Title: Dale Dyke Dam Disaster 1864
1Dale Dyke Dam Disaster 1864
School History Resource History Key Stage 2 Unit
7 Local History Study How the locality was
affected by a significant local event
2Victorian Sheffield
General view of Sheffield from the station,
1800s(Sheffield Local Studies Library Picture
Sheffield s11478)
3Dale Dyke Reservoir, Bradfield
Sheffield Waterworks plan showing the intended
Dale Dyke Reservoir, 1852(Sheffield Archives
YWA/10/1/2)
4View of Dale Dyke Reservoir, Bradfield,
1864(Sheffield Local Studies Library Picture
Sheffield t01546)
5Bursting of the Dam!
Picture of the bursting of Dale Dyke Dam, 1864
(Sheffield Local Studies Library Picture
Sheffield s00972)
6Eyewitness Account
Eyewitness account of the flood by Joseph
Ibbotson of Bradfield, from Harrisons History of
the Sheffield Flood, 1864(Sheffield Archives
HAR/LOCAL)
-
- My house stands fifty or sixty yards from the
mill, on rocky ground, higher than the roof of
the mill, facing across the valley. On hearing a
noise and a shout "The flood is coming !" I
instantly leaped out of bed, and looked out of
the window I ran out of the house down to within
fifteen or twenty yards of the flood. - Language cannot convey any just description of
the awful thundering, crashing roar of the
torrent. It was as if the earth itself was being
rent asunder... Irepeatedly exclaimed, "This
must be a wild dream it cannot be reality." It
seemed as if the bowels of the earth were being
torn up, or as if some unheard of monster were
rushing down the valley, lashing the hill sides
with his scaly folds, crunching up buildings
between his jaws, and filling all the air with
his wrathful hiss. Trees snapped like pistols,
mills and houses stood and staggered for a
moment, and then disappeared in the boiling
torrent. - Within the short space of five minutes, the
bridge, the triple storied mill, the school
house, and the master's house, were standing
unharmed, and before the minutes were out they
had all vanished. The flood swept by in all its
majesty - a mighty wall of water running on a
level with the roofs of the three storied
buildings it demolished, and sweeping away
everything in its path
7Path of the Flood
8Damage and Destruction Loxley
Flood damage at Rowell Bridge Wheel, Loxley 1864
(Sheffield Local Studies Library Picture
Sheffield w00404 )
Damage at Little Matlock Wheel (Messrs Thomas and
Daniel Chapman and John Denton), Loxley 1864
(Sheffield Local Studies Library Picture
Sheffield t00154 )
9Malin Bridge
Picture of ruins of the Cleakum Inn, Malin
Bridge, 1864(Sheffield Local Studies Library
Picture Sheffield s00976)
Photograph showing remains of housing at Malin
Bridge, 1864(Sheffield Local Studies Library
Picture Sheffield t01739)
Searching for survivors and the dead at Malin
Bridge, 1864(Sheffield Archives MD8058)
10Hillsborough
Scene of damaged houses on Brick Row,
Hillsborough, 1864(Sheffield Local Studies
Library Picture Sheffield s00580 )
Scene of a garden at Hillsborough after the
flood, 1864(Sheffield Archives MD8058)
11Wicker
The flood water racing through the Wicker, 1864
reproduced in The Collapse of the Dale Dyke Dam
by G. Amey (Sheffield Archives AME/LOCAL)
The Wicker after the flood, 1864 (Sheffield Local
Studies Library Picture Sheffield s00585)
12 We have to narrate this morning one of the
most terrific calamities that has ever visited
this part of the countryhouses have been washed
down, streets have been turned in to riverssome
have been swept down in the streets and drowned,
some have died in rooms that were for the moment
turned into miniature reservoirs, full from
ceiling to floor of water
Sheffield Telegraph Newspaper, 12th March
1864(Sheffield Local Studies Library Newspaper
Collection)
News
Sheffield Independent Newspaper, 14th March
1864(Sheffield Local Studies Library Newspaper
Collection)
Terrible news of a great flood in the Don
Valley. The New Reservoir at Bradfield has burst
the water tearing down to Sheffield has swept
off everything in its course. Lower Bradfield
entirely gone but one house. The Barrack wall
washed down. The Wicker 5 foot in water bodies
washed into the Midland Station. The water rose
above the Lady Bridge...
