August 2024

Humber Wetlands 10.

The photo above shows a section of the relatively new ‘sea-wall’ at St. Andrews Dock, this for almost 100 years a purpose-built dock for Hull’s deep-sea fishing fleet but filled in in the 1960s and ’70s with the demise of the fishing industry to be replaced by a retail park, although the original buildings around […]

Humber Wetlands 10. Read More »

Humberside Wetlands 9.

As seen in the previous blogs/posts the traditional man-made structure to reduce flooding in lowland areas across the Humberside Region was the linear clay bank, shaped to improve its effectiveness (s.p.b.s). Sections of the Humber Lowlands are still protected by clay banks including the south coast of Holderness, the Lincolnshire Marsh, apart from the sand

Humberside Wetlands 9. Read More »

Humberside Wetlands 8.

The Lincolnshire Marsh (s.p.b.s) has a history of flooding across many centuries. Here is a selection of recorded events’ 1176 ‘sea burst forth – engulfing men and herds’, this extract from the Louth Abbey Archives. 1253 ‘Great flood from the sea’. This storm surge wiped out a string of low-lying coastal islands, now the foundation

Humberside Wetlands 8. Read More »

Humberside Wetlands 5.

The Meaux Abbey Chronicle further records that in the 1340s Burstall Priory suffered the ‘ruin of much of their property by inundation’. Burstall Priory was an ‘alien cell’ (monastic site belonging to a foreign order) in the parish of Skeffling between Patrington and Kilnsea. Despite the above it was still mentioned in the documents covering

Humberside Wetlands 5. Read More »