Once upon a time, in the age of sail when ships were small and roads
were mere tracks (and usually impassable in winter), river transport
was the thing. In the flatness of Broadland with its 125 miles (200km)
of relatively lock-free navigation, a notable transport system
developed.
First there were the square sailed keels, cumbersome craft which worked
moderately well only with the wind astern although with no competition,
expediency was not a claim, nor even an aspiration, of their operators.
From the keels however developed the wherries, also slow but graceful
and more capable - relatively speaking - to windward, and some were still
working in the early 20th century. For nearly 200 years, wherries connected
the sea port of Great Yarmouth with Beccles and Bungay on the River
Waveney, Aylsham and North Walsham on the canalised upper sections of the
Bure and Ant and, most importantly, with the city of Norwich up 'The Norwich
River' the watermen called the Yare and its tributary, the Wensum.
But Norwich had a problem in that Yarmouth handled cargoes between sea-going
ships and wherries and, again, with no competition, expediency was not an
aspiration and neither for that matter were low charges. Yarmouth was slow
and expensive.
So in the early 19th century, the merchants of Norwich hatched a cunning
plan. Enlisting the Norfolk born engineer, William Cubitt, inventor of
the 'patent sail' for windmills, they sought to make Norwich directly
accessible to sea-going ships. They looked at various river dredging
options but finally decided to by-pass Yarmouth altogether.
The scheme, which they called 'Norwich a Port', involved a new canal two
and a half miles long between the Rivers Yare and Waveney above their
confluence at Breydon Water to the south west of Yarmouth. A new port
would then be developed near the small fishing village of Lowestoft
which would link with the Waveney through a channel dredged in shallow
Oulton Broad connecting to a dredged and widened Oulton Dyke.
There was resistance from Yarmouth, of course. A House of Commons
committee heard in particular from one John Bracey, Yarmouth
harbour-master, who claimed the cost of towing ships up to Norwich would
be prohibitive, adding: 'They would track them up by those steamboats
while they last - but they are going out'.
The first navigation bill failed in 1826, but another succeeded the
following year and the New Cut linking the Yare and Waveney opened in
1832. When two sea going vessels were towed upriver to Norwich on
September 30th, Norwich had indeed become a port.
But Harbour Master Bracey was right - unwittingly - in one respect,
for the new navigation, though used for a long time, was never really
busy. More particularly, by the second half of the century, steamboats
were indeed ‘going out’ because railways were taking their business -
and that of the wherries and of the navigation itself. With revenue
insufficient to service borrowings, it was sold in 1844 to Samuel Morton
Peto and his partners who were more interested in building a railway
alongside the New Cut.
But the whole adventure had done something unusual. It had created a
2000 acre island, a wedge of grazing marsh between the Cut, the
Waveney and the Yare. Today, though those waterways are heavy with
holiday traffic in the warmer months, the Island, also known as
Haddiscoe Island, is one of the remoter places in East Anglia.
Indeed, Haddiscoe Island is a place apart in just about every
respect. There are no public roads except the A143 which clips its
south-eastern corner and the only public access is by a footpath
which runs around the 12 mile perimeter. There are just five dwellings
on the main part of the Island, two of them 19th century, one a modern
bungalow and another the thatched 17th century Raven Hall, opposite
Berney Arms across the Yare. The fifth, a converted drainage mill,
recently changed hands. Otherwise, the Island’s only buildings are of
boating businesses on the Waveney edging St Olaves village together
with a former pub which became a restaurant and is now for sale as a
dwelling beside the Cut next to the main road.
Away from that road, the Island gets few visitors. Hares lope about
among summer grazing cattle under a big Norfolk sky unbroken by any
vertical intrusion save the few derelict drainage mills which were
long ago superseded by steam engines, diesel pumps and finally
electric units. Only two electric pumps are now needed. Reed beds
cover the Waveney flank, filling the rond between the river wall and
the river itself. Grass and reed, very much in that order, are the
Island's only products.
