History, Gazetteer, and Directory of Shropshire [1851]
Part 96
At a place called the Birches, between Buildwas and Ironbridge, and not far from Broseley, an extraordinary phenomenon occurred in May, 1775, of which the following account has been given by the Rev. John Fletcher, of Madeley. “When I went to the spot,” says Mr. Fletcher, “the first thing that struck me was the destruction of the little bridge that separated the parish of Madeley from that of Buildwas, and the total disappearing of the turnpike road to Buildwas bridge, instead of which nothing presented itself to my view but a confused heap of bushes, and huge clods of earth tumbled one over another. The river also wore a different aspect; it was shallow, turbid, noisy, boisterous, and came down from a different point. Whether I considered the water or the land the scene appeared to me entirely new, and as I could not fancy myself in another part of the country, I concluded that the God of nature had shaken his providential iron rod over the subverted spot before me. Following the track made by a great number of spectators, who came already from the neighbouring parishes, I climbed over the ruins and came to a field well grown with rye-grass, where the ground was greatly cracked in several places, and where large turfs, some entirely, others half turned up exhibited the appearance of straight or crooked furrows, imperfectly formed by a plough drawn at a venture. Getting from that field over the hedge, into a part of the road which was yet visible, I found it raised in one place, sunk in another, concave in a third, hanging on one side in a fourth, and contracted as if some uncommon force had pressed the two hedges together. But the higher part of it surprised me most, and brought directly to my remembrance those places of mount Vesuvius where the solid stony lava has been strongly worked by repeated earthquakes, for the hard beaten gravel that formed the surface of the road was broken every way into huge masses, partly detached from each other, with deep apertures between them exactly like the shattered lava. This striking likeness of circumstances made me conclude that the similar effect might proceed from the same cause, namely, a strong convulsion on the surface if not in the bowels of the earth. Going a little farther towards Buildwas I found that the road was again totally lost for a considerable space, having been overturned, absorbed, or tumbled with the hedges that bounded it to a considerable distance towards the river; this part of the desolation appeared then to me inexpressibly dreadful. Between a shattered field and the river there was that morning a bank on which besides a great deal of underwood grew twenty fine large oaks, this wood shot with such violence into the Severn before it that it forced the water in great columns a considerable height like mighty fountains, and gave the overflowing river a retrograde motion. This is not the only accident that happened to the Severn; for near the Grove, the channel which was chiefly of a soft blue rock burst in ten thousand pieces, and rose perpendicularly about ten yards, heaving up the immense quantity of water and the shoals of fishes that were therein. Among the rubbish at the bottom of the river, which was very deep in that place, there were one or two huge stones and a large piece of timber, or an oak tree, which from time immemorial had lain partly buried in the mud I suppose in consequence of some flood; the stones and tree were thrown up as if they had been only a pebble and a stick, and are now at some distance from the river, many feet higher than the surface of it. Ascending from the ruins of the road I came to those of a barn, which after travelling many yards towards the river had been absorbed in a chasm where the shattered roof was yet visible. Next to those remains of the barn, and partly parallel with the river, was a long edge which had been torn from a part of it yet adjoining to the garden hedge, and had been removed above forty yards downward together with some large trees that were in it and the land that it enclosed. The tossing, tearing, and shifting of so many acres of land below, was attended with the formation of stupendous chasms above. At some distance above, near the wood which crowns the desolated spot, another chasm, or rather a complication of chasms excited my admiration; it is an assemblage of chasms, one of which that seems to terminate the desolation to the north-east, runs some hundred yards towards the river and Madeley wood; it looked like the deep channel of some great serpentine river dried up, whose little islands, fords, and hollows appear without a watery veil. This long chasm at the top seems to be made up of two or three that run into each other, and their conjunction when it is viewed from a particular point exhibits the appearance of a ruined fortress whose ramparts have been blown up by mines that have done dreadful execution, and yet have spared here and there a pyramid of earth, or a shattered tower by which the spectators can judge of the nature and solidity of the demolished bulwark. Fortunately there was on the devoted spot but one house, inhabited by two poor countrymen and their families; it stands yet, though it has removed about a yard from its former situation. The morning in which the desolation happened, Samuel Wilcocks, one of those countrymen, got up about four o’clock, and opening the window to see if the weather was fair he took notice of a small crack in the earth about four or five inches wide, and observed the above mentioned field of corn heaving up and rolling about like the waves of the sea; the trees by the motion of the ground waved also, as if they had