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Fish weirs: as irritating as traffic-cones?
A research update - Chris Preece (Newsletter No 4 Autumn
2002)
Documentary Research;
If you’ve ever been tempted to play skittles with motor-way traffic
cones, you’ve probably come close to replicating the feelings
of mariners of the nineteenth century, especially if your port of call
was Barnstaple or Bideford. For many of them, fish weirs were a major
hazard to navigation, to such an extent that the law-courts were frequently
involved in settling disputes. In one instance, the Admiralty, no less,
recommended the removal of two weirs at Crow Point, one of which had
previously been removed at the behest of magistrates eighteen years
before. Another document, referring to the weir at the same location,
describes it as “ancient” and details how it was “cut
down ... by some of the sailors of Appledore” (presumably with
some relish). An Admiralty report further notes masters of vessels complaining
of loss of life and property occasioned by weirs upstream towards Barnstaple.
Whether this is the exaggeration of vested interests or not, what
is undeniable is the strength of feeling these contraptions engendered.
So why go to the trouble and expense of constructing weirs (the Admiralty
report notes the total length of one as 400 yards) with such fierce
opposition a certainty and demolition a possibility? A statement from
one defendant (in the dispute alluded to previously) suggests poverty
was a driving force. John Cory Chichester stated that he had six children
and “nothing to depend on but the weir”. Another explanation
is the age-old appeal of something for nothing: a ready supplement to
both income and diet. Documentary research by the NDAS has also revealed
some other fascinating insights into the history of these weirs. The
earliest mention of fishing so far unearthed is a 9th century charter
reference to the granting of land at Braunton to the Abbot of Glastonbury
“for the taking of salmon for his house”. This is of particular
interest, as monastic links with the taking of fish (in part occasioned
by the need for fish on Fridays) have been evidenced elsewhere, notably
by Mick Aston (of Time Team fame). There is also mention of a fishery
at Bideford in the Domesday Book. Demonstrating the longevity of these
weirs is an exciting challenge for the NDAS and can hopefully be achieved
by further documentary research this winter and possibly by sampling/excavation
if feasible. In this regard it was interesting to note that the Universities
of Exeter and Reading took advantage of low tides at the end of April
2002 to conduct investigations of the features at Westward Ho! (first
recorded by Balaam et al: BAR 181, 1987). Lines of predominantly hazel
stakes had previously been noted, suggestive perhaps of fish traps.
The deposits date from the Mesolithic to the Romano- British period.
The results of the recording and sampling carried out recently may well
be relevant to the NDAS project and are awaited with interest. Saxon
fish-weirs in Essex have been dated from the 7th to 10th century AD
and it would not be surprising to find earlier examples.
Fieldwork Lieutenant Denham’s chart commissioned in response
to the fish weirs dispute, shows some
eighteen weirs marked on the Taw/Torridge estuary. The aim of the NDAS
field-walking and survey has been to establish how many are extant and
can be recorded. Following a successful weekend on the 29th and 30th
March 2002, the majority have now been evaluated. On Saturday 29th March,
a good turn-out of NDAS members at Fremington Quay made it possible
to divide into two groups, one heading downstream to the west and one
upstream to the east. The west group successfully located weir no.11
(Allen’s Rock), and was also able to locate the abraded stumps
of two further unrecorded
weirs to the west. Two examples showed possible stone infill, a feature
noted in weirs elsewhere. Photographs were taken and approximate positions
noted. The east group, meantime, had located weir no.13 (Penhill Point
West), but found no evidence of no.18, slightly farther to the east.
Flushed with the success of the previous day, those members who could
escape domestic demands gathered at Heanton Court to search for three
weirs between there and Ashford to the east.Weir survey - like cricket
- is a great leveller however, for apart from no.15 (Heanton Court East)
which had been previously located, the other two eluded us and we returned
chastened to base.

Enough examples have been located to make measured survey the next
priority. This has already been achieved at Crow Point and useful sketches
have been made at other sites. Survey at Horsey Ridge has been problematic
(at present the substantial remains are largely sanded over again),
but hopefully this can be recommenced at a future date, as the size
and construction phases offer interesting possibilities of interpretation.
Fieldwork is also being focused on parts of the estuary outside the
remit of the Denham chart. References have been found to fish weirs
at Umberleigh and (unsurprisingly) at Weare Giffard. In addition, there
are a number of structures along the Torridge near Tapely Park, at Northam
Burrows and at Instow which, despite similarities to weirs, may be jetties,
wharves, slips or structures related to shellfish harvesting. Furtherresearch
is needed. Addirionally, aerial photographs are being investigated (stunning
results were achieved at Whitstable Bay in Kent using this resource)
and living history (a tape of Appledore fisherman Sid Crick) has yielded
some interesting observations on sluice gates at Horsey Weir. There
is also the evidence of old photographs and paintings. For those who
have
trouble imagining a fish weir, a 1795 painting by William Payne reproduced
in Alison Grant’s books,
shows a weir at Coolstone, Instow. The weir at Lynmouth (to the right
of the Rhenish Tower), used until recently, albeit a coastal rather
than an estuarine example, is well worth a visit, being one of the best
preserved in the area. It is hoped that, weather allowing, survey of
some of the extant weirs will be possible this autumn and next spring.
