidance of some
-of the villagers, made their way across the fields, and took shelter
-in the hotels. Strenuous efforts were made to extricate the train,
-but it was not until half-past four on the following morning that the
-difficult task was accomplished, and that the passengers were enabled
-to proceed on their journey. The loss of sheep in this district was
-very great.
-
-GUNNISLAKE.--Throughout the whole of Monday night the blizzard raged in
-Gunnislake, and only slightly abated its force on Tuesday. Havoc was
-spread on every hand, and in one case a very serious accident, that
-narrowly escaped fatal consequences, occurred. This was at the house of
-Mr. Bowhay, surgeon, where a neighbouring chimney crashed through the
-roof and fell into the kitchen. Two servants and an infant child were
-in the kitchen at the time, and one of the former was knocked to the
-floor, and on being extricated was found to have had her leg broken.
-The other servant girl and Mr. Bowhay's child received cuts. On the
-opposite side of the road a chimney fell upon a house named East View,
-crushing in the end roof of a house in which, soon after, and in a room
-immediately below that into which the rubbish fell, a child was born.
-Large trees, over fifty years' old, were rooted up and thrown across
-the main thoroughfares. At Drakewell's Mine serious damage was done to
-the roofs, and at Heath Cottage, adjoining the mine, nine tall Scotch
-firs, which stood within fifteen feet of each other, were rooted up,
-and left lying in all directions.
-
-HELSTON.--At Helston, every road leading to other towns was blocked
-up. No newspaper arrived, nor were any mails sent off until Saturday.
-Telegraph wires and poles, and innumerable trees were blown down, the
-plantations in the district suffering severely.
-
-HEMERDON.--No less than six engines were snowed up on Monday night
-in the neighbourhood of Hemerdon, many of them containing parties
-despatched from Plymouth by the Great Western Railway to the relief
-of the train that left Millbay Station at 6·50 on Monday night, and
-was snowed up on a bridge some distance beyond the Ivybridge Viaduct.
-In two cases timely rescues of drivers were effected by Mr. Harold S.
-Williams, of Torridge, the story of which will be found related in a
-subsequent chapter. One very sad fatality occurred to the wife of a
-miner, named Ann Farley. She left Plympton on Monday afternoon to visit
-her father at Hemerdon village, and setting out for her home in the
-evening would appear to have lost her way, as her body was found on
-Thursday evening in a field at Lobb Farm, in about three feet of snow.
-
-HONITON.--In a path field leading from Offwell to Land Wood, in
-the Honiton district, on the Sunday morning following the Monday
-and Tuesday of the blizzard, the body of a man named Bidgood was
-discovered. It transpired at an inquest subsequently held that the man
-was a labourer, who had left work at Gittisham Hill on Tuesday evening
-to proceed to his home at Offwell. After calling at the New Inn,
-Honiton Hill, he was not again seen alive. The body was found, lying
-flat upon its face, by Mr. F. J. Harford, who was looking for some
-sheep. In many places near Honiton the snow drifts reached to a height
-of twenty feet, and it was almost impossible to find the main road.
-Sheep were buried in the snow in many parts of the district, and large
-trees were rooted up and thrown across the road.
-
-ILFRACOMBE.--At Ilfracombe, during Monday night, a strong gale raged,
-and the brigantine _Ethel_, of Salcombe, went ashore at Combemartin
-early on Tuesday morning, and became a total wreck, but the crew
-were all saved. The schooner _Pride of the West_, of Padstow, had
-her bowsprit carried away, under Hillsborough, and was towed into
-Ilfracombe harbour. Considerable damage was done to property, and
-business for a day or two was suspended. Five large trees were blown
-down in the churchyard. The last train from Barnstaple to Ilfracombe on
-Monday night was brought to a standstill in the Burrow cutting, where
-the snow had reached a great height. The passengers were got safely
-out, and proceeded to the Fortescue Hotel at Morthoe.
-
-IVYBRIDGE.--A full share of destruction of every kind was experienced
-at Ivybridge during the storm. Trees fell in all directions, a large
-one breaking in the roof of the newly constructed Navvy Mission
-Room. The Navvy Missioner, Mr. MacLean, was in the room at the time,
-and had a very narrow escape. Over a dozen trees fell between the
-station and the village, most of them being uprooted. For some time
-provisions in the town showed serious signs of running short, but
-by a laudable system of mutual accommodation between the residents
-and tradespeople any actual privation was averted. Several of the
-passengers by the 6·50 P.M. snowed-up train from Plymouth on Monday
-night, and the down night train due at Plymouth about 8 P.M. on Monday
-night, also blocked at Ivybridge Station, were located in the village,
-but some of the passengers, as late as Thursday evening, were still in
-search of lodgings. The railway guards and drivers were also in dire
-straits, and Mr. Bohn (the proprietor of the London Hotel), promptly
-and generously came to the rescue with free dinners to the railway
-servants. Many hundreds of people visited the scene of the principal
-block at Langham Bridge, where the unfortunate train from Plymouth on
-Monday night became embedded in a deep snow-drift.
-
-KINGSBRIDGE.--This neighbourhood underwent some wretched experiences,
-not only during the blizzard of Monday and Tuesday, but for fully a
-fortnight subsequent to the storm. The roads leading to surrounding
-towns were in a terrible condition through the fall of snow that
-appears to have exceeded here the fall in any other part of Devon, and
-the losses of farm-stock were very great. The first episode occurred
-at seven o'clock on Monday evening, when the mail-cart for Totnes was
-snowed up after having proceeded a mile out of Kingsbridge, and the
-driver was compelled to return with his pair of horses, leaving the
-van in the road. The mail-bags were brought back to the town on the
-following morning. In another case, Mr. Waymouth, of Woolston, four
-miles from Kingsbridge, started from the latter place in his carriage
-for home on the same evening, but was stopped by a fallen tree, and
-he and his coachman were compelled to take shelter at Coombe Royal,
-and to remain there until the following Thursday. There were the usual
-instances of damage to house property, and there was also tremendous
-destruction to trees, and to the shrubberies of the various residences
-in the vicinity of the town. All communication was cut off from outside
-by the destruction of telegraph wires and posts. The telegraph wires
-have been described as presenting a very singular appearance, the
-coating of hardened snow in many instances extending to a thickness
-as great as six inches in diameter. No communication with any other
-town was received or sent for four whole days, and the post-office was
-closed for three days, as no mails could be received or despatched.
-Several commercial travellers who got into the town on Monday were
-compelled to remain till Friday, when they escaped from confinement by
-going to Plymouth by steamer. The hardships endured in neighbouring
-villages for a week were severe, some of the villagers having been
-without coals, and, the bakers having run out of flour, bread in
-sufficient quantities could not be obtained. There was considerable
-injury to some of the crops, and almost every farmer lost sheep in the
-snow. Mr. Hooppell, of Bigbury, lost between three and four hundred,
-the greater number of which were probably blown into the sea. Mr. J.
-Langworthy, of East Allington, lost about seventy sheep and lambs,
-computed to be worth £300. Mr. S. Square, of Thurlestone, also lost
-over 100 valuable sheep and lambs. One gentleman had the task imposed
-upon him of endeavouring to keep alive forty young lambs which had lost
-their mothers.
-
-Great havoc was wrought in the grounds of Coombe Royal, the American
-garden being laid almost bare. In the vicarage grounds many of the
-trees and shrubs were blown down. Improvised sledges were used during
-the second week by residents as well as the local carriers, these
-being, indeed, the only vehicles that could be used with any safety.
-
-[Illustration: ST. CLEER ROAD, LISKEARD.]
-
-LAUNCESTON.--Considerable inconvenience was experienced in Launceston
-throughout the week of storm, but scarcely anything more serious. From
-Tuesday to Thursday there was a complete cessation of intercourse
-with other parts of the country, no mails being despatched, or papers
-or news of any kind being received, and no telegraphic service was
-available throughout the week. Some damage was inflicted by the wind
-to both glass and trees, and the roofs of houses were more or less
-damaged, but altogether Launceston was much more fortunate than the
-majority of west-country towns.
-
-[Illustration: COLDSTILE LANE, LISKEARD.]
-
-LISKEARD.--The greatest discomforts experienced at Liskeard were those
-brought about by the impassable condition of the roads, and by the
-blocking of the leat on Bulland Down, which supplies the town with
-water. The reservoirs on St. Cleer Downs were nearly empty on Wednesday
-morning, when Mr. Sampson, the inspector of the water, visited it, and
-found that an immense snow-drift was blocking it on the north side of
-the down. For nearly twelve hours a gang of men dug at the drift, and
-succeeded in freeing the leat and saving the town from a water famine.
-The leat was on a very exposed part of the down, and the height of the
-snow-drifts in the locality may be judged from the view we give of one
-of these. The illustration is from a photograph kindly supplied by Mr.
-A. W. Venning, solicitor, of Liskeard. A horse and cart had been dug
-out from this drift just before the photograph was taken. The town was
-completely isolated for several days, and the distress among the poorer
-inhabitants was very great. Everything possible was done to mitigate
-the temporary distress, relief committees being formed under the active
-superintendence of the Mayor of Liskeard--Mr. T. Lang. On Friday, after
-Thursday's snowfall, the rural postmen could not go their rounds, the
-height of snow in the roads being so great. Our view of Coldstile Lane,
-near Liskeard (also from a photograph contributed by Mr. Venning),
-which was impassable for days, reveals in a forcible manner the state
-of this part of Cornwall. Here, as elsewhere, hundreds of sheep were
-buried in the snow.
-
-LYME REGIS.--One of the heaviest snowstorms that ever visited the
-south of Dorset was experienced at Lyme Regis on Tuesday, March 10th.
-The town lies six miles from the nearest railway station, and the
-only communication is by two well-appointed three-horse 'busses. On
-Tuesday the 'bus, with an extra horse, left the town at nine in the
-morning, carrying the mails. The conveyance, with great difficulty,
-reached the high hill known as Hunter's Lodge, where, notwithstanding
-all efforts, it was found impossible to proceed further. The one lady
-passenger walked to the hotel at Hunter's Lodge, while the driver, Mr.
