Eye Witness: the 1947 Floods | |
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Memories of the 1947 Flood and the plight of the families living in the disused wartime army camp at Dorneyby Mr E. WilksThe winter of 1946-47 had been one of the worst winters on record. It was estimated that the ground was frozen to a depth of almost 3ft, and when the thaw came the water, instead of soaking into the ground, ran straight into the river. I went out to see how high the water was but there was
no hope of getting to work. The water was almost half way up Tilstone
Avenue. I went up to the Eton Wick Road and the water had crossed the
road and was flowing down Moore's Lane into the lower part of Eton Wick.
Men had already started to build a bridge, making buttresses of kerbstone
taken from the building site for the new houses on Tilstone fields. A
few more men had fetched We went to bed on the Saturday night thinking that the
flood was at its worst. I was happily having a lay-in on the Sunday morning
when there was a loud bang on the front door - outside there were a group
of men. I asked them what they wanted and one of them called out "get
your boat and help to get the people out of the common camp". I did not
want to go - it was a new boat that I had been making in readiness for
the summer. It was just forms and slats covered with fine canvas, with
several coats of paint, inside and out. The last coat had on only been
finished a few days before; it had never been in the water and I did not
know if I could manage it. It was no use protesting - by the time I was
dressed they had opened my garage and were off down the road with my boat,
so I picked up the double paddle and followed them. A policeman who was just standing there doing nothing told me "I'll leave you to get on with it - I want the men to come with me, there are some pigs to rescue at one of the farms" and nearly every body left. My boat, although it was constructed like a Kayak, I had made it much wider as I intended to take the family picnicking in the coming summers. This makes it almost impossible to paddle sitting down in the boat so I had a seat on the deck and sat with my feet in the cockpit, which left the large cockpit free for any passengers. I pushed off and struggled against the swirling waters, learning how to manage the boat as I went along. Luckily, most of the wire fences were down, it was just the posts I had to miss. Reaching the first hut I pulled up to the hut windows and the people climbed out into the boat. The fierce flow of the flood water made it difficult to get into the shallow by the Common gate, and after the first rescue I had to come back through the gardens and steer around any obstructions - hard work with a loaded boat.
I got the rest of the people safely to dry land, but by this time I was so tired I was working in a daze. I cannot remember any details of those last trips. I asked the bystanders to bring my boat home and wandered home to a hot bath and bed, being too tired to eat any dinner. Later I dressed and came downstairs for a meal when there was another knock on the front door. The wife told the people that I was not fit to turn out again but as they were friends I went. There was an unhappy story behind this request: the husband was due for demob on the Saturday and his wife, with the help of her family, had prepared a hut in the army camp for his homecoming. They had even erected dividing partitions, then furnished it with all new goods. The wife had gone to London to meet him to celebrate his homecoming by going to a show. When they returned to Eton Wick late that night, the Camp was under water. They wanted to collect items of clothing and other odds and ends.
I left my friends to return my boat and staggered home to another hot bath and bed. On the next day I could hardly move, I could not even feed myself but the use gradually came back to my limbs and by the end of the week I was my old self again. When I look back, the one thing I remember most vividly about the flood - a frightened woman sitting in a tin bath being steered through the icy, swirling water by 'Mad Jack'. |
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