Fish weirs Update: Chris Preece (Newsletter No 5 2003)
Taking advantage of the high tides of the 20th March
and some unseasonably clement weather, a small but determined group of
NDAS volunteers set out to survey weir number 11 on the Taw, namely Allen’s
Rock. The stakes were first located and marked (with a small piece of
masking tape) and then offset measurements taken from a base line. The
tape was removed after each measurement thus ensuring that no stakes were
omitted in the survey. A total of eighty measurements were recorded and
are in the process of being drawn up. Given that the return could not
be located (even with the aid of a
reluctantly wet-suited surveyor – water temperature 10c) this represents
another sizeable structure.
It is hoped that further survey will help to identify
the weir most likely to be informative in regard to C14 dating, so please,
more volunteers! The next survey dates are in this newsletter.
The previous day I had managed to locate the elusive
weir 9 at Lower Yelland (elusive possibly due to the fact that the proximity
of the Boathouse Inn on a prior jaunt had proved more of a draw than further
mud-wallowing to the east!) Without Colin to lead me astray this time
I persisted and was rewarded with mud-spattered trousers and stakes as
far apart as 200 metres. Whether these stakes represent different structures,
phases of rebuilding or one large structure is difficult to tell at this
stage. Survey
again would be beneficial. This is almost certainly not the weir shown
in a watercolour by William Payne in 1795 however, as this is closer to
Instow and remains to be found. Alison Grant surmises it is (or was) near
to the cricket ground.
Documentary research in Northam has turned up a reference
to Captain Whyte, a fervent abolitionist of fish weirs. An 1842(?) edition
of the Gazette refers to his list of the weirs that ‘have desisted
from fishing and the hutches that have been destroyed on the Torridge,
without hardly a murmur’. Colonel Whyte, the Gazette tells us, was
anxious that the Taw should be equally free, but, the Gazette continues,
‘we would advise him to cease his thankless labours’! However
unappreciated Whyte’s efforts were at the time, his list, which
is quite specific about places, provides further material for research.

Fishweirs Update 2 - Chris Preece (Newsletter No 6 2003)
We stood in disbelief. No gale, no hail, no horizontal
rain, no driving wind or bitter temperature - and we were surveying a
fish weir!
On both Saturday 27th and Sunday 28th September we assembled
at Horsey Ridge, Braunton Marsh (no. 7 on the Denham chart of 1832) and
quickly shuffled off our thermals, pullovers etc., delighting in the unseasonably
clement weather.
Horsey Weir is very large, but is variably visible owing
to movements of the sand ridge. On the Saturday, Terry, Alistair and myself
were tasked with determining the present extent of visible remains, cleaning
seaweed from the stakes and revealing those stakes which we suspected
were concealed. Our assumptions regarding the apex of the weir were challenged
when we found three large posts running off obliquely from the main line
of posts. These may represent a gate or sluice or even possibly a basket/funnel
structure. In this regard, an extract from an interview with Sid Crick
(Appledore fisherman, born 1913) by DArcy
Andrew is revealing.
Interviewer: And you said that the Horsey Weir had two gates which opened
with the tide?
S.C.: Opened at the tide and closed on the ebb. Thats how it used to work.
Interviewer: And so there’d have been quite a
nice pool of water there?
S.C.: Oh yeah, there would’ve been - three or four foot deep - they
used to go out there swimming.
On Sunday, Mary Cameron (a veteran of the Allens Rock
survey), new member David Grenfell and myself were joined by Barry Hughes,
of Appledore Maritime Museum, who arrived in appropriate style by boat,
mooring up just down from the weir in the narrow creek. We followed a
similar routine to that used previously, namely marking all visible stakes
with masking tape (subsequently removed in sequence), setting up a base
line and using offset measurements to record (the drawing up can then
be done later). Slack water gave us a good window of opportunity, and
we were able to work from 12.30 until 3.30pm. On the north side, a central
line of stakes with evidence of wattle was apparent, presumably the earlier
phase of build. Two external lines of posts with a rubble in-fill suggest
a more substantial later structure.
Seventy-four measurements were taken from which a clearer
picture of this north side of the weir as well as the return will hopefully
emerge, in particular the finer details of construction. Careful analysis
of sequence will be critical prior to selection of samples for dating
material. It remains, when the south side of the weir is more fully exposed,
to complete recording. Then, detailed surveys of three weirs will be in
place. My thanks to all volunteers for a most productive week-end.

Fish weirs update 4 - Chris Preece (Newsletter
No 7 2004)
It is hoped that the fishweirs project will be concluded
by the end of the year with academic publication, dissemination in a format
more suited to the general public and C14 dating all needing discussion
and agreement by the NDAS committee.