-Blake, rode back to Lyme Regis and obtained assistance. By the time
-the luggage and mails had been transferred to a light waggonette the
-'bus, except for the roof, was invisible, and the roof was only kept
-clear by the strong wind blowing at the time. Later on the same night,
-the driver of the mail cart from Illminster to Lyme started to do the
-journey on horseback, driving being out of the question. On about the
-same spot as the 'bus had been buried, the driver lost his horse, and
-accomplished the rest of the journey on foot, arriving at Lyme at one
-o'clock on Wednesday morning. Both horse and 'bus were eventually
-recovered, and the mail carts resumed running on March 17th.
-
-MEVAGISSEY.--The gale of Monday and Tuesday raged with great fury at
-Mevagissey, blowing from E.S.E., accompanied by blinding snow. On
-Tuesday morning the parapet of the new breakwater on the southern side
-of the harbour was found to have been washed off for a distance of two
-hundred feet, and the sea was rushing through the gap. By the end of
-the week the breakwater was in three parts, and it was feared that the
-whole structure would have to be taken down. The damage was estimated
-at over £10,000. The fishermen suffered greatly through the loss of
-herring and pilchard nets, which were shot at anchor in the bay, and
-swept away by the gale.
-
-MODBURY.--The blizzard was very destructive in the Modbury district,
-and the town was completely isolated from the Monday to the Saturday.
-On Monday evening several farmers who had attended the market and left
-for their homes, were driven back, and had to remain in Modbury several
-days. The loss of sheep in the neighbourhood was unusually large, it
-being estimated that within the postal district of Modbury nearly one
-thousand sheep were lost, besides several head of cattle. Some of the
-snow-drifts were immense, and one labourer had his house completely
-covered. A boy, who had been sent on Monday to deliver bread at some
-neighbouring villages, was discovered in the evening sitting in the
-trap almost insensible from cold, while the trap was nearly buried in
-the snow. The horse was released, and the boy taken to the nearest
-house, where he soon recovered.
-
-NEWQUAY.--At Newquay there was a great fall of snow, and many sheep
-were buried. Mr. T. Cardell lost over 100, and other farmers as many as
-forty each. A man named Ambrose Matthews, a hawker of wild flowers, was
-found dead under three feet of snow in a field near Tower Lane, where
-he was probably trying to crawl into a shed for shelter. He was last
-seen selling flowers in the town at half-past eight on Monday night.
-
-NEWTON ABBOTT.--The greater part of the railway traffic at Newton
-Abbott was suspended. The last up-train that arrived on Monday was the
-4·30 P.M. express from Plymouth; and the Monday evening's mails from
-Paddington, and Tuesday morning's Bristol and Newton Abbott travelling
-post-office, which arrived several hours late, were unable to proceed
-further than this town, and about one hundred passengers were compelled
-to remain in Newton. There was, in the streets, an average depth of
-three feet of snow, whilst in some places the drifts were from ten to
-twelve feet in height. Considerable damage was done to the trees and
-shrubs in the park, and in the private gardens.
-
-PADSTOW.--This was another town that suffered very severely. Great
-quantities of unexpected snow fell, and the gale was terrific on Monday
-night and all day on Tuesday. People who were out of town on the Monday
-night had great difficulty in returning to their homes, and one woman,
-named Rebecca Chapman, did not succeed, but was found buried in the
-snow on the following Sunday. Miss Chapman, of about sixty-two years
-of age, who resided at Crugmere, about a mile-and-a-half from Padstow,
-had been in the latter town on Monday, and left for home at about seven
-o'clock in the evening. At a place named Trethillick she lost her
-way, and calling at one of the houses in the village was put upon the
-right road. She was never again seen alive. On perceiving on Tuesday
-that the woman was not at home, the neighbours raised an alarm, and
-search parties were instituted, but the body was not recovered until
-the following week. From the position of the body when found, it would
-seem that the unfortunate woman had mistaken the gate of the field in
-which she was lying for that of her own home, and, entering the field,
-had fallen exhausted. Her basket, containing the provisions she had
-bought in the town, was found lying beside her. When the storm was at
-its fiercest, on Monday evening, the dandy _Louisa_, of Exeter, in
-entering Padstow harbour, ran into the schooner _Ballanheigh Castle_,
-and damaged her galley and bulwarks. A praam, weighing nearly a ton,
-which was lying keel upwards on the quay, was caught during one of the
-squalls, and carried completely over the quay. On many farms large
-numbers of sheep were buried, but in most cases these were rescued
-alive.
-
-PAIGNTON.--Great damage was done at Paignton on Monday night and
-Tuesday. The roof of one wing of the house of Sir Thomas Seccombe,
-K.C.S.I., on Coninence, was blown in, and crashed through the building,
-but nobody was hurt. In the Totnes-road the roof of Miss Scale's house
-was blown off, and several trees were blown down. The landing-stage
-of the Promenade Pier was washed away, and the sea-wall front of
-Redcliff Tower undermined. The Artillery Volunteer ammunition shed was
-completely wrecked. A tall elm at Dr. Goodridge's residence fell over
-and nearly crushed the roof. Steam launches were much injured, and
-several fishermen lost their boats.
-
-PENZANCE.--During Monday night's storm, at Penzance, there was such
-a terrific sea running that the north dock gate was unhung, and
-much damage was occasioned to the shipping in the port. Some of the
-most beautiful trees in the vicinity were ruined. On the following
-Tuesday the storm continued, and business almost entirely ceased,
-no shops being opened for the day. There was a good deal of anxious
-looking out for the return of travellers who had left the town before
-the commencement of the storm on Monday, but by degrees they either
-returned or their whereabouts was ascertained. At Wheal Vor, Breage,
-however, a woman, sixty years of age, perished in the snow. Supplies of
-food were almost daily fetched by boat from Penzance for little fishing
-villages in the district, and a small coasting steamer was chartered to
-take in a stock of provisions and land it on the sands at Porthcurno,
-just within sight of Logan Rock.
-
-PLYMPTON.--At Plympton, matters were very serious. Hundreds of trees
-were destroyed, and large numbers of sheep died from exposure and
-starvation.
-
-[Illustration: CHURCH, AND CHAPLAIN'S HOUSE, PRINCETOWN, DARTMOOR.]
-
-PRINCETOWN.--This moorland town passed through some trying experiences
-during the storm week. The roofs of several cattle and sheep-sheds were
-blown away, and every house in the neighbourhood suffered considerable
-damage. A part of the church roof was unslated, and the church
-itself, and the chaplain's house, were almost buried in the snow.
-An illustration shows the condition of these two buildings, for the
-photographic views of which, as well as for the picture of the convicts
-cutting a road, we have to thank Mr. J. Richards, clerk of works at the
-convict establishment, who took a great number of interesting views of
-extraordinary scenes to be met with after the blizzard. At the Prison
-Officers' School, some four or five of the moor children had to be
-detained all night, fires being lighted and hot provisions provided.
-The block on the Princetown railway line, where the evening train had
-been snowed up on Monday evening, was a very serious one, and it took
-a gang of fifty men and a snow-plough several days to work through
-the accumulated mass. The inhabitants were without letter, paper, or
-telegram from Monday morning until Saturday, when the postmaster, Mr.
-W. Tooker, with the rural letter-carrier, and a prison officer, Mr.
-Rodway, who accompanied the party as a volunteer, risked a walk to
-Yelverton. There they found twenty-five bags of mails awaiting them.
-They succeeded in walking back to Princetown, taking with them fourteen
-bags of mails and a small quantity of newspapers, and were received
-with much enthusiasm. No fear was felt that provisions would fail at
-the prison, as there was a large stock on hand, but it was deemed
-advisable to kill a number of sheep and pigs belonging to the farm.
-The roads were cleared after immense labour, some of this work being
-carried out by convicts from the prison.
-
-[Illustration: CONVICTS CUTTING A ROAD AT PRINCETOWN, DARTMOOR.]
-
-REDRUTH.--On the Monday and Tuesday at Redruth there was such a storm
-as had not been known for thirty-five years in West Cornwall. It
-snowed almost incessantly for twenty-four hours, and left drifts, in
-some parts, from ten to twelve feet deep. The trains could not get
-into Redruth either from east or west for two days, and even Camborne
-could not be reached. Trees in various parts were much injured. There
-was little business done, and the quantity of provisions brought into
-the town being so small, the prices were of the most extravagant
-description. Milk could hardly be obtained, and what butter was in the
-market was sold at the price of 2s. per lb., a heavy price for Redruth.
-There was a scarcity of coals in the neighbourhood, and the stock
-(of coals) at the brewery was exhausted before the end of the week.
-Most of the roads in the district were impassable, and it was found
-impossible as late as Friday to dig out the vehicles that Monday's
-storm embedded in the Redruth highway. Mining operations were greatly
-impeded, tunnels in the snow having in some instances to be cut to
-enable the miners to get to their work. There were many rumours of
-persons missing since the memorable Monday, and fears for their safety
-were entertained which in one unhappy case proved to be only too well
-grounded. A boy named Wallace left his work at the Wheal Basset mine
-on the afternoon of the storm to walk to his home. He did not reach it
-at the usual time, nor at all on that day, and great anxiety resulted,
-search parties scouring the country in all directions. At length, ten
-days afterwards, his body was found in a snow-drift between thirty
-and forty yards from his home. Another lad had a very narrow escape.
-He was missed for some hours, and was found almost unconscious in an
-outhouse, where he had taken refuge under some straw. Not the least
-serious inconvenience attending this week of disaster at Redruth was
-the unavoidable postponement of a number of funerals, to make way to
-the parish church and cemetery being found impracticable.
-
-ST. COLUMB.--The advent of the blizzard at St. Columb was sudden and
-unexpected, and the force of the wind drifted most of the snow into
-the roads and hedges in such a way as to completely stop all vehicular
-traffic. In some spots the drifts were fifteen feet high. No letters
-or papers arrived in the town from Monday until Wednesday evening,
-and among other inconveniences was the unavoidable postponement of a
-wedding which was to have taken place. As this event was not fixed for
-any earlier date than the last day of the week, and could not take
-place then, some idea of the condition of the country may be formed.