been blown with the wind, though the air was calm and serene; the river Severn, which for some days had overflowed its banks, was also very much agitated and seemed to turn back to its source. The man being astonished at such a sight, rubbed his eyes, supposing himself not quite awake, and being soon convinced that destruction stalked about, he alarmed his wife, and taking children in their arms they went out of the house as fast as they could, accompanied by the other man and his wife. A kind Providence directed their flight, for instead of running eastward across the fields that were just going to be overthrown, they fled westward into a wood that had little share in the destruction. When they were about twenty yards from the house they perceived a great crack run very quick up the ground from the river; immediately the land behind them with the trees and hedges moved towards the Severn with great swiftness and an uncommon noise, which Samuel Wilcocks compared to a large flock of sheep running swiftly by him. It was then chiefly that desolation expanded her wings over the devoted spot and the Birches saw a momentary representation of a partial chaos! then nature seemed to have forgotten her laws: trees commenced itinerant!—those that were at a distance from the river advanced towards it, while the submerged oak broke out of its watery confinements and by rising many feet recovered a place on dry land; the solid road was swept away as its dust had been on a stormy day;—then probably the rocky bottom of the Severn emerged, pushing towards heaven astonished shoals of fishes and hogsheads of water innumerable;—the wood like an embattled body of vegetable combatants stormed the bed of the overflowing river, and triumphantly waved its green colours over its recoiling flood;—fields became moveable,—nay, they fled when none pursued, and as they fled they rent the green carpets that covered them in a thousand pieces;—in a word, dry land exhibited the dreadful appearance of a sea-storm. Solid earth as if it had acquired the fluidity of water tossed itself into massy waves, which rose or sunk at the beck of him who raised the tempest; and what is most astonishing, the stupendous hollow of one of those waves ran for nearly a quarter of a mile through rooks and a stony soil with as much ease as if dry earth, stones, and rocks had been a part of the liquid element. Soon after the river was stopt, Samuel Cookson, a farmer who lives a quarter of a mile below the Birches, on the same side of the river, was much terrified by a dust of wind that beat against his windows as if shot had been thrown against it, but his fright greatly increased when getting up to see if the flood that was over his ground had abated he perceived that all the water was from his fields, and that scarce any remained in the Severn. He called up his family, ran to the river, and finding that it was dammed up, he made the best of his way to alarm the inhabitants of Buildwas, the next village above, which he supposed would soon be under water. He was happily mistaken, providence just prepared a way for their escape; the Severn, notwithstanding a considerable flood which at that time rendered it doubly rapid and powerful, having met with two dreadful shocks, the one from her rising bed and the other from the intruding wood, could do nothing but foam and turn back with impetuosity. The ascending and descending streams conflicted about Buildwas bridge; the river sensibly rose for some miles back, and continued rising till just as it was near entering into the houses at Buildwas it got a vent through the fields on the right, and after spreading far and near over them collected all its might to assault its powerful aggressor, I mean the grove, that had so unexpectedly turned it out of the bed which it had enjoyed for countless ages. Sharp was the attack, but the resistance was yet more vigorous, and the Severn repelled again and again was obliged to seek its old empty bed, by going the shortest way to the right, and the moment it found it again it precipitated therein with a dreadful roar, and for a time formed a considerable cataract with inconceivable fury, as if it wanted to be revenged on the first thing that came in its way, began to tear and wash away a fine rich meadow opposite to the grove, and there in a few hours worked itself a new channel about three hundred yards long, through which a barge from Shrewsbury ventured three or four day after, all wonder at the strangement of the overthrow. Some ascribe it to an earthquake, others to a slip of the ground, and not a few remain neuter, confessing that providence has conducted this phenomenon in such a manner as to confound the wisdom of the wise, and force even philosophers to adore in silence the God of nature whose ways are past finding out, who giveth not always account of his matters, and who perhaps strikes an ambiguous blow to convince us that the how of his vengeance has more than one string, and that, to say nothing of the other elements, our mother earth may afford us an untimely grave, either by the slipping of her back or the convulsion of her bowels. My employment and taste leading me more to search out the mysteries of heaven than to scrutinize the phenomena of the earth, and to point at the wonders of grace than those of nature; I leave the decision of the question about the slip and the earthquake to some abler philosopher.”
POST OFFICE—_At Mr. Jeremiah Ashwood’s_. Letters arrive at 8 A.M., and are despatched 5.35 P.M.
_Marked_ 1 _are in Cape or King street_; 2 _Church street_; 3 _High street_; 4 _Queen street_; 5 _Barratt’s hill_; 6 _Broseley Wood_; 7 _Jackfield and neighbourhood_; 8 _Barber’s row_; _and_ 9 _Duke street_.
