On 14th
June 1736 the
Reverent William Gostling of Canterbury recorded “…I have got a piece of a huge bone (I suppose from an elephant’s thigh
bone) petrified, which the dredgers of copperas stones fishes out of the sea”
In “The Harwich
Story”, Len Weaver describes the “new and
profitable” Roman cement industry which grew up in Harwich after 1812.
Roman cement was patented in 1796 by the Reverend James Parker of Northfleet , Kent . Parker discovered the method after
throwing a rock he found on the Isle of Sheppey beach into a fire, and hence it
was sometimes called ‘Parker’s cement’. Most descriptively, Parker himself
called it Aquatic cement’. It was a very rapidly setting ‘hydraulic’ cements
and therefore most suitable for wet work including under-water work, sealing
leaks in pipes and damp proofing Regency houses in London . The copperas stone was broken up, burned
in kilns, ground into a powder and packed in 4cwt casks for shipment to all
parts of the UK and northern Europe .
For more than 50
years after Parker patented his cement between 400 and 500 men were employed in
the Harwich trade alone supplying about two million bushels (70,000 m3)
annually.
It may not be
generally known that copperas exposed to the weather is soon reduced to powder
and that it can, with great advantage, be applied to improve the growth of
vegetables. An experiment also showed that a slight sprinkling produced a crop
of grass twice as heavy as that grown on land which had not been so treated.
Confusingly, it is also reportedly a good weed killer.
Similar products
to Roman cement including ‘Medina ’ Cement and ‘Sheppy’ Cement were produced
from septaria (clay-rich limestone) of the Solent and Harwich.
In 1826 the
Topographical Dictionary of England recorded in its entry for Harwich “....About one hundred small vessels and
boats are employed in or near the harbour in dredging for stone for making cement.
The manufacture of copperas from stones, which are found in abundance on the
shore, was carried on here in the seventeenth century, about which time an
attempt was made to obtain potash from various seaweeds but it was soon
abandoned….”
By 1835 there
were five cement factories in Harwich with ‘some
five hundred men employed in dredging the stone and manufacturing the cement’.
The removal of ‘several hundred thousand
tons’ of stone from Beacon Cliff caused changes in the set and strength of tides which threatened to
silt up to the mouth of Harwich Harbour and in 1845 removal of stone was
immediately stopped by The Commission on Harbours of Refuge. The consequence of
this was to see a marked increase in dredging until, by 1850, up to 400 smacks
from Kent ports, each with a crew of three or four,
were dredging stone from the West Rocks off Walton with some off Brightlingsea
and off Hythe.
In her “The
History of Harwich Harbour”, B. Carlyon Hughes reproduces the report of Captain
Washington of HMS Shearwater dated 19th
January 1843 to
the Harwich Harbour Conservancy Board following his survey of the harbour. His
report includes the figure of “upwards of
a million tons” of cement stone having been removed from the area since the
traffic in cement stone started. He also
gives an indication as to the depth the cement stone dredgers could reach when
he writes “….the actual channels should
be dredged so as to command a depth of 15 feet at low water, or at 27 feet at
high-water springs; this would be attended by little expense, as the(stone) dredgers now on the spot would gladly
undertake the work for a bounty of one shilling a ton on all the cement stone
taken away from the different shoals in the harbour” The good Captain’s suggestion was evidently
taken up as a footnote mentions that “…of
530 tons of soil dredged up; 70 tons of this were of cement stone, worth five
shillings a ton.
It’s also reported
that the Whitstable oyster industry had some hard times, when stock was all but
wiped out by disease and hard winters during which ice covered the whole Bay
and the Flats. During those hard times, some Flatsmen (freelance Whitstable
oystermen) turned to dredging cement stones. “That was unbelievably hard work”.
Similarly, the foreshore at Bognor Regis had a cottage industry in natural pyrites, referred to locally as “Picking Mine”. The London Clay outcrop off Bognor extends along the coast from Felham to Pagham where the extreme low water mark is some 600 metres from the shore-line where the receding tide would leave an accumulation of iron pyrites of various sizes in every hollow in the clay’s surface. Before the arrival of the railways, boats containing coal would beach on the foreshore and, when discharged, would require ballast before returning to sea. The pyrites was an available “ballast” material which, for many years, had a re-sale value which benefitted the coal boats and for which they paid the Bogner ‘pickers’ some £1.50 per ton. The Picking Mine hey-days were between 1850 & 1870 and declining with the arrival of the Barnham to Bogner railway branch line in 1864 which eventually ended the arrival of coal by boat.
However, by 1890
the industry had died out as Roman cement was replaced by the cheaper chalk
based Portland cement.
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