-The farmers were apparently taken by surprise, as most of their sheep
-were out, and hundreds were buried beneath the snow. Many lambs and
-sheep were found at a depth of seven or eight feet, and instances
-occurred of lambs, who had been born under circumstances such as these,
-being found alive and healthy. Buried houses were by no means an
-uncommon occurrence. At Winnard's Perch, about two miles from Redruth,
-a woman was snowed in from Monday until Wednesday at noon, when she was
-dug out. Great damage was also done to trees, and for a time business
-was suspended.
-
-ST. IVES.--A tempestuous sea was the chief cause of suffering at St.
-Ives. The blizzard blew mainly from the E.N.E., and caused sad havoc
-along the coast on Monday night and Tuesday. Ships in positions of
-peril were occasionally observed, and the lifeboat crew, with rocket
-apparatus, held themselves in readiness, and in some cases, endeavoured
-to get near the endangered vessels, but the tracks to the shore were
-impassable. The window of a cottage on the Warren, overlooking the sea,
-was blown in, and the sea rushed in and partly filled one of the rooms.
-Slates and chimneypots were blown about to the imminent danger of the
-inhabitants. A man named Metters left St. Ives for St. Just, with a
-donkey cart, on Monday, to sell herrings, and after nearly a week's
-absence his friends gave him up for lost, but he returned to his home
-on the following Monday, having been snowed up at St. Just for the
-entire week.
-
-SENNEN.--The Land's End district was altogether cut off from other
-parts of the country from Monday to Friday, and even after that time
-communication was only effected with great difficulty. The snow-drifts
-were immense, and many sheep and lambs were buried. Supplies having
-begun to fail by the end of the week, a shopkeeper inaugurated a novel
-expedition which, grotesque as it was in its make-up and appearance,
-succeeded in the object the organizer had in view. He obtained a
-number of donkeys, and having placed baskets upon their backs, formed
-them into procession, he leading the way with a shovel, with which
-he cleared a path to St. Just. There provisions were obtained, and
-the adventurous tradesman, followed by his donkeys,--now laden with
-well-filled baskets,--returned triumphant to St. Sennen. Two cottages
-near the Land's End were buried in the snow, and the cottagers had
-to be dug out. The Rev. J. Isabell, of St. Sennen, by way of getting
-the roads clear, set an admirable example. He headed a party of some
-seventy men, all being armed with shovels, and effected good work in
-making the parish roads fit for traffic.
-
-TAUNTON.--The train due at Taunton at seven minutes past nine and the
-"Flying Dutchman" reached Taunton at about the same time on Monday
-night, and were unable to proceed further. Among the passengers was the
-Duke of Edinburgh, on his way to Devonport, who was detained for some
-few days, after which he was enabled to reach Exeter, and from thence
-to proceed without further mishap to his destination.
-
-TAVISTOCK.--Some account of the devastation caused in this district
-by the storm has already been given. The destruction to timber was
-especially heavy, but perhaps the most serious feature of all is the
-loss of sheep and cattle. Mr. H. Dingle, of Taviton, had over two
-hundred sheep embedded in the snow, and a number of these were taken
-out dead. Mr. Perkins, of King-street, Tavistock, and Mr. Walkem, of
-Hartshole, also suffered heavily in this respect. On the estate of the
-Rev. J. Hall-Parby there was also a great loss of sheep. Out of sixteen
-sheep buried in a drift, nine, belonging to Mr. Warne, were dug out
-dead, while in the neighbouring parish of Walkhampton the loss was
-still greater. Mr. Giles, of this parish, dug out 40 dead sheep. Mr. J.
-Squire, of the Bedford Hotel, had a flock of sheep and lambs buried in
-the snow, on his moorland farm on Whitchurch Down, but he succeeded in
-rescuing most of them.
-
-TEIGNMOUTH.--The destruction wrought on the sea-front of this
-well-known watering-place and sea-port, which has been briefly alluded
-to in earlier pages, appears to have had the effect of waking up the
-residents to a sense of the innumerable natural beauties that belong
-to their town, and the advisability of preserving, and, if possible,
-improving them. Not many months before the blizzard of 1891, a gale
-from the south-east was near demolishing that portion of the bank above
-the beach, that has since fallen before the action of the waves, and
-from time to time the dangerous position of the houses abutting upon
-it, and standing within a stone's-throw of the sea, has been pointed
-out by a large number of the residents themselves. Nature has now taken
-the matter in hand, and the probabilities are that a sea-wall will be
-built that will extend from the "Point," or lighthouse, to the Hole
-Head tunnel, a distance of over a mile and a half, and thus the finest
-sea promenade in the country will be secured.
-
-TORQUAY.--The snowstorm was more severe at Torquay than at any of the
-surrounding districts, the fall having been heavier than at either
-Teignmouth or Dawlish. Few mishaps occurred, however, and there was not
-any really serious damage. Railway communication with Exeter, London,
-and the north, was never interrupted. Some injuries to trees occurred,
-and a few telegraph posts were blown down, but, on the whole, Torquay
-sustained its reputation as a desirable winter abode.
-
-TOTNES.--Some novel incidents occurred at Totnes during the week of
-the storm. The town was for days completely isolated, the only journey
-possible in search of news appearing to have been a perilous one, on
-foot, to Brent, where ignorance of the doings of the outside world
-was as great, if not greater, than at Totnes itself. A number of
-travellers, among them Mr. H. S. Jenkins, of the _Western Morning News_
-(who had gone to the town on duty on the Monday night), were detained
-until the end of the week, and all the inconveniences resulting from an
-enforced imprisonment of such an unusual description were experienced.
-The first indication of an actual block on the railway was at about
-nine o'clock on Monday night, when the down-train, due at Plymouth at
-ten o'clock, arrived at Totnes station, and was not allowed to proceed,
-as no communication could be exchanged with stations further down
-the line. After hours of waiting, some of the passengers sheltering
-themselves in the carriages and others in the waiting-room (where
-they were made as comfortable as circumstances would allow, Miss
-Inskip keeping the refreshment-room open until four o'clock on Tuesday
-morning), all were compelled to take up their quarters in the town
-for what was to them, at that time, a very indefinite period. There
-were, in the neighbourhood of Totnes, great losses among the farming
-community, hundreds of sheep being buried in the snow. One farmer, of
-Ashprington, dug out a flock of fifty, of which fifteen were dead.
-Orchards were completely wrecked, and many fine forest trees were
-destroyed. In the town the damage done to property was not very great,
-but the glass roofs of several conservatories were broken in by the
-weight of snow. The snow in the streets was three feet deep, and in the
-adjacent country roads a depth of from six to eight feet was recorded.
-
-TRURO.--At the cathedral city of Cornwall trade was at a complete
-standstill for days, owing to the heavy fall of snow. Snow lay three
-feet deep in all the roads outside the town, and, going farther into
-the country, the drifts were from ten to twelve feet deep. Great damage
-was done to property, and some accidents, none of them, however, having
-a fatal termination, occurred. To make matters worse for those having
-business matters to look after, the train service was altogether
-disorganised. The "Dutchman" arrived on Monday night forty minutes
-late, and then had to wait the arrival of the train from Falmouth.
-This, due at Truro at 7·25, did not arrive until ten minutes to nine.
-Its course was blocked by fallen telegraph poles and wires, which
-had to be cut away before the train could proceed, the most serious
-obstacle being between Penryn and Perranwell. The "Dutchman" had to
-pass by Grampound Road at full speed, or it would probably have been
-in danger of being embedded in the snow. It was only when the end
-of this memorable week had been reached that telegraphic and other
-communication with neighbouring towns was restored, and that the city
-once more returned to its usual condition of comfort and tranquillity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-IN PARK AND FOREST.
-
-
-There is no stronger testimony to the overwhelmingly destructive
-character of the blizzard of March, 1891, than that afforded by
-the spectacle of thousands of forest trees, that had, in numerous
-instances, withstood the storms of centuries, lying, some with their
-roots above ground, others snapped short off or twisted asunder, but
-all mercilessly and hopelessly wrecked. Many of these fallen monarchs
-had experienced heavier gales undoubtedly, but they had not been so
-rapidly laden with the heavy burden of clinging snow that caused them
-to sway and stagger, and rendered them helpless victims to the fury
-of the blast. The effects of this blizzard-like nature of the storm
-are apparent in the peculiar form the havoc in the parks and forests
-has assumed--some trees appearing as if the tops had been wrenched
-off, and in other instances a trunk being left standing--a mere bare
-pole--denuded of all its branches. Many trees that were old and feeble
-weathered the storm best, the apparent cause being that their stronger
-brethren sheltered them from the fatal garment of snow as much as from
-the gale, and that when the protector at last fell the fury of the
-blast was spent.
-
-The manner in which the snow clung to, rather than fell upon, all
-objects that it encountered, is strikingly shown in the accompanying
-illustration of Membland after the storm. The illustration is from a
-photograph of a water-colour drawing. The photograph, and the following
-narrative, have been courteously supplied to us by one who was a deeply
-interested spectator of the scene:--
-
-"At Membland, Lord Revelstoke's place ten miles from Plymouth at the
-mouth of the Yealm, the devastation and havoc caused by the storm of
-the 9th of March are indescribable.
-
-"The appearance of the house on the Wednesday following, the 11th, will
-not easily be forgotten by its inmates. That Wednesday was a glorious
-day of sunshine. The house was entirely, to all appearance, snowed up
-to the top storey; the wind in its fierceness having flung the snow
-against the house, where it froze on the windows, giving a weird look;
-a pane of glass here and there coming out in relief, and prismatic
-colours darting across, in and out of the snow where the sun shone in
-full power.
-
-"Where the ivy covers the north side, the effect was very beautiful:
-each leaf covered as it were with a bell of crystal, and festoons of
-crystal hanging down in every direction. Outside the front door the
-snow was fourteen feet deep. From eight to ten on that memorable Monday
-evening when the storm was at its height, the gardener, Mr. Baker,
-stood out and saw the trees right and left, here rooted up, there
-felled down with the rapidity and report of a volley of musketry. Over
-a thousand trees are down, among them the finest trees surrounding the
-house, and which can ill be spared, such as the Insignis, the Ilex, &c.
-Every orchard is laid low.
-
-[Illustration: MEMBLAND, RESIDENCE OF LORD REVELSTOKE, AFTER THE
-STORM.]
