1608 and all that . . . .
At nine o'clock on the morning of Tuesday the twentieth of January sixteen o'
eight, a wall of water twenty-eight feet high swept up the Bristol Channel at
thirty miles per hour . Houses “on the cliff top” in Appledore “were not simply
flooded they were overtopped causing them to collapse”. Then, after striking
with its full force upon Instow, the wave continued up the Taw into Barnstaple.
“It overtopped the Pill Bridge” and flooded many houses in Mayden Street,
Crockstreete, Wilstreet,Maiden Street and Southgate Street. “It cast down the
whole house whereon James Frost did dwell
whereby himself was slayn with the fall of the roof & two Children lying within
bed were slayn with the falling of the Walls”. Locals claimed that the water was
“five or six feet greater than the highest tides of living memory”. Low lying
areas on either side of the Bristol Channel, including the Somerset Level were
inundated for ten days.
Although, some must have lost their lives in Appledore and Instow, there appears
to be no record of it. However, at Appledore, a fully laden ship of sixty tons
was swept well above the highest tide mark “far enough to make its salvage
unlikely”. Damage must have been substantial in both localities and residents
became wary of building close to the sea; the oldest house in Appledore was not
built until seventeen fifty and in Instow sixteen forty.Known for centuries as
'the great storm', this event is now believed to have been a local sunami
emanating from a known geological fault in the Irish Sea. Doctors Simon Haslett
and Ted Bryant have found convincing evidence on Northam Burrows and four other
places along the Bristol Channel. It might be added that, over the past hundred
years, the sea has washed away four
hundred yards of the Northam Burrows or approximately twelve hundred acres.Could
it happen again? That is the question, in 1860 a strong tremor shook
“substantial buildings in Barnstaple” and again on Friday 1st of June 2001.
Those who “heard the rumbling”say the walls and floors shook and windows
rattled. One man described the rumble as “like an overloaded washing machine”.
According to seismologists, this 'significant' tremor at 3.6 on theRichter Scale
had its epicentre eighteen or nineteen miles West of Hartland Point. Britain
experiences between two hundred and three hundred tremors a years although few
are felt.In many parts of the country, and North Devon in particular, there is
an ever increasing search for building land and one can only hope that, in
future, no one will tempt fate by building along the Tarka Trail.
Roger Sugar