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EVERY
PICTURE TELLS A STORY...

...
place your mouse over any of the pictures and see what you
can discover.
MUSIC
MAESTRO PLEASE

As
each page is opened you should hear some music, to
compliment each story so, unless you hate music,
turn on the sound and ENJOY!
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THE
GREAT FLOOD OF 1953
It
was one of the worst peacetime disasters in living memory.
The
waters of the North Sea, whipped up by north- westerly winds,
smashed through sea wall fortifications breached nearly 1,500
sites from Lincolnshire to Kent.
In
East Anglia it was a catastrophic tragedy, with almost one
hundred people losing their lives, whilst thousands more were
driven from their homes and lost their belongings.
FATALITIES
IN NORFOLK
KINGS
LYNN 15 people drowned and much of the town flooded.
HUNSTANTON,
HEACHAM
AND SNETTISHAM
65 people drowned, including many American service personnel
and their families.
WELLS
Heavy damage to town; railway station under water.
WIVETON
73-year-old woman drowned in her kitchen. Village almost obliterated.
CLEY
Heavily flooded, coast road impassable. One person drowned.
SALTHOUSE
Village devastated; one lady died, swept through her kitchen
window.
SHERINGHAM
30 yards of promenade swept away.
CROMER
Tidal wave causes heavy damage to pier and rips off lifeboat
station doors. Lifeboat washed away and dumped against east
sea- front wall.
OVERSTRAND
AND MUNDESLEY Sea walls overturned and promenades smashed
to smithereens.
WALCOTT
Village completely wrecked.
SEA
PALLING 7 people drowned.
GREAT
YARMOUTH Flood water outflanks town, nine people drowned.
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THE
LAST WEEK OF JANUARY 1953, had begun just like any other
week; it was totally uneventful, or at least as far as Albie was
concerned, with life at home and at school going on as it had always
done. On the Wednesday, as it was relatively fine, Albies
mother, Gladys, decided to clean her windows. After she'd washed
and polished the downstairs windows to a brilliant shine she turned
her attention on those upstairs. Raising the lower sash-windows
she sat herself on the outer window-sill facing the windows, as
she always did, and began to clean them as well. Soon, all the windows
began to look the better for her endeavours, although one thing
was always certain it was bound to rain! But no-one was prepared
for what was about to follow later that week.
ON
THURSDAY ,
the bunch of seaweed hanging by a nail on the wall of the outside
water-closet displayed the telltale signs of impending bad weather
according to Nanny Edie. One look at that soggy bundle of marine
vegetation told her that they were in for something
and she was hardly ever wrong.
Oh,
Gladys, she exclaimed, with a worried look on her face,
I sartenly dornt like the look o this, theres
suffen coming an thas for sure!
Wuh,
laughed Gladys, pegging out her washing in the back yard, thas
an ole wives tearle that is, an yew knows it anorl!
Yew
maark moi wuds, Gladys, Edie replied vehemently, thas
a-cummin orright, Oi kin feel it in me bones.
Edies
weather forecast was rarely wrong; even if the forecast on the wireless
set gave out a fine day, she would always consult her
seaweed first and, on the following day, her predictions began to
ring true.
On
Friday 30 January an enormous depression, of some magnitude, began
moving from Iceland in a southeasterly direction heading for Scotland,
with its northern coast receiving a buffeting from gale force winds
late that night.
Albie
and his mum and dad, with Nanny Edie, sat glued to their wireless
set as the briefest of news came through, before the radio signal
faded and nothing more was to be heard that night.
Oi
told ya, Gladys, retorted Edie, as she always liked to be
right, were in fur a right ole tempest theres
no mistearken that!
With
the wind getting up to gale force, bad-weather warning cones were
raised by the coastguards to warn fishermen against the perils of
putting to sea. But, of course, they all had a bit more common sense
than that, as they only had to take a look at the mountainous waves
to know they were best to keep their feet on dry land.
Yet,
at that point, there seemed to be no cause for alarm as theyd
weathered the storm before, so what made this one any different?
Without the luxury of television sets and meteorologists weather
charts, with their computerised visual effects, no one on the north
Norfolk coast knew what was coming or what to expect...
A
WEEKEND TO REMEMBER
Albie
always looked forward to weekends, which meant a welcome break from
rigours of the Paston School and studies, even though a certain
amount of homework was expected of him.
Saturdays
were always a bit of an excuse for a lie in, as he'd
worked hard all week, and that Saturday, 31 January, was certainly
no different, except for the sound of the wind rattling the roof-tiles
that had awakened him much earlier than hed intended.
Youre
awake early, remarked his mother, as she took him a cup of
tea and a Custard Cream biscuit.
I
cant sleep through that din," he told his mother
angrily, indicating his dislike at his rattling window. Spoose
I might as well git up, the lad complained, No rest
fur th wickid!
Well,
Albie, his mother replied, Dads suffen worried
bout the chickns, an would like us to feed them,
do the weather wussens afore he git home from work.
Like
his father before him, Albies dad rented an allotment on which
to grow vegetables and keep some hens for fresh eggs. This was always
a bit of a bind for the family, as the chickens needed feeding at
least once a day. Besides, the allotment was a fair distance out
of Sheringham, down the Weybourne Road next to the Cemetery, and
a good distance from their house.
Later
that Saturday afternoon, Albie and his mum put on their warmest
clothes for the long walk to their allotment to feed the chickens.
The quickest route was over the practise links of Sheringham Golf
Course.
Opening
the little gate, in the wicket fence at the end of Links Road,
they began to feel the full force of the wind, which was howling
straight off the sea from a northwesterly direction. By the time
Albie and his mother reached the middle of the links, which was
totally exposed to the elements with no cover whatsoever, they found
it almost impossible to breathe in the face of the gale, let alone
make any headway.