-
-"The two plantations near the house present the appearance of hundreds
-of trees felled down for the advance of an invading and cruel enemy. On
-the carriage-drive you come across a huge tree torn up by the roots,
-leaving the whole road cracked as from an earthquake! By the side of
-this devastation, at every turn, you see the most curious sight of
-all,--a tree frail from age or extreme youth left untouched! The drift
-at the lodge was from fifteen to twenty feet deep. The lodge-keeper
-took one hour and three-quarters getting from the lodge to the house,
-on Tuesday, the 10th; a distance under three-quarters of a mile. Mr.
-Methyrell, a tenant of Lord Revelstoke's, residing one mile from
-Membland, lost fifty of his sheep. Lord Revelstoke was fortunate in
-not losing more than seventeen sheep and one black lamb. The village
-of Noss Mayo, situated in the estuary of the Yealm, in the parish of
-Revelstoke, has sadly lost in beauty and picturesqueness from the
-destruction of trees, these falling headlong in some instances on the
-boats of the inhabitants, and causing distress and ruin.
-
-"Lord Revelstoke was in London--Lady Revelstoke was alone in the house
-with her niece, Miss Bulteel: the experience of being cut off from
-all communication with the neighbouring villages, the impossibility
-of procuring the services of Dr. Adkins were it a matter of life or
-death, the cessation of all postal or telegraphic communications, being
-told the last portion of flour was exhausted--this lasting from Monday
-until Saturday--all the different incidents arising from this "_Great
-Unforeseen_" are recollections which will never be effaced from the
-memories of the inhabitants of the parish of Revelstoke. The postman
-from Plymouth to Yealmpton and Newton Ferrers, including the parish of
-Revelstoke, deserves praise. His return was looked for anxiously by the
-inhabitants of Noss Mayo and Newton, morning after morning. He got to
-Yealmpton, and sallied forth like the dove after the flood to try and
-find his way to Newton, but was forced to turn back. He succeeded on
-the Saturday, and was hailed with delight.
-
-"At Flete, Mr. Mildmay's place, three-and-a-half miles from Ivybridge,
-the damage is great, but the loss of trees not as irreparable as in
-other places. The family were away. But the snug little corner between
-Flete and Membland, at the mouth of the Erme, inhabited by Mr. Bulteel,
-was a haven chosen by this merciless blast upon which to vent its worst
-fury. The peaceful valley strewn with trees, and the beautiful laurels
-shattered.
-
-"A little incident is worth recording to illustrate the friendliness
-and kind-heartedness of the neighbours. The town of Modbury is six
-miles from Pamflete. Mr. Bulteel has for years dealt with Mr. Coyte,
-the butcher. On Thursday, the 12th, Mr. Coyte feared Mr. Bulteel might
-run short of butcher's-meat; he accordingly started three men at 8 A.M.
-from Modbury, one man carrying a basket of meat, and the other two with
-shovels, for places found too impassable to ensure a footway.
-
-"These men reached Pamflete (Mr. Bulteel's) at 6 P.M., after a struggle
-of ten hours to get there. It is needless to say they were welcomed
-by Mr. Bulteel, who was thoroughly grateful to Mr. Coyte for his kind
-thought."
-
-Another account says:--"At Mount Edgcumbe Park, the principal seat
-of the Rt. Hon. Earl of Mount Edgcumbe, the wreck to the timber is
-enormous. So large are the gaps made in the groups and avenues of
-trees, that the unaccustomed open spaces are distinctly visible from
-Plymouth Hoe, and from even greater distances. Altogether, the Earl
-estimates his loss at two thousand trees (at Mount Edgcumbe alone), and
-calculates that it will take two years to sufficiently clear his park
-of fallen timber to enable him to again throw it open to visitors."
-
-The reproduction of a photograph by Mr. Heath, of George-street,
-Plymouth, shows the entrance to Mount Edgcumbe Park. Here there are
-down three fine elms, each four hundred years old. One fell right
-across the path, the other two fell towards the lodge, which they only
-escaped by a few inches, the branches even sweeping off some of the
-slates from the roof of the building. Had the trees fallen but a little
-more to the north, the lodge must have been crushed like cardboard. All
-the way up the avenue leading to the house the trees are lying in every
-direction. In the private garden behind the house (the favourite resort
-of the Earl and his family), the beautiful cedars, known only to those
-who have had the privilege of visiting this retired spot, are all down
-or shivered where they stand. Particularly and painfully noticeable are
-a fine old lime, a chestnut tree, and a beautiful Turkey oak, not only
-rooted up but split to pieces. These the Earl describes as having been
-his favourite trees.
-
-[Illustration: THE ENTRANCE, MT. EDGCUMBE PARK.]
-
-"On the hill overlooking the ruins of the old castle, all but one of
-the umbrella pines, so well known to all visitors to the park, are
-rooted up, and scattered. In the laurel walk, dozens of fine trees
-are down, quite obstructing the pathway, but the saddest scene of all
-in this portion of the park is the fall of a fine silver beech, which
-stood just at the end of the walk. Strange to say, this tree has fallen
-in the opposite direction to every tree in the park, as if its sole
-purpose had been to crush a beautiful camellia tree that stood exactly
-opposite, and that has yearly yielded a thousand blooms. Close by is
-still standing a fir, the tallest tree in all the park, looking as
-though, through all the stormy night and day, it had reared its proud
-head in defiance of the tempest.
-
-"The greatest havoc of all is in that part of the park known as
-Beechwood, situated on a slope facing almost due east. This slope was
-exposed to the full fury of the gale, and quite four hundred trees were
-blown down. Our illustration, from a photo by Mr. Heath, pourtrays some
-of this fallen grandeur. A gardener, who lives in Beechwood Cottage,
-far more familiarly known as Lady Emma's Cottage, relates, that on
-Monday night, when the storm was at its height, which was between
-half-past seven and eight o'clock, he with his wife and young family
-were in the house in an awful state of suspense and apprehension.
-Momentarily they were dreading that a fallen tree would crush in their
-cottage, and yet they dared not venture out among the crashing timber,
-nor face the blast that would in all probability have blown them over
-the cliff into the sea. Their terror can be well understood when it is
-stated that from time to time the branches of falling trees actually
-brushed the walls of the cottage. As if by a merciful dispensation
-of Providence, a huge beech, standing almost due east to the house,
-remained standing, while other trees, less exposed, were blown down.
-If the beech had fallen, the fate of the cottage with its inmates must
-have been quickly determined.
-
-[Illustration: BEECHWOOD, MT. EDGCUMBE PARK.]
-
-"In the English and Italian gardens more disastrous wreckage meets the
-view. On the lawn, in the English garden, a splendid cork tree, and
-also a famous holly, were uprooted. The orangery in the Italian garden
-narrowly escaped damage by a falling elm."
-
-Many of the large trees, lying prostrate, and others completely
-wrecked, are depicted in the accompanying view, also from a photo by
-Mr. Heath.
-
-Seriously as the noble owner of Mount Edgcumbe suffered at his
-principal seat, that was not, however, the extent of the calamity. The
-condition of the woods was described by one who visited the locality
-after the storm in the following terms:--
-
-"At Cotehele, the devastation in the woods is beyond all description.
-Few, indeed, except the very oldest persons, have ever been able to see
-Cotehele House from the town of Calstock. This historic mansion is now,
-however, in full view, and the monarchs of the wood have fallen low
-to the extent of thousands. It is only as one goes through the woods
-that the vastness of the destruction can be comprehended. In the glade
-that fronts the house towards the Tamar, below the ornamental pond, the
-crash and fall has been so great as to make a tangled mass of roots,
-branches, and limbs. Most of the trees that are down are elms, though
-beeches, ashes, and sycamores have also given way to the gale. Oaks
-have held on at the roots, but the limbs have suffered, and firs have
-gone by the board. Most of this species of tree have broken short off,
-rather than have been uprooted. The beautiful walk from Cotehele Quay
-to the house is a wreck that fifty years will not set in the same form
-as it existed before the 9th of March. Trees three feet through have
-been blown out of the ground as though they had been saplings, and in
-some cases the weight of the earth and stones around the roots must
-have been several tons." Not less than two thousand trees were blown
-down in Cotehele Woods, representing over 100,000 feet of timber. One
-tree alone contained over two hundred cubic feet.
-
-[Illustration: FALLEN MONARCHS, MT. EDGCUMBE PARK.]
-
-Mr. W. Coulter, the highly respected house-steward of the Earl of Mount
-Edgcumbe, at Cotehele, and who resides in Cotehele House, has favoured
-us with the following graphic account of what took place during the
-early part of this eventful week:--
-
-"The wind, having blown a gale the whole day, continued to increase
-in violence as evening approached, and from 7 till 9 o'clock P.M.,
-accomplished, if not all, the greater part of the devastation to house
-and woods. The noise of the storm resembled the frantic yells and
-fiendish laughter of millions of liberated maniacs, broken, at frequent
-intervals, by what sounded like deafening and rapid volleys of heavy
-artillery, and, as these died away, louder and louder again rose the
-appalling screams of the storm, with slight intervals of lull and
-perfect calm, only to return with tenfold violence, which made the
-whole house tremble and vibrate. At 7 P.M. two heavy skylights were
-blown from their position on the roof of the kitchen, and from the
-chimney of the same building a huge metal plate was hurled into the
-court below, carrying the masonry through the roof and into the room
-underneath.
-
-"Several of the windows facing the east were swept in as easily as a
-spider's web; lead and glass, scattered all over the room, leaving only
-the shattered frames, through which rushed the resistless wind and
-blinding snow. One window, being almost new, the hinges and fastenings
-were snapped asunder like joints of thread, the snow lying in heavy
-wreaths over beds, furniture, and floor. Most of the windows on the
-weather-side were more or less broken evidently, in the first instance,
-by the scattered branches of fallen trees just in front of the house.
-Through the joints of doors and windows the cracks and crevices, before
-unknown to the eye, the drifting snow penetrated and piled up in
-ridges, so that rooms and passages had to be cleared like the pavement
-in the streets.
-
-"It is absolutely impossible to picture the scene of desolation
-revealed at daybreak on the morning of the 10th all round the house.
