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Rambles Twenty Miles Round Doncaster (1860) (Paperback)
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Rambles Twenty Miles Round Doncaster (1860) (Paperback)
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for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: THE
LEVELS. No. IV. It is astonishing to see the crops grown on these
Levels; fifteen and sixteen loads of wheat per acre; sixty or
seventy sacks of potatoes per acre; with oats and barley bending to
the ground by their weight of golden grain. As to Mangold Wurzel
the danger is in its eventually swallowing up the land altogether.
Imagine the farmer delving through deep, dense fathoms of Mangold
Wurzel. Not always was it thus. Little more than two centuries ago
this locality was a swamp (that is the proper term for it, )?a
great broad swamp. There were, it is true, considerable patches of
green earth, but the lower districts presented nothing but a watery
landscape, with here and there a hillock on which a few starved
rushes tried to get as far as possible from the water, and where
the frogs croaked in undisturbed dominion. This country being so
exceedingly flat, and lying below the level of the tide in the
adjacent rivers, the water had no chance of escape. Out of the
180,000 acres composing the Chase about 70,000 were either
completely submerged or liable to periodical inundations. To any
one not cradled in a land of bogs the idea of reclaiming this
district, not by any partial modifications but by one grand
concentrated effort, would have appeared simply a delusion. Even in
comparison with our days of Leviathan steam ships and ocean
telegrams, the great Dutchman's achievements appear truly titanic
?embanking and turning the course of rivers, and reclaiming out of
a vast morass 70,000 acres, which are now ranked amongst the most
productive land in Yorkshire. But let us look carefully at this
great drainage in its origin and progress. I have met with several
old manuscript records of the drainage of Hatfield Chase, each
purporting to be written "by one who was a witnes...
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