2 Amphlet Susannah, vict., The Dog
3 Ashwood Jeremiah, corn miller, maltster, and postmaster
3 Bartlam Edward Glover, Esq., surgeon, and coroner for borough of Wenlock
5 Bathurst Henry Martyn, schoolmaster (national)
5 Baker Mrs. Frances
3 Baker The Misses, drapers and mercers
2 Baugh George, Esq.
2 Bayliss Miss Helen, ladies’ boarding school
7 Beard Thomas, victualler, Werps Inn
3 Beddoes John, shoemaker
6 Beddow Thomas, grocer
6 Bill Jeremiah, butcher, shopkeeper and beerhouse
3 Birch Thomas, coalmaster
7 Boden Susannah, shopkpr.
3 Booth Henry, farmer and butcher
6 Bradley Richard, tobacco pipe maker
3 Bourne Wm., blacksmith and beerhouse-keeper
2 Boycott Richard, baker and confectioner
2 Broadhurst Thos., timber merchant & wheelwright
2 Brodie Mrs.
7 Brown Edwd., blacksmith, and vict., Summer House
3 Burnet Henry, hosier and haberdasher
3 Burnet Isaac, boot and shoemaker
3 Burnet John, grocer and dealer in hops
7 Burn Rev. Andrew, B.A., curate, Rock House
7 Burton Edward, brick and tile manufr. & barge owner
7 Burroughs John, rope manufacturer
3 Cartwright Chas., butcher
6 Cartwright James, butcher
3 Charlton Humphrey, wine and spirit and hop and seed merchant
4 Colley Bernard Wilkinson, maltster
8 Collins Thos., locksmith
2 Cooke Joseph, victualler, Old Crown
3 Corfield Thomas, butcher
3 Cowley Jas., grocer, ironmonger, and seedsman
3 Cox Robert, saddler
3 Crowder Leonard, painter, plumber, and glazier
3 Crump William, butcher
7 Crumpton William, ferryman and barge owner
7 Cullis William, victualler, Tumbling Sailors
7 Davies Ann, brick and tile maker
7 Davies James, sen., brick and tile maker, The Rock
7 Davies James, jun., brick and tile maker, The Rock
3 Davies John, farmer
6 Davies Samuel, butcher and maltster
7 Davies Thos., shopkeeper, and brick and tile maker
Davies Thomas, tailor, The Delph
6 Dean James, thatcher and beerhouse-keeper
1 Davies Thomas, victualler, Duke of Cumberland
7 Dillon Joseph, bargeowner, Salt house
7 Dodd Andrew, bargeowner, Salt-house
7 Doughty Geo., bargeowner, Salthouse
7 Doughty Robert, bargeowner, Salthouse
7 Doughty Theophilus, brick & tile maker, Lloyd Head
6 Easthope Mrs. Ann
2 Edwards Ann, victualler, Foresters’ Arms
3 Evans Edwin R. auctioneer, accountant, house & estate agent, valuer & appraiser, agent to the Sun Fire office, and superintendent registrar
3 Evans Mrs. Maria, draper and mercer
9 Evans Richard, registrar of births and deaths
6 Evans John, shopkeeper and poulterer
Evans Robert, Esq., J.P., The Dunge
8 Evans Susan, confectioner
3 Evans Thos., confectioner
8 Everall Robert, butcher and vict., The Plough
1 Everall Thomas, baker and grocer
3 Fawkes Arthur, victualler, Cape of Good Hope
8 Fenton John, brazier and tinman
2 Forester The Honourable and Rev. Orlando Watkin Weld, M.A., The Rectory
5 Firfield Mrs.
5 Francis Robert, tailor
8 Glover Edwd., hairdresser
6 Gough Mrs. Martha
2 Griffiths Edward, shopkeeper, Salt-house
2 Griffiths John, timber merchant and wheelwright
Griffiths Miss, milliner
3 Gwynn Geo., basket-maker
5 Gwynn Martha, basket-maker
7 Harris Richard, tailor, Salt-house
3 Hartshorne Edward, boot and shoemaker
2 Hartshone Frederick H., Esq., surgeon
3 Hartshorne George, auctioneer, appraiser, cabinet-maker, builder, and upholsterer
1 Harvey John, grocer, draper, accountant, agent to the Birmingham fire office, and medical, clerical, and general life office