-The ground was strewn and literally covered with fallen slates and
-branches of trees. The appearance of the courtyard, or quadrangle,
-presented that of a grave-yard, the slates in all shapes, sizes, and
-forms, standing on end, like grave-stones projecting above the snow.
-
-"Notwithstanding the great number of huge trees levelled all round
-the house, neither the inmates of Cotehele, nor a single individual
-outside, once heard the crash of falling timber above the fierce
-howling of the blast.
-
-"We inside the house, at much risk, and after much labour, managed
-to find and secure the displaced skylights, and from that time, 7
-P.M. till 4 A.M., we were hard at work clearing rooms of the snow
-and barricading broken windows with whatever material came first to
-hand, such as packing-cases, door-mats, old books and cardboard,
-battened firmly into the granite mullions. Many times during the fierce
-cannonade we feared the whole building would collapse, but beyond
-shattered windows and roof, the granite walls remain intact, and during
-the storm fires had to be extinguished, smoke and flames being driven
-into the room and the occupants driven out.
-
-"A somewhat remarkable incident in reference to this may here be
-recorded. Perched on the extreme point of an abrupt and precipitous
-rock, overhanging the river Tamar, stands the venerable old fane,
-better known as Sir Richard Edgcumbe's Chapel. Right and left of the
-building, nearly the whole of the timber was levelled, but the Chapel
-itself and a small clump of sturdy oaks surrounding the spot are, with
-the building, left intact, save one small insignificant tree whose
-roots and fangs were clinging to an almost barren piece of rock.
-
-[Illustration: A FALLEN MONARCH, COTEHELE, CALSTOCK.]
-
-"On an examination of the Cotehele Woods, the scene presented gives one
-the idea of an earthquake rather than that of a storm. The majority of
-the hundreds of trees vary from two to three hundred years and even
-older, torn up by the roots, and tearing up like so much turf yards
-of macadamized road and huge blocks of strong stone walls, leaving
-their ponderous roots standing erect, to which may be seen clinging
-several tons of huge rock firmly clasped by root and soil, and in
-many instances, these giants of the forest are found lying athwart
-each other, shewing the storm to have practised all the antics of
-a whirlwind." A huge fallen tree, lying prone across a pathway in
-the woods, may be seen in the above illustration, which is from a
-photograph taken by Mr. Rowe, public librarian, Devonport.
-
-A description of another scene of melancholy devastation, written in
-April, some weeks after the storm, said:--
-
-"At Maristowe, the seat of the Right Hon. Sir Massey Lopes, Bart.,
-the storm did irreparable damage on Monday. The grounds presented on
-Tuesday a scene of terrible desolation, and even now it can be seen
-that the beauties of Maristowe are all destroyed. Mr. Merson, steward
-to Sir Massey, states that fifty thousand trees are down, and that
-the respected owner is much affected by his loss. Nearly all the lime
-trees in the avenue leading from the croquet and tennis lawns to the
-garden, and which formed the chief attraction to visitors, are lying in
-hopeless confusion, and the avenue, considered the most beautiful walk
-in all Devonshire, is now utterly impassable and destroyed for ever. In
-the main coach road, from the gamekeeper's lodge to the mansion, fifty
-beautiful beeches have fallen.
-
-"The greatest portion of the damage within the park itself, occurred in
-the immediate vicinity of Mr. Merson's house, the occupants of which
-expected every moment that it would be crushed by falling trees.
-
-"A strange incident occurred in connection with the sycamore trees. It
-appears that on the Saturday previous to the storm Sir Massey decided
-that two old and decayed trees of this kind, which were somewhat in the
-way of contemplated improvements to the steward's residence, should
-be cut down, and gave Mr. Merson instructions accordingly. The gale
-came on, and hundreds of stately trees, one a monarch elm of unusual
-size, and another a stately macrocarphus fir, sixty feet high, and
-of exceptional beauty, succumbed within a short distance of the spot
-where the two old and despised sycamores still reared their heads. The
-storm could not destroy them, but they have since been sawn down. Near
-this same spot some very choice laurels and rhododendrons were torn
-up by the roots and hurled fifty yards away, being discovered days
-afterwards buried under from twelve to twenty feet of snow. In the
-fir wood, facing the mansion, on the opposite side of the Tavy, quite
-half the trees are blown down, while the plantation close to the main
-entrance on Roborough Down is almost entirely destroyed. The plantation
-adjoins the residence of Dr. Clay, of Plymouth, and contained about
-three thousand very fine firs and pines of which only about one hundred
-remain.
-
-"Looking towards the woods opposite Maristowe House, the owner must
-witness such a wreck as never was before seen since the house has stood
-there. From the entrance of the road from Beer Ferris to Lopwell, trees
-of every description lie twisted and thrown in every direction, and
-the road itself must, for some time, be only available for traffic
-with care. The great trees in falling have crashed through others, and
-thousands of broken limbs are visible on every hand. On the other side
-of the Tavy towards Denham Bridge, the damage is great, and in the
-hollows, here and there, more than three weeks after the storm, were
-considerable quantities of snow. At Denham Bridge several very fine
-firs have gone, broken off short some five to eight feet above the
-ground in most cases, and in the Tavy here and there are other trees.
-On the road from Beer Alston to Tavistock one plantation of black firs,
-consisting of several hundred trees, has lost to the extent of nine
-trees out of every ten, and the cutoff ends of the trees jutting on
-the highway present a remarkable appearance. A little further away, on
-the road to Milton Abbot, another fir plantation has nearly every tree
-down."
-
-At Buckland Abbey, famous as the ancestral home of Sir Francis Drake,
-the ruin is singularly disastrous. Messrs. Ward & Chowen, of Burnville,
-Bridestowe, have kindly forwarded an interesting communication which
-sets forth vividly some startling results of the blizzard. They write:--
-
-"As agents to the Buckland Abbey property, our Mr. Chowen visited the
-Abbey on the Saturday after the storm, that being the first day it was
-possible to arrive at the nearest station, namely, Horrabridge, and
-in getting to the Abbey he had to walk over fifteen feet of snow in
-some parts, the average depth being about five feet. On reaching the
-North Lodge, he was astounded at the devastation which met his view.
-The whole of the Rookery between the North and South Lodges at the
-back of the farm-house, commonly known as Place Barton, was literally
-levelled--scarcely a tree remained standing, and the few that were
-left were completely shattered, partly by the storm, and partly by the
-falling of the other trees in their sudden descent.
-
-"The fine old timber around the Abbey, which doubtless gave character
-to the place in the renowned Sir Francis Drake's time, has been more or
-less ruthlessly torn up by the roots by the effects of the disastrous
-storm, and a noble avenue of beech to the north of the Abbey grounds
-has suffered terribly, almost every alternate tree having succumbed. In
-the Abbey grounds, an interesting sycamore, centuries old, on the stock
-of which, at the point where the branches diverged, accommodation was
-afforded by seats and a centre table for a quiet tea-party, shared the
-fate of the others, and in its terrific descent crushed down another
-fine ornamental specimen as if it were a sapling. Many of the fine old
-cedars have been sadly mutilated, whilst some of the tulip trees have
-been destroyed, but the Abbey buildings have, most fortunately, escaped
-injury.
-
-"Our Mr. Stevenson, at the North Lodge, has recounted a marvellous
-incident which took place on the Monday evening of the storm. It
-appears a neighbouring farmer and his wife paid a visit to their
-friends at the Barton, and discovering that the storm was increasing
-in violence, decided to leave early. In passing through the Rookery
-towards the North Lodge, the way by the South Lodge being already
-inaccessible, they had arrived just where the Rookery terminated at
-this point, when down came the last tree over them without warning,
-and, marvellous to relate, the horse, conveyance, and occupants were
-imprisoned between the large branches diverging from the stock without
-the slightest damage whatever being done. After great difficulty in
-clearing the branches, the party were rescued, but could get no further
-than the lodge, the horse having to be put up in the kitchen or living
-room, whilst the owners were accommodated in the sitting room, where
-they remained until the following Wednesday at midday. Immediately
-after this occurrence, the whole Rookery was swept down, completely
-covering the road which had been so recently passed over, and one of
-the trees was blown on the back roof of the farm-house, crushing in one
-of the bedrooms to within six inches of where a child was sleeping.
-
-"In tracing the ravages of the storm it is most interesting to notice
-the vagaries of the current, as it affected everything with which
-it came in contact. In some cases the force would appear to descend
-vertically in gusts, seizing the top or tops of trees lying together
-and wrenching off the same as if turnip-tops, leaving the stock intact;
-whilst other trees within a few feet escaped untouched. Undoubtedly the
-force of the gale assumed a variety of forms. In some cases it could
-be seen that the extreme violence of the wind reached a breadth of an
-eighth of a mile, more or less, when in other places it was only a few
-yards wide, clearing everything before it. In other parts it assumed a
-circular or vortex form, and in its tortuous route decimated everything
-in its way, tearing up huge trees, as if telegraph poles, and even
-stripping off the thick bark of the Scotch fir, leaving it as clean as
-a rinded pole.
-
-"So far as we know the buildings have pretty well escaped, only partial
-damage being done, and in some instances trees which might have smashed
-down dwelling-houses have been spared, whilst those immediately around
-the building have been stranded."
-
-The Rev. Frederic T. W. Wintle, rector of Beerferris, who, in addition
-to severe damage to his residence suffered considerably from loss of
-trees, contributes the following information which was written on the
-Wednesday after the blizzard:--
-
-"The barometer on Monday morning at 9 A.M. had risen from 29·60 on
-Sunday to 29·70. About 12 noon slight snow began and continued, but
-did not lie much until towards evening; the gale freshened towards
-sunset, and at 7·30 was furious. One of my chimney-stacks fell at that
-time, wrecking the roof and three rooms, and it blew a hurricane for
-some hours, with blinding drifts of fine snow. I dreaded daylight,
-but was quite unprepared for the horrible desolation around me. I had
-some fine fir trees, and others, almost everyone was blown down; and
-oak trees either uprooted or boughs twisted and broken in a remarkable
-way. I have nineteen good trees all down, and twenty apple trees in
-an adjacent orchard. Indeed, my garden, of which I was justly proud,
-is completely wrecked and ruined. The barometer had fallen to 29·20
-yesterday (Tuesday) morning, and there was a high wind and fine snow
-partly falling, partly drifting, till after dark. The average depth
-is from five to seven inches, but deep drifts all about, five feet at
-least. This morning (Wednesday) we have a cloudless sky, calm, and
-barometer 29·60. Great destruction is everywhere. In one orchard
-over 100 trees are down, in another cherry orchard they are described
-as lying as if they were mown with a scythe. The roads are mostly
-impassable with huge drifts, so that we can get no communication at
-all. No post, no papers. The trains are all blocked beyond Tavistock,
-and the telegraph won't work. No doubt the accounts of the storm will
-reveal some curious details. Although the whole of my place suffered so
-extensively, in a field just outside there are several fine oaks which
-are untouched. I imagine the storm to have swept down from Dartmoor
-pretty well north-easterly, over a high hill and down upon us, and
-we must have been right in its vortex: the trees all show signs of
-twisting, as if there had been a circular force. I am curious to see
-how wide an area it grasped."
