The 1968 floods

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Robin Summerhill
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The 1968 floods

Post by Robin Summerhill »

Lifted from the no. 33 bus thread - as somebody has now mentioned the 1968 floods I thought it might deserve a thread all of its own :)
43126 wrote:I can remember spending all night on a no 33 bus, It was Wednesday 10 July 1968, The Bristol flood, I was a young bus conductor of 21 years of age Newly married based at Marlborough Street Bristol, I was on what they called spare duty for the evening and was asked to go on the Bath service as a conductor had gone sick, To my surprise the bus was a single deck R E, unusual at that time, The driver was a regular on this service for many years, We knew nothing then about what was going on outside of the depot but is was raining quite heavy when we departed, I cannot remember the time we left sometime between 7 and 8 pm i believe, We knew nothing of flooding until we got to Brislington Village, The police were there stopping cars, A policeman said we could go through but to take care, To which we did, We were the last bus to go through as the next bus a double decker got stuck in the village, There was a photo of the bus in the evening post the next day, It was a night i shall never forget most of the journey it was like going along in a boat, We managed to go through Keynsham there were no people about waiting for the bus we were picking up stranded motorists from the roof of their cars as we went along, We eventually arrived at Newbridge Road Bath about Midnight thats as far as we got, The police would not let us go any further, The passenger/stranded motorists were transferred on to large lorries to get them through to Bath, We then turned around and headed back to Bristol, We got back as far as Stockwood on the outskirts of Bristol, By then i believe the road bridge at Keynsham had collapsed, Thank goodness for the Keynsham bypass, Both roundabouts at either end were flooded but my driver managed to get through, The police said Brislington and many parts of Bristol were flooded and to stay where we were, As luck would have it my driver lived just down the road in West town Lane, so we walked to his house it was now about 2 am the next morning, The drivers wife got out an old fold up camp bed and i settled down in their front room to sleep. About 6.30 am i was woken by the drivers wife with a nice cup of tea and a piece of toast, How lucky i was that the driver lived in West Town Lane, As soon as soon as we could we got ready and walked back to our bus, No cars were being allowed through to Bristol but it was decided we would be allowed to proceed, We arrived back at Marlborough Street Depot about 08.00am, I was booked to work my rest day Thursday on an early start and was of course already late, When i told the depot inspector i was now going home he said are you not going to work today, I will not repeat what i said to him and headed home, Sadly i cannot remember my drivers name he certainly knew his stuff driving in those conditions keeping the engine running,
I was 16 years and a few weeks old at the time, effectively teaching myself to ride my first motorcycle (a 1955 Francis Barnett 197cc two-stroke job)

As usual in the evening, I got on the thing and left Stockwood for Brislington where all my mates lived at the time. It was absolutely bucketing down, none of my friends were around or going out, so by about 1900 I decided to give up and go home. I recall my parents were rather shocked that I came home so early :mrgreen:

It kept bucketing down through that evening but, as we were in Stockwood and on high ground, I had no idea what was going on in Brislington (from what John says, I must have gone through Brislington village just before the floods came up).

The rain had stopped by the morning, but the radio was reporting how bad things were in the greater Bristol area, so I decided to use this is an "excuse" to go to school a bit late, and I swanned in about 0915.

To find I was only the third kid who had got in that morning ..... :mrgreen:

Has anybody else got any memories from the time? Even railway-related ones will do!
Mitch
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The 1968 floods

Post by Mitch »

I was a mere skoolboy at the time, living a few hundred yards down the hill from Midsomer Norton South station.
Midsomer Norton was always proned to flooding in its High Street, but by the morning after that storm the water was six feet deep, causing much damage to the shops, the owners of which couldn't afford insurance against flooding due to its frequency in the town.
I remember the devastation at Pensford where the A37 bridge was swept away and the reports on the local TV news which showed the dire situation in Bristol and elsewhere.
The storm also damaged the railway between Bristol and Radstock to such an extent that it was never repaired. The line closed permanently and for the last few years of coal production in Radstock, trains ran via Frome and Westbury to Portishead power station.
76026
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The 1968 Floods

Post by 76026 »

I remember seeing a photgraph in the Evening Post showing an FLF more underwater than not. My friend who lived at Ashton Vale told me that Winterstoke Road Bus Depot was flooded to the extent than no buses were usable.

You probably know these pics online

A Country KSW driving through floods at at Stapleton
http://www.flickr.com/photos/brizzlebor ... otostream/

Ashton Gate level crossing
http://www.flickr.com/photos/brizzlebor ... otostream/

East Street
http://www.flickr.com/photos/glosters/2185655093/

The remains of a car in Pensford
http://www.flickr.com/photos/glosters/2 ... otostream/
Geoffers
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Post by Geoffers »

At the time I was working in the accounts department of T. Lucas & Co, in Kingswood. However, I was also secretary and a team member of Vassall Cricket Club. We played weekends and occasional mid-week evening games of 20-overs a side.