9 Hayman John, glass dealer and victualler, The Fox
1 Holmes Wm., coalmaster
8 Hill Benjamin, joiner and builder
5 Hill Hiram, grocer and coal master
8 Hiskett Thomas, tin-plate worker
7 Holt Thomas, victualler, Woodbridge Inn
3 Humphries John, grocer, chandler, and hop dealer
2 Instone Samuel, grocer
2 Jones Adam, surveyor and victualler, The Pheasant Commercial Inn
Jackson Rev. Wm. (Baptist), Broseley Cottage
8 Johnson John, tailor and habit maker
7 Jones Isaac, blacksmith
7 Jones John, vict., Duke of Wellington, The Werps
6 Jones Samuel, baker
3 Jones Stephen, tailor and habit maker
Jones Rev. Wm. (Baptist), Chapel Hill
3 Jones Richard, painter, plumber, glazier, & paper hanger
7 Jones Thos., fishmonger, and beerhouse-keeper, The Rock
2 Knight Henry, Esq., professor of music
3 Leadbetter Enoch, agent to Crown Life Assurance office
9 Legge Mrs. Margaret
3 Lister Edward, victualler, The Elephant
6 Lister Thomas, Esq.
7 Lloyd Henry, waterman and vict., The Oak
6 Lloyd William, beerhouse-keeper
3 Mason James, shoemaker, and licensed to let post-horses
7 Mapp Thomas, cement manufacturer
6 Mason Henry, hatter and marine-store dealer
6 Mason John, grocer and tea dealer
7 Miles Francis, shopkeeper, Salt-house
3 Miles Thomas, victualler, The Albion
3 Molineux Thomas, boot and shoemaker
6 Morris John Cox, Esq.
Morgan Mrs., Rock House
Mortimer Mrs. Favell Lee, Broseley Hall
3 Nevitt Enoch, stationer
3 Nevitt Samuel, shopkeeper
Nicholas William, Esq., Field House
3 Oakley Jesse, druggist and grocer
3 Oare Charles, Esq.
2 Onions John, Esq., iron-founder, and brick & tile maker, White Hall
7 Oswell George, beerhouse-keeper and ferryman
Page Thomas, maltster
7 Parker Benj., bargeowner & vict., Lloyd’s Head Inn
7 Parker Charles, victualler, Black Swan
3 Parsons Wm., blacksmith
3 Perrin William, draper, mercer, and hatter
9 Peters Moses and Richard, nail makers & ironmongers
3 Potts Geo., Esq., solicitor, clerk to borough of Wenlock & to Madeley County Court, The Green
3 Potts & Nicholls, solicitors
2 Pountney Edwin, baker
3 Pountney Samuel, grocer
9 Pountney Samuel, tailor
6 Powell Richd., shopkeeper
7 Price Robert, mine agent, Calcott
3 Pritchard’s Boycott and Nicholas, bankers; draw on Barnett, Hoares, and Company, London
2 Pritchard George, Esq.
3 Pritchard John, Esq.
2 Pritchard Miss
7 Proudman Geo., earthenware manufacturer, Ivanhoe Pottery
3 Pugh Helen, milliner and dressmaker
3 Pugh Thos., china painter
5 Raspass Elizbeth, shopkpr.
7 Reynolds John, bargeowner
3 Rhodes Charles, vict., The Lion Commercial Inn
7 Richards Geo., beerhouse, The Salt-house
7 Richards Robert, victualler, Severn Trow
3 Richards Thomas, saddler
7 Robinson Jas., blacksmith
7 Roden Samuel, brick and tile manufacturer; house, Ironbridge
7 Roden Thomas, joiner, Salt-house
6 Rowe Chas., wheelwright
6 Rufus Hannah, victualler, King’s Head
2 Rushton Henry, joiner and builder
3 Rushton Richard, grocer
2 Shaw William P., agent to legal and general life assurance office, and to Salop fire office
6 Smith Moses, hosier
4 Salmon John, hosier
6 Southorn Ann, beerhouse
6 Southorn Joseph, tobacco-pipe manufacturer
6 Southorn Wm. & Co., tobacco-pipe manufacturers
4 Speak Thos., shopkeeper
5 Squires Richard, builder
2 Stable Mrs. Mary, The Deanery
2 Stables Miss Jane, The Deanery
3 Stephan Caroline, milliner and dressmaker
4 Taylor William, butcher
7 Taylor William, coal and brick master, The Tuckies
2 Thorn John, Esq., White Hall
4 Thursfield Richard, Esq., surgeon, and high bailiff to Madeley County Court
5 Tonkiss Richard, tobacco-pipe maker
5 Trupp Thomas, inland revenue officer
7 Transom Jas., bargeowner
9 Watkin Richd., shoemaker
Watkins Wm., victualler, Duke of York
6 Weaver Mary, shopkeeper
9 Weeks John, shoemaker
6 Weeks Thos., shoemaker
9 Weeks Richard, boot and shoemaker, & beerhouse
8 Willings Benjamin, boot and shoemaker
9 Westover John, attorney’s clerk
7 Wiggins John, schoolmaster (national)
7 Wild John, bargeowner
2 Wilkinson John, blacksmith
5 Wilkinson Mrs. Lucia
3 Williams Ann, shopkeeper and poulterer
7 Williams Edward, shopkeeper, and brick and tile maker, The Werps
7 Williams Edwd., jun., vict., Dog & Duck, Lloyd Head
7 Williams Mr. Silvanus, Salt-house