-
-At Saltram House, a country seat of Lord Morley, four hundred trees
-were blown down, and damage was done to the farm buildings. The
-kitchen chimney at the mansion was also blown down, and crashed through
-the roof into that apartment.
-
-The very fine beech avenue, leading from the entrance lodge to the
-mansion at Bickham, the residence of Reginald Gill, Esq., banker, of
-Tavistock, is totally destroyed.
-
-At Warleigh, the residence of Walter Radcliffe, Esq., two thousand
-trees were blown down, and at Derriford, P. C. C. Radcliffe, Esq., lost
-sixty.
-
-In the plantations at St. German's, between two and three hundred trees
-were uprooted or broken off. The park covers four hundred acres, and
-much of the damage is in the home plantations.
-
-On the Kitley estate, near Yealmpton, over 1,500 trees were blown down,
-amongst them being some of the small leaf elm for which the property is
-noted, while on the Blatchford estate four hundred trees fell.
-
-At Woodtown, near Tavistock, the residence of W. F. Collier, Esq.,
-hundreds of large trees were blown down, amongst them being several
-exceptionally fine American conifers. At Foxhams, in the same district,
-M. Collier, Esq., lost some magnificent Scotch and silver firs and
-other trees, many of which had attained a great age. A large number
-of conifers and rhododendrons, planted by Mr. Collier himself some
-eighteen years ago, also perished.
-
-Pentillie Castle suffered very severely; the house and the gardens
-both escaped with but little damage, but trees of all sizes and ages
-were blown down in all directions, from the majestic oaks of two
-centuries' growth to the more recently planted Pinus and other rare and
-ornamental trees and shrubs. So far all the strength of the woodman's
-establishment has been directed to the clearing of the roads and walks,
-which of itself is a herculean undertaking. The wreck may be cleared
-away in time, but restoration to its former state is impossible.
-
-At Efford Manor, Plymouth, the blizzard struck with great force the
-edge of the lane on the eastern side of the house, and then recoiling,
-and turning right and left, uprooted about twenty trees on the northern
-side, and the same number on the southern side, leaving the house and
-grounds untouched.
-
-At Greenbank, Plymouth, several very fine trees were lost, and others
-old and withered were left standing.
-
-On Pitt Farm, near Ottery St. Mary, a magnificent Scotch fir, standing
-alone, and measuring fifty-six feet to the lowest branch, was blown
-down. This had for many years been a familiar landmark, and will be
-greatly missed in the neighbourhood.
-
-What transpired at the Elms, Stoke, the residence of Dr. Metham, our
-illustration, next page, from a photograph by Mr. Rowe, Devonport,
-plainly shows.
-
-To enumerate here the instances of lamentable destruction to woods,
-parks, and forests, all similar in character to the cases recorded
-above, would be an impossible task. It will be long before the extent
-of the damage is fully known, and where nearly every acre of ground on
-which trees stood, more particularly in Devon and West Cornwall, has
-been more or less rifled, anything like a comprehensive account is out
-of the question. The same remark applies to the loss of fruit-trees. We
-have hundreds of instances of farmers and fruit-growers who have to
-lament the destruction, in some cases, of whole orchards; others, not
-quite so unfortunate, having lost fruit-trees upon which for various
-reasons they placed an especial value. The few facts given are but
-typical of many scores of others, special reference to which the time
-at our disposal does not permit.
-
-[Illustration: THE ELMS, STOKE, DEVONPORT.]
-
-Generally speaking, the nurserymen have not met with any very great
-loss. Some glass has been broken, but in the winter season nearly all
-the valuable stock, with the exception of choice trees and shrubs,
-is protected. Among shrubs, many of the half-hardy specimens are
-destroyed, their strength permitting them to stand an ordinary western
-winter, but not one of the severity of that of the memorable blizzard
-year of 1891.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-AFTER THE STORM. THE WATER FAMINE IN PLYMOUTH.
-
-
-As soon as the gale of Monday night and Tuesday had spent its force,
-and it became possible for the work of clearing up to be proceeded
-with, movements in this direction were rapidly organized in the Three
-Towns, as well as in all other parts of the west where men were
-obtainable, or traffic was at all possible. In Plymouth, Stonehouse
-and Devonport, the earliest opportunities had been seized of clearing
-the snow away from the door-ways; to free the pavements as a whole was
-the next important step; and finally, in the temporarily fine weather
-of Wednesday, the congealed masses in the roadways were attacked,
-and that to such good purpose, that by the following Sunday, while
-traces of the recent fall were frequent enough, in the majority of
-the streets pedestrians could walk about with comfort, and vehicular
-traffic was fully resumed. George Street, Plymouth, assumed before
-long a very different appearance from that which it bore on Tuesday
-morning, when Mr. Heath took the photograph from which our illustration
-is reproduced, and the marvellous wintry mantles that enwrapped the
-other portions of the town were removed with equal despatch. Hundreds
-of men were employed shovelling the snow into carts, from which it
-was subsequently tipped into the sea at Sutton Harbour and the Great
-Western Docks.
-
-[Illustration: CLOCK TOWER AND THEATRE ROYAL, PLYMOUTH.]
-
-The railways by the end of the week had commenced to run with something
-like regularity, although there were one or two temporary hitches at
-first; and the postal telegraph services had already been partially
-restored. To effect the latter object, large numbers of engineers had
-been at work, and in the course of their labours, as may be supposed,
-they met with a great deal of discomfort, and some very startling
-adventures. Bricklayers, plumbers and plasterers plied a busy trade
-for weeks after the storm, their services being required to some extent
-in every house.
-
-[Illustration: DEVONPORT PARK.]
-
-At Stonehouse, the main streets were soon freed from snow, and the
-usual busy throngs of people began once more to pass along this highway
-between Plymouth and Devonport.
-
-At Devonport, by Friday, in many parts of the town the snow had quite
-disappeared, though in several of the streets heaps of slush remained,
-and at the railway station business went on much as usual. In Devonport
-Park great quantities of snow remained for a considerable time, though
-the paths were cleared, and traffic for foot-passengers was made easy.
-Mr. Rowe, of Devonport, has supplied a photograph of a very familiar
-scene in the Park, which is here presented. The view of the Water
-Steps, Milehouse Road, is also from a photograph by the same gentleman.
-
-All over the storm-swept district, farmers were busy looking for cattle
-and sheep, and some marvellous instances have been told of sheep being
-recovered alive after being entombed for various lengthy periods, one
-term of snow imprisonment lasting as long as sixteen days.
-
-As early as the Tuesday morning following the storm of Monday night,
-Mr. Bellamy, the Plymouth Borough Surveyor, notified to the inhabitants
-of that town the imminent danger of a cessation of the water supply, in
-consequence of the blocking by snow of the leat through which the water
-is brought into the town. That these warnings were needed was evident
-from the fact that since the Monday night the only water obtainable
-had been from the Hartley reservoir, which, when full, contains only
-two million gallons, or two days' supply. On Wednesday the whole of
-the available staff of the Corporation, including the men whose usual
-task is the repairing of the leat, were set to work, under the personal
-supervision of Mr. Bellamy, to clear away the frozen snow which
-completely filled the leat at the Head Weir, and prevented the passage
-through it of any water from the river. The whole leat from the Head
-Weir to Roborough was found to be one mass of frozen snow. On the same
-day, the Mayor of Plymouth, Mr. J. T. Bond, accompanied by Mr. R. Monk
-and Mr. G. R. Barrett, set out to walk up to Roborough, to ascertain
-if possible how the work was progressing. The Mayor and his companions
-arrived safely at Roborough, and were enabled to have communication
-by telephone with the borough surveyor who was at the weir head. They
-ascertained from him the condition of the leat, and received an urgent
-appeal for at least two hundred more workmen to be sent up immediately.
-The party then set out on their return journey, and again on foot.
-
-[Illustration: WATER STEPS, MILEHOUSE ROAD, DEVONPORT.]
-
-Arrived in Plymouth, a meeting of the Water Committee was hastily
-convened, and it was ascertained that four Plymouth contractors would
-be able to supply about one hundred men to proceed to Roborough.
-This force was inadequate, and consequently the Mayor proceeded to
-Devonport, and having stated the case to General Sir Richard Harrison,
-K.C.B., commanding the district, at once received a promise of the
-services of a military force of two hundred--one hundred of the Welsh
-Regiment from the North Raglan Barracks, and another hundred of the
-Royal Marines, the latter by permission of Colonel Colwell, second
-colonel commandant.
-
-On Wednesday the efforts of Mr. Bellamy, ably supplemented by those of
-Mr. Duke and Mr. Shadwell, to make rapid progress with clearing the
-leat near the well-known Rock Hotel at Head Weir, had been somewhat
-retarded. Many of the labourers employed were ill-clad, and showed
-signs of weakness, and when it was found that no sufficient provision
-had been made to supply them with food, they threw down their shovels
-and returned to Plymouth. Others, however, worked gallantly on through
-the night. On Thursday morning, things looked more promising. At an
-early hour the new contingent of workmen engaged on the previous day,
-and the two detachments of the military--the men of the Welsh Regiment
-under Lieutenants de la Chapelle and Ready, and the Marines commanded
-by Captain Kelly and Lieutenants Mullins and Drake-Brockman--were on
-the spot, and these, being divided into gangs, set vigorously to work
-on the leat at various points. During the morning large commissariat
-supplies were received from Plymouth, and the men, besides having a
-plentiful supply of food, were served at intervals with hot coffee.