We had an evening game scheduled for Wednesday, 10th July 1968, against Bristol Waterworks (yes, really!). I was having real problems raising a side for this away game and had even resorted to asking workers from the factory to play û people I barely knew. I nearly cancelled the match the evening before, but that is always a hard thing to do for a secretary - almost an admission of defeat, so I decided if we ended up with 9 or 10 men, so be it.

On the Wednesday morning, two more people dropped out but it was now far too late to call off the game. I started to pray for rain, though not literally. I can't remember when it started but I do recall it getting heavier and heavier without any phone call from Bristol Waterworks telling me it was off. I think it was getting on for five when they finally rang and I then had to contact all the other players to tell them û if they hadn't guessed by then.

I went home to St. Andrews via bus to Lawrence Hill and train to Montpelier (see what I did there?) but still got soaked. At least I didn't have the indignity of turning up for a game with 8 players and of course our area of Bristol got off comparatively lightly.
Geoffers
Robin Summerhill
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Re: The 1968 Floods

Post by Robin Summerhill »

76026 wrote:
You probably know these pics online ...
Looking at those photographs, reading the captions, remembering that the Wills factory was flooded, and the fact that we've been talking about songs on another thread tonight, reminded me:

The damaged cigarettes from Wills were dumped at Lawrence Weston, and certain individuals were interviewed by the BBC at the time as they helped themselves to the fags from the rubbish dump.

Does anybody else remember the song about this - "Lawrence Weston Tipped" ? :)
jules
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Post by jules »

The damaged cigarettes from Wills were dumped at Lawrence Weston, and certain individuals were interviewed by the BBC at the time as they helped themselves to the fags from the rubbish dump.
I believe this actually happened twice :D

In the early 1970s, Wills experimented with a noxious substance called "New Smoking Material" or "NSM" as it was labeled. It was truly disgusting stuff and despite all the hype, nobody but nobody would buy cigarettes that contained it. One of the brands I seem to recall was named "State Express 555 - with NSM".

Anyhow, completely unable to sell their new experimental fags to anyone, these also ended up at Lawrence Weston tip in their millions.

And guess what? The good people of Lawrence Weston didn't seem to mind smoking the stuff at all, when it was free and readily available from the local tip!
Robin Summerhill
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Post by Robin Summerhill »

jules wrote:
The damaged cigarettes from Wills were dumped at Lawrence Weston, and certain individuals were interviewed by the BBC at the time as they helped themselves to the fags from the rubbish dump.
I believe this actually happened twice :D

And guess what? The good people of Lawrence Weston didn't seem to mind smoking the stuff at all, when it was free and readily available from the local tip!
One personal matter I recall about this was that it taught me to take all news reports with a pinch of salt.

I recall the BBC making the point that people nicking contaminated fags from Lawrence Weston tip were holding themselves open to all sorts of unpleasant diseases as a result of the contamination.

I thought at the time "that's a bit like saying - don't jump off the Suspension Bridge - it could do your shoes no end of damage"
Ian L Jamieson
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Bristol 1968 Floods

Post by Ian L Jamieson »

We had been married just a couple of years and were living in New Cheltenham [Crispin Way]. We had been to my parents in Filton for the evening and managed the journey back OK until we dived under the railway bridge separating Manor Road from Bridge Road [down the side of Rodway Common]. We drove the mini straight into a huge pool of water that had gathered under the bridge, stalled the engine, and couldn't restart it because it was an early model with the starter motor under the floor - believe it or not. We walked the rest of the way and in the morning pushed the car to a garage about 100yds away - the repair bill was ú5!

While we were languishing below the bridge, a north-south train hauled by a Class 47 was in a similar predicament above us, having come to a halt, and, if my memory is correct, may have also derailed. Anyhow, it was still there the next morning, but had shifted by the time we got back from work at 6.00pm.
Andrew
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Post by Andrew »

I have a vague memory of the road bridge over the Avon being quite badly damaged between Willsbridge and Keynsham. I think there is a photo of it in a book I can't put my hands on immediately
the green mile
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Post by the green mile »

There was certainly a lot of water about around that bridge. Did it not get washed away or an I confusing it with the one at Pensford?
Robin Summerhill
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Post by Robin Summerhill »

the green mile wrote:There was certainly a lot of water about around that bridge. Did it not get washed away or an I confusing it with the one at Pensford?
A lot of bridges were washed away. As you say, one went in Pensford, the bridge over the river at the end of Keynsham High Street went as well, and such a mess was made of the bridges on the Willsbridge Road at Keynsham that the whole road was diverted. The army put up temporary Bailey bridges at all these locations. In case anybody is interested: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bailey_bridge

The remains of the old road can still be seen on the right hand side as you go from Keynsham towards Willsbridge. Whether it was simply the floods that caused the road to be diverted, or whether the Council just "took advantage" of the situaion to improve the road at this point (the old road was very narrow over the original bridges) is something that will probably be in the local RDC minutes in the Records Office should anybody want to bother to go and have a look :)
BristleGWR
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Post by BristleGWR »

Found some photo's of the flood at Keynsham and the bailey bridge here:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/rustysea/s ... 359231473/
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