In terms of survey there only remains the south side
of Horsey Weir to complete, but given the size of this structure and the
shifting sand cover, more than one visit may be necessary. Three suitable
early dates are the 5th and 6th of May, followed by the 4th June. Volunteers
please contact me on 01237 475368 (otherwise conscription may be necessary!).
Recording of Horsey will mean that three weirs of varying types will have
been drawn to scale; an essential means of comparison with other published
examples.
Following the reference in the Spring 2003 newsletter
to a list of weirs on the Torridge (Bideford Weekly Gazette 1862), the
observant and unremittingly enthusiastic NDAS member David Grenfell called
me regarding stakes in the river bank near Landcross. Three of us (David,
a badly trained dog and myself) went to investigate and returned more
confused than when we set out. A dizzying array of stakes was visible;
some straight lines angled from the top of the bank, some curved on the
bend in the river and some encroaching towards the middle of the channel.
Whether some or all were connected with fish entrapment
is difficult to ascertain, but research in Northam has suggested that
fish traps took many forms. Articles in the Bideford Gazette refer to
fishing mill dams, fishing cruives, weirs, hutches, coops and fenders
as well as the incongruous ‘privileged engines’. Given the
use of nets and rod and line as well, it is not surprising that an editorial
of 1860 in the Gazette describes fishing as a “war of extermination”
and decries the “murderous system pursued here”.
Competing interests in a hierarchical society meant
that while the Salmon Fishery Acts 1861- 1865 were intended to conserve
stocks it seemed to be the poorest whose livelihood was most affected
by restrictions. Capt. R.C. Whyte, conservator of the Taw and Torridge
(who had taken it upon himself to destroy weirs and hutches on the Torridge
in 1862) had a more ambivalent attitude towards the millowners: “very
civil but fond of fish”. By 1870 he was less indulgent, bemoaning
the fact that contrary to the Act of 1861 the river at Beam weir was stopped
up by boards in the grooves of the sluices and that “in the case
of rain they (the fish) would all be found to pay the miller a visit”.
The owner of the mill, incidentally, was a JP and one of the board of
Conservators. The indulgence allowed to the upper classes is exemplified
by a newspaper reference to the illegality of using coops after 1st September:
“Mr Rolle himself was restrained in this way and he had most liberally
opened up his coops and let down a large supply.” (Gazette; 22 July
1862).

A Final Word on Fishweirs - Mary Houldsworth
(Newsletter No 13 2007)
Last year, at one of the evening talks, Chris Preece
gave a fascinating presentation on the fishweirs of N. Devon, following
which 'five went fishing' to assess the fishweir situated in the channel
between Crow Point and Appledore.
Needless to say, being NDAS members, led by Ann and Chris Mandrey, we
chose the coldest, windiest, bleakest day in March to coincide with the
lowest tide of the season. The excitement of that day was later discussed
with a friend Paula, studying marine biology, who proceeded to tell me
that one
Valerie Robson used to live in Lynmouth, where her father owned the fishweir
in the estuary there. To cut a long story short, Valerie had not only
been her father's regular assistant, but also had the foresight in 1993,
to video the weir after it had been sold, while still in working order.
The video was duly shown to a very interested NDAS audience in November,
when Valerie complemented the scenes from Lynmouth with a fascinating
insight into her childhood memories spent at each tide change, clambering
over the rocks to recover the salmon, trout and, in season, white bait,
which were then sold to the local hotels.
The weir was fished from April to August. A further custom instigated
to allow the salmon to run up river to spawn, was the practice of opening
the sluice gate on the Friday tide until the first tide on Sunday.
The weir had been in Valerie's family, the Bevans, for three generations,
and was previously owned by the Lords of the Manor from the early 1700s.
The oak uprights were interwoven with silver birch brushwood to contain
the fish at turn of tide. To catch the fish in a scoop net necessitated
the family working around the clock. Sometimes, finding their way over
the boulders at nighttime proved difficult until Mr. Bevan painted each
rock along the route with Valerie according each one a name, e.g.Cheddar
Gorge!
Obviously during the spring tides and winter storms, these structures
where dislodged and carried away down the coast. Regular maintenance was
required to replace the brushwood, especially after stormy weather. The
flood damage in August 1952 almost destroyed the weir, when the over-flowing
River Lyn met the spring tide along the estuary.
Since Mr. Bevan's death, the weir has been managed locally. However with
labour difficult to find, and fish stocks depleted, the Environment Fisheries
Agency recently purchased the weir.
Valerie had invited Rob Jones from the Fisheries Agency to our meeting,
where we were all extremely pleased to hear that a decision on the weir
had been reached. The weir was to be renewed to the original design, using
chestnut instead of oak posts. The work was just awaiting a risk assessment
before the task was to be under-taken. However the regular replacement
of silver birch branches woven into the structure, would no longer be
a possibility. To hear this news (you heard it first here folks!), was
thrilling for Valerie, and all of us keen to see history preserved.
Our thanks go to Valerie for such an informative and personal talk, to
Chris for our discussion, and to Rob Jones for sharing the Environment
Agency's plans and problems. It was like watching history in the re-making!
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