-
-Some serious difficulties were encountered, and heavy labour on the
-part of the civilian labourers and the soldiers was entailed. There
-were nearly ten miles of leat to be cleared, and much of the snow was
-frozen into hard solid masses, against which but slow headway could be
-made. In some places the leat was completely buried under frozen snow
-of great depth, and for hundreds of yards snow rose in drifts from
-ten to twelve feet in height, burying the rails guarding the leat,
-and rendering it difficult to trace its course accurately. The young
-Welsh soldiers worked well, and the services of the Marines were found
-invaluable.
-
-By nightfall, when work ceased, it was found that the leat had been
-cleared for a mile and a half from the Head Weir towards Yennadon.
-On Yennadon Down Lieutenant de la Chapelle's men had cleared the way
-nearly as far as Dousland, and near the Roborough Reservoir a clearance
-of three miles had been made. At about six o'clock the troops and
-civilian labourers, numbering about 450, returned to Yelverton Station,
-and ultimately, after a vexatious, but, fortunately, not serious
-mishap, reached Plymouth.
-
-Fears were expressed during Thursday night that there would be another
-snowstorm on Dartmoor, and this proved to be the case. A violent gale
-raged on the moor, and three feet of snow fell, undoing much of what
-the heavy toil of the previous day had accomplished. Much of the snow
-that had been removed from the leat had drifted back, and part of the
-work had to be done over again.
-
-On Friday morning, a special train left Millbay with 200 general
-labourers. There were also 100 Marines under Lieutenants Sousbie and
-Garrett; 150 men of the Dorset Regiment, under Captain Lushington and
-Lieutenants Mangles and Household; and 50 men of the Welsh Regiment,
-under Lieutenant Woodville. The civilians were under the direction
-of Mr. S. Roberts, and the Mayor of Plymouth, Mr. G. R. Barrett
-(deputy-chairman of the Water Committee), Mr. W. H. Mayne, Mr. R. Monk,
-and Mr. G. Bellamy, junior, accompanied the party. The train had a
-rough time, on account of the heavy gale that was blowing, and just
-before Bickleigh Station was reached it was brought to a standstill by
-a snow-drift. About fifty of the labourers had to cut a way through the
-snow, enabling the party, after nearly an hour's delay, to proceed on
-their journey.
-
-On arriving at Yelverton the weather was found to be so bad that, after
-some consultation, it was considered advisable to send the military
-back to Plymouth, and, after clearing the rails for the return of their
-own train, they, with about fifty civilian labourers, started on the
-return journey. Mr. Roberts, however, with his men proceeded along the
-leat to a point near Clearbrook, but so fierce was the storm that work
-could not be commenced, and an adjacent barn was used as a temporary
-refuge. In less than two hours work was begun, and by four o'clock in
-the afternoon a clear way of four feet in width was made from Yelverton
-Bridge to Roborough Reservoir, a distance of six miles. A contingent
-under the direction of Messrs. T. and W. Shaddock, and another directed
-by Mr. Duke had been progressing most satisfactorily, and, when night
-approached and success was within view, all the men expressed their
-readiness to work all night if needful, so that the leat might be all
-clear before the morning. This, however, was not necessary, and before
-seven o'clock a clear passage for the water had been made along the
-whole ten miles of leat. The water had still to be brought on, and a
-hundred men volunteered to remain, under Mr. Bellamy, and work on until
-a good stream was running. Their services were accepted, and the other
-two hundred men, with the Mayor and Messrs. Roberts and Duke returned
-to Plymouth by a special train at nine o'clock. The great piece of
-work thus happily accomplished had been ably assisted by the Mayor
-of Plymouth, Councillors G. R. Barrett, and R. A. Monk, and Messrs.
-A. R. Debnam, S. Roberts, Duke and Shaddock, contractors under the
-Corporation. Mr. Bellamy, with his staff, Messrs. Prigg, A. G. Davey,
-S. Chapman, and G. A. Picken, worked without intermission, and had an
-arduous and an anxious time. Messrs. Barrett, Monk, and Mayne, managed
-the commissariat department, which was no light task, with admirable
-efficiency. Before the party of workers broke up the Mayor thanked, in
-the name of the town of Plymouth, all those who had assisted in the
-labour of averting a great calamity. Thanks were also offered to the
-railway officials for the efficiency of the train service. It was not
-until Sunday morning that a full supply of water began to flow into the
-cisterns, but after Saturday night all apprehension had ceased, and
-within a few hours the discomforts of the previous few days, as far as
-want of water was concerned, were removed.
-
-Although great and growing inconvenience was caused towards the latter
-end of the week to all the inhabitants of Plymouth by the partial
-deprivation of water, things never reached the same pass as they did
-in the famine of 1881. Stonehouse had plenty of water, and was able to
-assist in supplying the western end of Plymouth. By order of the Local
-Board standpipes were on the Saturday erected at the Malt House, and in
-Millbay Road, Union Place and Eldad Hill, and all day long residents of
-Plymouth were supplied from these. In some parts of Plymouth families
-were in great difficulty, and water borrowing, where practicable, went
-forward on a large scale. Messrs. Polkinghorne, at their brewery in
-Bedford Street, Messrs. Denniford & Son, mineral water manufacturers of
-Russel Street, and Mr. Lewis, aërated water manufacturer of Athenæum
-Street, supplied hundreds of the inhabitants, free of charge, from
-their artesian wells.
-
-At a meeting of the Plymouth Borough Council subsequently held, formal
-votes of thanks were passed to a number of citizens, as well as the
-military authorities, for the services they had rendered, and a rate of
-remuneration to the soldiers for their valuable service was fixed upon.
-
-As soon as the Plymouth water difficulty was satisfactorily overcome,
-it was discovered that the Devonport leat, also on Dartmoor, was
-blocked. Mr. Francis, C. E., manager to the Devonport Waterworks
-Company, set out for Princetown to inspect the place, and as speedily
-as possible gangs of men were put on to work on the different parts
-of the leat. Some serious difficulties were encountered, most of the
-snow being frozen quite hard, and forming barriers fifteen feet deep,
-while in one spot, near Lowery Lane, a tree, fourteen feet in girth,
-had, fallen right across the leat. This tree was removed by means
-of lifting jacks, after having been cut in two. After many trials of
-patience, extending over several days, the toilers were rewarded with
-well-deserved success, and the water once more flowed freely. This
-was a fortunate result, for, besides the inhabitants of Devonport and
-Stonehouse, the regiments in garrison, the Naval Barracks, the Engineer
-Students, and the Royal Marine Barracks, are dependent on the Devonport
-Water Company for their supply of water.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-SOME STRANGE EXPERIENCES.
-
-
-For many years to come residents of the western counties will have
-tales to relate of marvellous incidents, involving both great and small
-consequences, that occurred in connection with this memorable blizzard.
-The remarkable tenacity of life exhibited by birds and animals had been
-probably wholly unsuspected, until this recent sudden storm supplied
-the opportunity for its discovery. We have already heard of lambs born
-under the snow; of geese hatching their young within a day or two of
-release from days under a heavy snow coverlid, which not only covered
-but enwrapped them; and of horses being dug out alive and well after a
-night's chilly burial.
-
-An experience of this kind, as curious as any, was that of Mr. J.
-Trant, of Redlap, Stoke Fleming, who dug a lamb out of a snow-drift,
-where it had lain buried for sixteen days. To quote the words of our
-informant, "the little creature seemed none the worse for its long
-imprisonment, but began to graze as soon as it was released. I have
-just seen it, and it was busy making up for lost time." Mr. Trevethan,
-of Beer Barton Farm, Beerferris, also met with some instances of this
-kind. After he had succeeded in releasing his lambs, of which he had
-missed a large number, he found them generally weak, and rather
-drowsy, but they at once bleated for their mothers, and their call
-being answered, they trotted off in the direction from which the call
-came. A bottle of gin was kept on hand for the resuscitation of the
-recovered creatures, and its efficacy in imparting the needed warmth is
-highly spoken of.
-
-Mr. Trevethan's shepherd was making for his cottage on Monday evening,
-carrying with him a basket of provisions which he had been into the
-village to purchase. In attempting to get over a gate, within a short
-distance of some outhouses that stood between him and his cottage,
-he was separated from his basket by a violent gust of wind. Picking
-himself up, he reached his home in safety, and his basket was found,
-after a few days, empty. In the course of the following week, while
-clearing up his garden, he discovered, under some feet of snow,
-a package of tea, which had formed part of the Monday's stock of
-provisions, lost from the basket. The package, which was unbroken, and
-in good condition, had evidently preceded him to his home more than a
-week before.
-
-"Mrs. Hatherley, living near Bickleigh, missed a hen, which she
-naturally gave up as lost. After a lapse of ten days, a cackling was
-heard to proceed from under a heap of snow. On going to the place, Mrs.
-Hatherley was surprised to find the long-lost hen force an exit through
-the snow, and, flapping its wings, make its way home to the house with
-all speed. Mrs. Hatherley then examined the spot, and found on the
-ground two eggs which the bird had laid whilst held prisoner by the
-snow."
-
-Mr. George Sara, of Plymouth, traveller for Messrs. Cadbury Bros.,
-was enabled during the Monday night of the storm to administer comfort
-to his fellow-travellers. The train by which he was travelling on the
-Great Western line from Penzance to Plymouth became snowed up at St.
-German's. Mr. Sara, happening to have his samples with him, and hot
-water being available, was able to dispense cups of chocolate to his
-companions. Some Easter eggs, made of chocolate, are described by the
-narrator of the story as forming an excellent ingredient for a beverage
-of this kind. Approval of the samples of Messrs. Cadbury Bros.' wares
-was expressed by all the belated travellers who had the good fortune to
-taste them.
-
-[Illustration: A ROOM AT WALREDDON MANOR, TAVISTOCK.]
-
-Snow effects resulting from this storm were remarkable in many places,
-but perhaps none could be found more striking than the illustration we
-give of the result of leaving open, a few inches, a lattice window,
-facing north, at Walreddon Manor, near Tavistock, on the night of
-Monday, March 9th. The illustration is from a photograph kindly
-supplied by Henry D. Nicholson, Esq.