Clinging
to his mother for support, Albie glanced over to the clifftops,
a short distance away, where the sea presented an almighty fearsome
sight. It was huge! To Albie, the gigantic waves were running wild
and threatening to break over on to the golf links, as if determined
to scale the hundred feet tall cliffs that stood in the way.
My
Gawd, yelled with the wind buffeting his face, jist
look at that there sea!
Thas
no use, Albie, shouted his mother above the noise of the storm,
holding the lad tightly, well hatta to go back, theres
no way we can git to Webbn Road now.
The
hinsll hatta look arter themselves, Albie shouted back,
losing his footing on the grass and falling on his backside, lifted
off his feet by the force of the wind.
UTTER
DEVASTATION ALL ALONG THE COAST
That
evening, Albies father became increasingly concerned about
the precarious state of the shed in their back garden. Whipped up
by the gale, the roof was beginning to lift, so Albert senior, armed
with a length of rope, ventured down the garden in an attempt to
hold the roof in place.
He
was to spend the next four hours sitting inside his shed holding
on to the rope and struggling to keep the roof from becoming airborne,
whilst, outside in the garden, wallflowers were uprooted, flowerpots
flew off into the night sky, never to be seen again, and, the strangest
of things, small pebbles from the beach began to drop from the air
as if by magic!
The
towns pavements were becoming littered with broken roof tiles
and chimney pots that were sent flying earthwards; trees were uprooted
and garden fences blown down and, in the darkness of the night,
scenes of utter devastation were to be witnessed everywhere. Worse
was to follow as the night went on, although many other places along
the coast were to fare far worse than Sheringham.
Sunday,
the first of February, dawned much quieter; the winds had dropped
significantly and there seemed a promise of a much better day ahead,
until the extent of what had happened during the hours of darkness
became known.
When
Albie got up that morning, his father was already busying himself
in the garden, tidying up the overnight damage caused to the fencing
and the shed, although he was relieved to discover his efforts of
the previous night hadn't been in vain, as the shed roof was still
almost intact, apart from being devoid of its felt covering!
But Albert, Gladys, Nanny Edie and Albie were mystified at how several
small pebbles from the beach, which was many hundreds of yards away,
now lay in a thick flint carpet covering their garden.
After
breakfast, Victor came to call for Albie.
Hello,
Albie, his friend said, standing in the kitchen doorway, you'll
never believe it, but they do say that the seas come up Beeston
Road!
Cant
have, can it? replied Albie, thas never done that
before, least ways, not that I know of.
ALBIE
AND VICTOR WITNESS AN UNBELIEVABLE SIGHT!
Quickly
putting on his shoes and a warm duffle-coat, Albie and Victor set
off down Cliff Road to have a look for themselves, but they were
totally unprepared for the unbelievable sight that met their eyes.
Everywhere
was a scene of utter devastation! The sea, normally fairly placid,
never venturing further than the top of the Fishermens East
Beach, was indeed gushing up Beeston Road and making waves as it
did so. Even with the highest, spring tide it had never breached
the sea walls, but here it was, a torrent of swirling gurgling sea
water, flowing along the road, carrying with it ruined crab pots,
nets, dead foul-smelling fish and, across the entrance to Beach
Road, the wreck of a crab boat, Our Margaret, smashed to smithereens
by the force of the raging sea.
Wading
around the edge of the flooded road, Albie and Victor made their
way up into town heading for the Boulevard and the Burlington Leas,
near the Grand Court Hotel, itself looking a sorry state after suffering
the full brunt of the overnight storm.
Walking
down the slope, under the old bridge that housed the public conveniences,
they attempted to reach the West Promenade, but, down at the bottom
of the steep concrete slope they were stopped in their tracks
the rest of the slope and the promenade to the Lifeboat Station
had gone, washed away by the force of the sea and in its place was
a mass of broken concrete. The once-proud promenade had been torn
apart by the force of the sea. All that was left were neatly-shredded,
huge chunks of concrete, with exposed rusty lengths of reinforcing
ironwork.
Albie
and Victor
completely forgot themselves for a moment, leaping from one enormous
chunk of concrete to the other, scaling the two-foot gaps between.
To them, this was a great game. But, to many others, it was a national
disaster, as, unknown to Albie and Victor at the time, many people
up and down the coast had lost their lives. Entire communities had
been destroyed by the onslaught of the relentless storm and raging
seas.
People
had been washed out of their homes by the sudden inrush of water
only a few miles further along the coast with no warning
whatsoever, such was the lack of communications in 1953.
Some
people made holes in their ceilings and clambered, in their nightclothes,
into the roof spaces in an attempt to avoid the rising waters. Others
clung all night long to chimneys and rooftops, never giving up hope.
For some, help just came too late and they succumbed to the biting
wind, driving rain and bitter cold. It was a similar story all along
the East Coast, of raging seas bursting through inadequate defences
without warning.
As
they played amongst all the desolation and destruction, Victor and
Albie suddenly realised the sheer magnitude of the disaster. They
felt ashamed that they had taken it all so lightly and, as they
returned to their homes, they could think of nothing else but the
terrible scenes theyd witnessed.
In
the hours that followed, the full extent of that night in 1953 was
made known on the radio and, for those who had it, the television.
In
chapel, the following Sunday, Albie, with his parents, together
with a large congregation, gave thanks for their deliverance in
time of need and then, quietly, remembered those who had lost everything,
including their lives.
On
his way home from the Beeston Road Methodist chapel, Albie knew
that the night of
31 January/1 February 1953 would be a night to remember, and one
he vowed he would never forget for the rest of his life.
NEXT: Albie goes on a run across
country and meets his match!
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