Life in 18th and 19th Century Shoreham

Newspaper Reports continued 12:-

The Morning Post of 12th May 1856 reported that at the Court of the Exchequer a local farmer named Akehurst amongst others was prosecuted for smuggling seven tons of tobacco totaling in value £2,686. The schooner ‘Navigator’ had arrived in Shoreham during August of the previous year with a supposed cargo of cement stone and tied up at the Custom House quay. Bales of tobacco had also been secreted amongst the stones, offloaded into a barge and taken up river to the chalk pit at Beeding where the cement works are now and dispersed onwards up country. You have to wonder how all this was possible under the noses of the twenty or so customs men in Shoreham until you realise this was the very occasion that historian Henry Cheal described when complimentary tickets for a visiting circus had been given to the customs men to ensure their attention was occupied elsewhere!

(photo – visiting circus elephants at Star Gap circa 1900, courtesy Michael J Fox)

Life in 18th and 19th Century Shoreham

Newspaper Reports continued 11:-

Don’t go in the water …. in April of 1856 Captain Guy of the ‘Imogen’ arrived at Shoreham from a voyage that took them through the Azores where, he stated, he and his crew saw a large sea serpent – “The creature was in view for a full 35 minutes …. and had the same appearance that I have before seen represented in drawings but without the hairy mane and more like a large conger eel. It was a full forty feet long above water and from the wake it left I would say sixty feet would not be an exaggeration.”

Continue reading “Life in 18th and 19th Century Shoreham”

Life in 18th and 19th Century Shoreham

Newspaper Reports continued 10:-

The fort was later to be manned by Shoreham’s Artillery Volunteers, local men who also had full time jobs. One of the ways that Volunteers were encouraged to drill and practice was through the annual competitions run by the National Artillery Association at Shoeburyness. These involved timed exercises to put together a dismantled gun culminating in a series of shots at targets. Shoreham was to achieve success in this competition when Sergeant Major William.T. Streader’s detachment from the Shoreham Battery took the Prince of Wales prize at Shoeburyness in 1879 ‘the prize consisting of ten silver cups all taken by Major Streader’s detachment’.

Life in 18th and 19th Century Shoreham

Newspaper Reports continued 9:-

October 1855 Tenders were invited for the building of a fort to house ‘six heavy guns and defensible barracks for the lodgment of troops.’ The project was to be completed by November the following year under penalty of £35 for every week’s delay and forfeiture of £1,000 for non-completion. Whether or not the construction conditions were met is unclear but in February 1858 artillerymen were reported as being still ‘engaged mounting six 68 pound guns on slide and traversing carriages.’

Three guns covered the sea and three were to perform nearly a complete circle over both sea and land (although later reports suggest that the actual extent of the arc of fire was rather more limited). It had a ditch, walls with loopholes for musketry, subterranean passages, magazines and barracks for 70 men but to begin with was maintained by just ‘a few invalids of the late war.’ By November that year Lord Vivian and men of the Royal Artillery delivered shot, shell and ammunition – each gun received 130 rounds and for each shot 16 pounds of powder were required to propel missiles 3,000 to 4,000 yards.

(Image of the fort by courtesy of the artist, Mike Codd)

Life in 18th and 19th Century Shoreham

Newspaper Reports continued 8:-

The opening of the Swiss Gardens (1838) is well reported and an 1850 article of a balloon flight describes one particularly adventurous event when 56 year old Lieut. George Burcher Gale RN arose from Swiss Gardens, was blown across to France where he landed, was thought by the French to have been a spy (it was at the time of the invasion scares, the building of Shoreham fort etc.,) and imprisoned for a while.

Another report (1857) also concerning Swiss Gardens revealed the existence of a passage way through it. This was a right of way that ran from alongside the Victoria Road entrance through to the path that later became Connaught Avenue and actually went under some of the Garden buildings. It must have been a somewhat claustrophobic experience to walk through as the parish surveyors had inspected the passage and called upon the owner to ‘increase the depth to 6 feet 6 inches, widen it under the cosmoramic views pavilion and prevent the water fountain from leaking into the passage.’

(Images show balloons at Swiss Gardens and a blurred but rare photo of the passage way there).

 

Life in 18th and 19th Century Shoreham

Newspaper Reports continued 7:-

Shoreham’s roads are mentioned. Before the riverside stretch to the east of the footbridge was built up the turnpike road from Brighton used to run along to Tarmount Lane, up Brunswick, into St. Mary’s Road and down East Street to the High Street. This was the last part of King William IV’s favourite route on his regular outings from Brighton to Shoreham and the new Norfolk suspension bridge (1833) that he much admired. When the railway arrived (1840) the turnpike trustees at first refused to let the railway company build a viaduct over the Kingston wharf so buttresses with a drawbridge were initially designed to go across the line – eventually though the trustees relented.

Life in 18th and 19th Century Shoreham

Newspaper Reports continued 6:-

Much of the chalk and earth taken out from the cutting through New England Hill in Brighton was reused to build the bank through Southwick and Kingston and in February 1840 a great number of workmen arrived in Shoreham to build the Brighton Road viaduct over the line connecting the Kingston wharves to the main railroad. On the 11thMay 1840 the official opening was reported with the first trip through the five and a half miles from Brighton to Shoreham being completed in 12 minutes.

One intriguing report of 1841, the year following the opening of the Shoreham line, was taken up and published by all the national dailies and read ‘On Monday, as the Shoreham branch of the London and Brighton Railway was proceeding to Shoreham a hare ran on the rail for some distance but eventually poor puss was overtaken and cut in half by the train.’ J.M.W. Turner’s famous ‘Rain, Steam & Speed’ painting shows a hare running before the train – presumed to represent speed. The painting was first exhibited in 1844 and shows the Maidenhead Bridge, is it possible that the idea of the hare was planted in Turner’s mind by this report?

Life in 18th and 19th Century Shoreham

 Newspaper Reports continued 5:-

Companies were formed (1834) with a view to funding the London to Brighton railway line. There were two main routes proposed and one of them was the line down to Horsham, Shoreham and on to Brighton. Various reports followed during the subsequent years giving arguments for and against the different routes. Although the Adur Valley route was backed by the renowned railway engineer John Rennie and was the least expensive option requiring no tunnels and less bridges to be constructed the more direct route to Brighton was chosen. It was small consolation for Shoreham that that the branch line from Brighton to Shoreham was to be completed first

1839 The new locomotive ‘Shoreham’ was towed into Shoreham drawn by 14 beautiful horses and conveyed on to Portslade where it was put on the rails to join the other locomotive ‘Brighton’ already working on the line’s construction.

There were a number of fatal accidents among the workers on the Brighton to Shoreham line and many more non fatal – so much so that the contractors for the railway ‘presented an extra ten guineas in consequence of the number casualties that had to be sent to the Sussex County Hospital for treatment.’

(Photo: The ‘Shoreham’ like the ‘Ajax’ pictured here, was built by Jones, Turner & Evans of Warrington)