But there is a constancy about the place. The marshmen looking after
the cattle and grazing today are from families with a history of
such work who, in the case of the Maces - Bob, Brian and Paul - are
three generations of an Island line which goes back at least to the
19th century and includes the Hewitts who once featured large in
Island affairs.
That line and others and their work and lives are traced in the book,
'The Island, (The Haddiscoe Island) Past and Present' (2002) by
Sheila Hutchinson whose childhood was spent at Berney Arms. She
tells of the Hewitts, resplendant with cryptic nicknames: William
'King Billy' Hewitt and his son, James 'Wesmacott' Hewitt and his
grandson Henry 'Yoiton' Hewitt.
She tells of Yoiton living in Raven Hall before the Second World
War, taking his cows’ milk by motor boat up the Yare to Reedham
for collection by the Milk Marketing Board and taking his children
the other way to school, walking them over the marshes and then along a
boardwalk through the reeds on the Waveney side from where he would row
them across to Burgh Castle overlooked by the flint walls of the Roman
town. His wife, Annie, made and sold mushroom ketchup until the
'53 flood wiped out the mushrooms.
His mail was delivered to Berney Arms across the Yare, itself just a
farmhouse, a drainage mill and, these days, a summer opening pub, all
remote enough with no public road, although there was - and is - a
railway halt. There was a signal post with an arm to be raised when
Yoiton had mail to collect. But by the time that Yoiton's son Stanley
and his wife had Raven Hall after the War, boating holiday makers had
cracked the code and were perpetrating too many false alarms to make
it workable.
Telegrams were another problem. When Stephen Hewitt lived at Upper
Seven Mile House (demolished in the late '70s) before the War, he
would get telegrams telling him when Irish cattle would be arriving
to graze the marshes. The delivery boy had to bike from Reedham
alongside the railway line north of the Yare, looking over his shoulder
for trains and trying not to wobble off, and then walk over two
marshes to reach the river. There he had to shout loud enough to make
Stephen hear, or at least to make his dogs bark, and then read the
telegram to him when he had rowed over.
But there was a decent tip at the end of it.
These days, Bob Mace, born at Berney Arms and great grandson of King
Billy Hewitt, is the link with those times. In '53, he still lived
over the river and crossed to the Island each day to work the marsh,
but for the seven weeks of the flood, he stayed on the Island. He
recalls five pumps working at a time, including an Admiralty pump
with so much compression that it needed three men to start it.
In the '70s, Bob was awarded a British Empire Medal for identifying
a copper deficiency in the cattle which was causing their black
colouration was turn brown and rings to form around their eyes. A
ministry investigation confirmed the condition and copper injections
were given. The cattle still have copper supplements when necessary
but the problem has abated, coincidentally or otherwise, since the
old Yarmouth power station closed. Bob had always suspected a
connection. When the wind was from that direction in the summer, he
says, it could be quite stifling on the marsh.
These days, King Billy and Co might be surprised by electric pumps,
mobile phones and the volume of holiday traffic on the rivers
(though Yoiton actually worked the electric pumps) but they would
recognise the general nature of the place. The Island still
supports about 2,500 cattle each summer; the grazing is still let
in late March by auction at the Bell Inn, St Olaves. There are
fewer hares perhaps - marsh harriers are taking the leverets lately -
and there have been no bitterns for years, probably deterred by
degeneration of the reed bed. Years ago, the whole rond used to be
cut.
But even that might revert to the old times, for Norfolk reed is
in demand, even in the face of cheaper imports, and they have been
reclaiming more of the Waveney rond over the last two winters in
response. Even the Environment Agency with its new emphasis on flood
defence, is spending money, strengthening or renewing the river wall
for the first time since the ‘60s, which should hopefully protect the
terrain for a while against the ravages of a changing climate.
In which case, in an age of accelerating change, the Island, still
physically, economically and spiritually intact, might just remain
a place apart for a few generations more.
Reproduced by kind permission of
John Worrall
© 2002