-
-At the Land's End the gale was very severe, and the snowed-up
-passengers on the omnibus from Penzance to St. Just on Monday night
-had a dreadful time. They left Penzance about six o'clock, and should
-have reached St. Just by half-past seven, but it was nine o'clock
-before the 'bus reached the point where it had to remain, some three
-miles from St. Just. The horses failed to proceed, and the driver, a
-young man about 20, was also very much exhausted. He unhitched the
-horses, and proceeded to a farmhouse near and asked for shelter. This
-was refused him, the people of the house saying that there was no room
-for the horses, as all their cattle were in the house. He begged for
-admittance, and offered to stand by the horses all night, but he was
-again refused. Not knowing what else to do, he took the harness off the
-horses, turned their heads towards St. Just, and told them to go home.
-The horses went off in the darkness, and he saw them no more. They did
-not reach home, but were recovered alive next day. The driver returned
-to his passengers in the omnibus, and remained with them until midday
-on Tuesday.
-
-Mr. William Penrose, of Bojewan, St. Just, had also a terrible
-experience on Monday night. He arrived at Penzance by the half-past
-six down-train, intending to catch the omnibus, but, finding it gone,
-he walked after it. Not catching it, he struggled on through the storm
-for several hours. Some time in the night he found himself near a
-farmhouse. The people of the house had gone to bed, and there was no
-light, but he knocked vigorously at the door, succeeded in awaking the
-inmates, and asked to be admitted, as he was well nigh exhausted. The
-farmer, however, refused to admit him, and, after a long rest under the
-shelter of the house, he battled again with the storm, determined to
-make another effort for life. He finally reached the snowed-up omnibus
-at six in the morning more dead than alive, having been exposed to the
-storm for twelve hours. Instances of inhospitality such as these were
-rare during the blizzard, and they are worth recording on that account.
-
-Mr. Theo H. Willcocks relates as follows:--
-
-"On the memorable Monday night, the storm raging furiously and showing
-no signs of abating, I left the Molesworth Arms, Wadebridge, at about
-eight o'clock, after being persuaded to do otherwise by the worthy
-proprietor, Mr. S. Pollard, and numerous other friends, and made tracks
-for Tregorden, some two miles distant. The town itself was desolate in
-the extreme, the streets being absolutely deserted except by a passing
-chimney-pot or tile.
-
-"The wind howled and whistled as I wended my way over the bridge,
-hurling the flakes in my face with almost blinding force, but at the
-far end I found myself greatly sheltered, and made fairly good progress
-over the hill until I reached Ball, where I encountered the full
-force of the gale. It must have taken me at least ten minutes making
-100 yards, at the end of which I was thoroughly exhausted, but managed
-to reach the cottage occupied by Eliza Burton, which I entered; after
-furiously rapping the door to wake the inmates, who had retired for the
-night. Here I received the kindest attention, also severe ridicule from
-'Dick,' a person of no mean size, and the man of the house, for being
-obliged to seek help. He immediately volunteered to accompany me, so
-after lighting a lantern, and getting tied up securely, as we thought,
-from the tempest we closed the door behind us.
-
-"By this time the snow in the highway was several inches in depth, and
-the storm raged with greater fury than ever. On turning down Tregorden
-Lane, this road, though running nearly at right angles to the wind,
-was being rapidly filled, for the blizzard came rushing across a
-twelve-acre field, with nothing to impede its course, and, gathering
-the snow up in clouds, whirled it along until it reached this sheltered
-lane, where it came over the hedge and through the bushes in streams
-of sleet, and it was as though we were inhaling icicles, for when we
-turned our backs it was just the same. It pierced our clothes, freezing
-as it did so, and our hair and necks became saturated with the driving
-snow which formed into a mass of ice. The lane was rapidly becoming
-impassable, the snow being now even up to our waists. In this state we
-plodded along for a short distance, I being determined that this time
-'Dick' should be the first to be beaten, and I had not long to wait,
-for he gasped out 'Let's turn back, I am done;' so round we turned and
-struggled back to the cottage more dead than alive, having been out for
-some twenty-five minutes. Eliza, prophesying our return, had by this
-time got up a roaring fire, and at once forced some hot brandy down our
-throats, after which we changed our stiff clothes and made ourselves
-comfortable for the night before the fire, and I enjoyed a cup of tea
-as I did not know how to before." On the following day the narrator was
-able to proceed to Tregorden.
-
-Among other peculiar and beautiful forms taken by the blizzard snow,
-and seen with great effect during the sunshine of the Wednesday after
-the storm, were the huge, shell-shaped hollows scooped out by the wind
-from the snow-drifts. An examination of many of our illustrations will
-reveal examples of this very unusual feature. In the accompanying
-scene, which is a view of a drift in the Liskeard cricket field, the
-peculiarity is very marked, the hollow being apparently sufficiently
-deep to cause the surface of the drift to overhang for some two or
-three feet.
-
-Brief reference has already been made in another chapter to the gallant
-exploits of Mr. Harold S. Williams, of Torridge, near Plympton.
-On Tuesday afternoon, at about five o'clock, he left his home and
-proceeded in the direction of the Great Western Railway line. Making
-his way in the storm, he found No. 160 engine standing in a deep drift
-which had formed on the bridge crossing the lane leading from the
-George Hotel. Alone on the engine was the driver, Coleman, in imminent
-danger of being frozen to death. Getting back as fast as possible to
-Torridge, Mr. Williams procured stimulants. Returning to the driver,
-he found him almost in a state of collapse. All he could say was, "I'm
-dying, I'm dying." Mr. Williams, who showed great pluck and presence
-of mind, got him off the engine, and conducted him towards Torridge,
-nearing which a portion of a relief party was met, and they carried
-the driver into the house. By that time he had become unconscious, but
-restoratives having been administered, and Coleman's limbs vigorously
-rubbed, he in about an hour was restored to partial consciousness.
-He remained the guest of Mr. Williams all night, and next day had
-sufficiently recovered to be removed to his home.
-
-[Illustration: DRIFT, CRICKET FIELD, LISKEARD.]
-
-Not long after Coleman had been received into Torridge, news was
-brought that another driver, rather further up the line, was dying. Mr.
-Williams, who is only nineteen years of age, again started on an errand
-of mercy and rescue. This time he was accompanied by Mr. Thornton, his
-tutor, and some of the relief party, who had helped to carry Coleman
-into his hospitable home. About 150 yards beyond Coleman's engine the
-party came across another engine completely buried in the snow, even to
-the funnel. Lying near to it was its driver, who had evidently crawled
-off the footplate in the hope of reaching shelter from the bitter
-snowstorm. At once he was carried to Torridge, apparently dead, and was
-laid on a mattress before a large fire.
-
-An attempt to administer restoratives failed, so tightly was the man's
-teeth clenched. All that could be done was to promote circulation
-by the warmth of fire and friction. Rubbing the limbs and body was
-persevered in, and at length the man gave a groan. That, however,
-was the only sign of life he gave for three hours, during which
-time the rubbing was persevered in by relays of helpers. Two hours
-afterwards--that is five hours after he had been brought in--he was
-sufficiently recovered to speak, but it was some time after that before
-it could be said that he was out of danger. When he first recovered
-speech he was found to be delirious, and he continued in a state of
-delirium, more or less, the whole of the night.
-
-When Mr. C. C. Compton, the divisional superintendent, called at
-Torridge early next morning, to ascertain how the driver was, it was
-reported that he was making favourable recovery, but that it would not
-be possible to remove him for some days. The man suffered much in his
-legs and feet, which are believed to be considerably frostbitten. His
-hands appeared to be all right. He remained some time at Torridge, and
-was most carefully tended. Eventually he and the driver first rescued
-recovered.
-
-A plucky journey was undertaken on the Wednesday after the storm by
-Captain Cowie, R.E., with a view to ascertaining the damage done
-between Totnes and Plympton to the postal telegraph wires, and being
-unable to proceed on the journey by rail in consequence of the blocks
-_en route_, he set out from the former place with a determination to
-cover the distance on foot. He was the first to attempt the venturesome
-task, and the consciousness of the difficulties that would have to
-be encountered did not appear to trouble him. Proceeding as fast as
-circumstances would permit, he eventually accomplished the journey of
-nineteen miles, meeting with hardly a solitary individual the whole of
-the way.
-
-It is almost needless to say that his experiences were of a most trying
-and perilous character. The road being impassable at many points he
-mounted the hedges, and occasionally losing his footing he fell into
-snowdrifts many feet high, being completely buried. He succeeded in
-releasing himself from his dangerous predicament, but on each of
-the occasions he met with this misfortune there was absolutely no
-assistance at hand even should it have been required. He ultimately
-reached Kingsbridge Road, and notwithstanding the adventures which he
-had already experienced, he decided to continue the journey to Plympton.
-
-Having regaled himself with a little milk and some light refreshment,
-he started off again, and the remainder of the journey was no less
-perilous than the portion already accomplished had been. He had to
-wade through accumulations of snow almost as high as himself, and
-was frequently compelled to crawl along on his hands and knees. He
-eventually reached Plympton, saturated with water and sore from the
-difficult and dangerous ordeal he had passed through, and here left
-instructions for some men to follow him, finding, however, that the
-wires _en route_ had suffered very little damage.
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
- A. H. SWISS, "BREMNER" PRINTING WORKS,
- FORE STREET, DEVONPORT.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes
-
-In the first chapter, much of the meterological data does not make
-sense but there was no way to correct it.
-
-Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
-
-Hyphen removed: bed[-]rooms (p. 141), break[-]down (pp. 23, 44, 47).
-
-Hyphen added: down[-]train (pp. 46, 51, 120, 162), sea[-]port (pp. 98,
-100).
-
-The following words appear both with and without hyphens and have not
-been changed: farm[-]house, life[-]boat(s), mid[-]day.
-
-"a.m." and "p.m." changed to small capitals (pp. 33, 103, 110).
-
-P. 57: "on on" changed to "on" (Whilst the heavy squalls were on
-Tuesday).
-
-P. 143: "thermometer" changed to "barometer" (calm, and barometer
-29·60).
-
-
-
-
-
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