9 Whooton Herbert, butcher and farmer
Wyke Richard, surgeon, Salt-house
5 Yates Elizabeth, victualler, The Crown
7 Yates Robt., vict., Ash Tree
HUGHLEY
is a parish and village delightfully situated in a lovely vale four and a half miles S.W. from Much Wenlock; the Wenlock Edge bounds the parish on the eastern side, and on the west is a small mountain stream. The parish contains 1,111A. 3R. 38P. of land, the soil of which for the most part is of an inferior description, but produces tolerable crops of oats, and wheat is also grown. Rateable value £817. The land in this parish is the property of the Earl of Bradford, except about three roods and a small cottage. A bridge has recently been built over the stream here, which is a great advantage and convenience to the inhabitants, as the waters occasionally rush with great impetuosity from the hilly district, and render the fording of the stream dangerous. The bridge was built by subscriptions, under the superintendence and aid of the late rector. In former times the extensive woods with which Hughley was surrounded were long the retreat of robbers; a commission was issued in the reign of Richard II. to inquire into the best means of securing the banditti, and protecting travellers from their lawless depredations.
THE CHURCH, a small but interesting specimen of the gothic style of architecture, is dedicated to St. John the Baptist; it is very ancient, and consists of nave and chancel, the latter divided from the nave by a beautifully rood loft elaborately carved; on the roof also is some beautifully carved work. A recess in the wall containing a number of human bones is conjectured to have been a shrine; the bones are probably the remains of some reputed saint, and were formerly secured by a door, but this has long been destroyed. There is a piscina on a pedestal, whereon in former times would very probably stand the patron saint of the church. The living is a rectory valued in the King’s book at £4. 11s. 3d., now returned at £160, in the patronage of the Earl of Bradford, and enjoyed by the Rev. John Wakefield, M.A. The parish of Hughley, at the census of 1801, contained 83 inhabitants; 1831, 115; and in 1841 there were twenty houses and 127 souls. Job Littleford, in 1772, gave to the parish of Hughley 6s. yearly to maintain a poor child at school; 4s. to be distributed among the poor by the rector; and 2s. 6d. to the parish clerk yearly. The premises charged with this payment are situate at Holt Praed, and are the property of Mrs. Thursby.
DIRECTORY.—Richard Bullock, blacksmith; Edward Corfield, miller; Elizabeth Owen, farmer; Thomas Madeley, farmer; Rev. John Wakefield, M.A., rector; Andrew Walker, farmer, Upper Hill farm; Richard Walleter, farmer, Lower Hill farm.
LINLEY
is a small parish in the Wenlock franchise, situated about three and a half miles south-east from Much Wenlock. The parish comprises 636 acres of land, the principal owners of which are Lord Forester and John Stephens, Esq. At the census in 1801 there were 108 inhabitants; 1831, 111; and in 1851, 105; of whom 42 were males, and 63 females. At the same period there were 19 inhabited houses, and one uninhabited. Gross estimated rental of the parish, £809. 2s. Rateable value, £729. 18s. Lord Forester is lord of the manor and impropriator. THE CHURCH, a plain, unpresuming structure, has the appearance of great antiquity: the windows are small and square headed, and there is a short tower. The church is situated in a field, and near it stands a venerable yew tree, but there is no inclosed burial ground. The living is a rectory, annexed to that of Broseley. The Hon. and Rev. Orlando Forester is the incumbent. Divine service is only performed once a month. LINLEY HALL was formerly the seat of the ancient family of Lacon, who possessed the greater part of the parish. It is a plain brick structure, now occupied by Miss Martha Onions.
DIRECTORY.—George Carpenter, vict., Duke of Wellington Inn; Robert Harrison, farmer; Joseph Langmore, wheelwright and blacksmith; Ann Newton, vict., Britannia Inn; Miss Martha Onions, Linley Hall; Edward Owen, proprietor of Owen’s pills and drops, Linley Villa; Josiah Wellings, bailiff to Mr. Hembry.
LITTLE WENLOCK