THE VILLAGE THAT COLLAPSED INTO THE SEAOn
a stormy night in January 1917, the Devon fishing village of Hallsands
collapsed into the sea. The entire village was destroyed together
with the livelihoods of its people. For
decades the fishing village of Hallsands and its stunning coastline
had been at the mercy of the forces of nature. But
it wasn't nature that led to the dozens of homes being washed into
the sea on a fateful night in January 1917. It
was the foolishness of man that obliterated this small Devon village
forever. Hallsands
- the buried villageToday
Hallsands lies largely under the waves, a sad testament to man interfering
with nature. | A
sad reminder of Hallsands - the ruins are testament to man interfering
with nature |
The
story of Hallsands is a tale of greed, deception, and slow death. It
starts in the 1890s when the Admiralty decided to expand the naval
dockyard at Keyham, 30 miles away. The
lucrative contract was awarded to Sir John Jackson Limited, one
of the country's biggest engineering companies in 1896.
The
Board of Trade gave the company permission to dredge shingle from
along the coast between Hallsands and Beesands. The
villagers weren't consulted, but protested to their local MP, Frank
Mildmay, as soon as the dredgers appeared. Disaster
or conspiracy?The
villagers' protests centred around worries about the fishing industry,
and damage to the coastline including... - fears
that crab pots would be damaged
-
concerns
about disturbance to fish
-
fears
that removal of the shingle would lower the level of the beach,
thereby threatening their homes
| Former
resident of Hallsands |
Following
pressure from the local MP, the Board of Trade agreed to an enquiry. This
eventually led to an agreement whereby Sir John Jackson paid 拢125
per year to the villagers of Hallsands.
Fears
about the long term impact of dredging abated, and life returned
to normal.
Three
years later, storms battered the coastline again and swept away
part of the sea wall. Studies
showed that the beach had fallen by between seven and 12 feet. Slow
death of a fishing villageThe
worst was yet to come.... on 26 January 1917, the village of Hallsands
fell into the sea. Here's
our profile of the village before tragedy struck... Gales
and extremely high tides shook houses to their very foundations,
walls came toppling down, and the waves roared over the breaking
rafters. The
local Gazette reported eye-witness accounts including that of the
Logans who experienced the disaster. "It
had been blowing hard from the South East all day, and in the afternoon,
the seas came tumbling in, shaking everything all to pieces. We
became greatly alarmed." "This
is the end of our village. We shall have to go elsewhere." | Hallsands
villager |
"Instead
of abating, as we hoped it would, the gale increased, and we soon
saw that our cottages would come down." Another
resident Edith Lamble battled vainly to save her house. She later
recalled "the blackness of that fateful night." Hallsands
todayAll
that remains of Hallsands today is the ruins of the chapel which
perches on the edge of the cliff top. | The
village of Hallsands is now a ghostly sight |
Dozens
of families lost their homes when Hallsands disappeared. Miraculously,
no villagers died in the tragedy. Many of the families relocated
to North Hallsands or Beesands, having lost most of their belongings. An
inquiry into the tragedy was set up, but the poverty-stricken villagers
never got to see what it contained. The
Government of the day wouldn't release the report because it said
the tragedy was unequivocally because of the dredging. The
villagers were eventually offered 拢6,000, but some
believe that the villagers were never given the full compensation
they deserved. | Hallsands
is now just a distant memory |
Historian
Steve Melia has
lodged a complaint with the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry.
So far he has received no response. Like
many descendants of the villagers, he believes that it's
time for some official recognition.
The
story of Hallsands is far from over... and the village refuses to
lie down despite its watery demise. |