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|   | introduction | 
 
 
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|   | list, 3rd qtr 18th century | 
 
 
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|  | Gentleman's Magazine 1771 pp.567-568 
 
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| Solway Moss flood, 1771
 
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|  | Eruption of Solway  
Moss 
 Thursday, 12.
 A letter from Edinburgh, of this day's date, gives the  
following particulars of the ravages sustained by the  
moveable moss:
 "Solway moss still continues to move, and it began to flow  
on Saturady last with more rapidity than it has done for  
three weeks past.
 The following is a list of the names and number of the farms 
destroyed by the eruption of Solway flow in Cumberland,  
together with the number of farmers who possessed these  
farms, and the rental ofthese lands, as present paid to Mr.  
Graham of Netherby, proprietor of Solway flow, and the lands 
now covered by it. Taken at Solway flow, on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 
1771.
 
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|  |  
 
|  |  |  |   
| Names of the  
farms. | Farmers. | Rental. |   
|  |  | L.s.d. |   
| Closgap, | 3 | 29 10  
0 |   
| Patonston, | 3 | 22 0  
0 |   
| Browhead | 3 | 17 10  
0 |   
| Lake, | 3 | 20 0  
0 |   
| Henrystown, | 1 | 10 0  
0 |   
| Cullenston, | 1 | 14 0  
0 |   
| Smallholmstone, | 1 | 14 0  
0 |   
| Peartree, | 2 | 29 10  
0 |   
| Yadefold, | 2 | 27 4  
0 |   
| Todbank, | 1 | 7 12  
0 |   
| Dykestone, in part as  
yet, | 4 | 12 0  
0 |   
| Mirrinstoun, in part as  
yet, | 1 | 12 0  
0 |   
|  |  |  |   
| Twelve  
tenements, | 23 | 220 6  
0 |  | 
 
 
|  | The above farms are so greatly destroyed, that twenty three  
families of the farmers, besides cotters, are obliged to  
leave their ruined houses; some of them being knocked down  
by the force of the eruption, others of them covered almost  
to the top of the side walls by the moss. The following four farms are only partly covered, the houses 
being inhabited, viz.
 
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|  |  
 
|  |  |  |   
| Farms. |  | Rental of  
what is covered. |   
|  |  | L.s.d. |   
| Oakbank, |  | 2 0  
0 |   
| Meadoff, |  | 12 0  
0 |   
| Cargate-head, |  | 4 10  
0 |   
| Know, |  | 8 0  
0 |   
|  |  |  |   
|  |  | 26 10  
0 |   
| Rental of the other 12  
towns, |  | 220 6  
0 |   
| Total |  | 246 6  
0 |  | 
 
 
|  | This is the present rental of all the land that is covered  
by the eruption of the moss; and, if these lands are set, on 
an average, at twelve shillings per acre, the quantity of  
ground covered must be four hundred acres and fifty-three  
poles. The land upon which the moss has flowed, is covered by it  
from twelve to thirty feet deep. The eruption began on  
Saturday the 15th of November last, about eleven o'clock at  
night. It broke out from the Solway flow, on the north-east  
side, by a gullet of about a hundred yards wideness. At a  
very short distance from the mouth of the gullet, it spread  
at the wideness of almost a mile square, over above four  
hundred acres of the best land in the north of England. It  
still continues to flow out of the gullet in a very rapid  
current, carrying along with it a large quantity of moss,  
which it forces from below the surface, and, even in some  
places, the solid surface along with it, which, by floating  
upon the moss that hath covered the lands in the beds of  
Esk, gives them altogether the appearance of having been a  
moss from time immemorial. As it flows at present, so it  
must, from the very nature of the thing, continue to flow  
for ages. That it may do least damage, its course should  
either be diverted to the river of Sark, on the west side of 
Solway flow, or else a clear passage made in its present  
direction to the river of Esk; both of which are  
practicable, but at considerable expence. However, if some  
such method is not taken, much more exceeding good land will 
be covered by it.
 The cause of the eruption is so evident, from the situation  
of Solway flow, and of the adjacent lands on the east side  
of it, with the former management of those who have casten  
their peats on the Solway flow, that it is more wonderful to 
the person who hath taken the above account, that the Solway 
flow hath stood so long, than that it hath now broke out,  
and overflowed so great a quantity of ground upon the beds  
of Esk. It will be next to impossible, ever again to clear  
the covered land by burning the moss; though it appears  
probable to me, that there is a possibility of clearing it  
by water. The greatest part of the surface of the old moss  
is still whole; but it is now so much out, that, though  
formerly level, the middle of it is like a large glen  
between two hills, declining from each other."
 
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|  | gazetteer links 
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|   | -- Solway Moss | 
 
 
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