Juliana Gattys Diary, 12th March 1864 (Sheffield
Archives HAS41/9)
13Card in memory of those who died in the flood,
1864(Sheffield Archives X160)
14Survivors and Escape
Photograph of Mrs Kirk of Damflask, 1864
(Sheffield Local Studies Library Picture
Sheffield s08752)
15Joseph Chapman, a tailor from Hillsborough(Sheffi
eld Local Studies Library Picture Sheffield
s08751)
16Picture of Rollo the dog and a child,
1864(Sheffield Local Studies Library Picture
Sheffield u01735)
Souvenir mug showing the rescue of a child by
Rollo the dog(Sheffield Local Studies Library
Picture Sheffield u01737)
17POLICE RECORDS
Sheffield Police Book, 1864 (Sheffield Archives
SY295/1/2/4)
18Helping the victims
- After the flood a Relief Committee was set up in
Sheffield and an appeal for funds to help the
sufferers was made. - People from all over the country donated money
(Queen Victoria herself donated 200). - The Relief Committee provided thousands of pairs
of shoes and items of clothing to people who had
lost their possessions.
Relief Fund Register showing items provided to
flood victims, 1864(Sheffield Local Studies
Library 361.52 SSTF)
19Inquest
- An inquest was held in Sheffield to try and
work out what caused the flood and the deaths and
destruction that followed. - The inquest was led by Sheffield Coroner, John
Webster (pictured right). - At the inquest, the Sheffield Waterworks Company
denied that the flood had been caused by any
faults in their building of the dam
- John Leather (Engineer) There is the possibility
of a landslip. A landslip under the side of the
bank may have produced it - Coroner Then you do not ascribe the bursting of
the reservoir to unsound principles of
engineering or to bad workmanship? - John Leather Certainly not.
Inquest extracts reproduced in The Collapse of
the Dale Dyke Dam by G. Amey (Sheffield
Archives AME/LOCAL)
20- At the inquest, rather than the dam bursting
because of bad workmanship, the Sheffield
Waterworks Company argued that it may have burst
because of a landslip, due to weaknesses in the
ground on which it was built.
Sheffield Waterworks Company drawing showing
breach in the Dale Dyke Dam and the underlying
ground, 1864(Sheffield Archives YWA/10/1/3)
21Who or what was to blame?
Two Government inspectors, Robert Rawlinson and
Nathaniel Beardmore, reported that the dam burst
because of bad workmanship and design.
The Sheffield Waterworks Chief Engineers, John
Gunson and John Leather (and a Waterworks Company
Investigation) claimed the burst was an accident
which couldnt have been avoided, caused by an
unforseen landslip.
John Webster, Coroner According to the
description of Mr Leather and Mr Gunson, the work
was so perfect that it was impossible to improve
upon it. Now, in my opinion, there must have been
something fatal in either its design or its
construction or it certainly would not have
burst.
Inquest Jury In our opinion, there has not been
that engineering skill and that attention to the
construction of the works, which their magnitude
and importance demanded.
22Flood Claims for Compensation
- With the inquest judging that the Sheffield
Waterworks Company was responsible for causing
the flood, thousands of compensations claims for
damages were made against the company by people
who had suffered. - People claimed for loss of property, possessions,
livelihood and for injury and death of relatives.
Sheffield Flood Claims Register, 1864(Sheffield
Archives CA7/1, claim no. 414)
23Case Studies
- 7 Case Studies each case study is based on a
family who were caught up in the Sheffield Flood. - Working in groups - each group will be given a
family to investigate. - Use the documents in your investigation pack to
answer the questions posed and try and work out
what happened to your family in the flood.
24Case Report 1 Ibbotson Family, Damflask
Remains of Damflask Wire Mill (F. Shaw Co.,
Wire Drawers) by the River Loxley following the
flood, 1864 (Sheffield Local Studies Library
Picture Sheffield y00808)
25Case Report 2 Chapman Family, Little Matlock,
Loxley
Ruins of Daniel Chapmans house at Little
Matlock, Loxley, after the flood, 1864 (Sheffield
Local Studies Library Picture Sheffield t00152)
26Case Report 3 Watson Family, Malin Bridge
Ruins at Malin Bridge after the flood, 1864
(Sheffield Local Studies Library Picture
Sheffield t00163)
27Case Report 4 Pickering Family, Hill Bridge,
Hillsborough
View of demolished Hill Bridge, Walkley Lane,
Hillsborough, showing the ruins of the Free
Masons Arms on the left 1864(Sheffield Local
Studies Library Picture Sheffield s00909)
28Case Report 5 Elston Family, Neepsend Gardens
Ruins at Neepsend Gardens, Neepsend Lane, after
the flood, 1864(Sheffield Local Studies Library
Picture Sheffield s00591)
Case Study 6 Medwood Family, Neepsend Gardens
29Case Study 7 Parkes Family, Harvest Lane/Orchard
Street, Neepsend
Ruins of a house at Neepsend after the flood,
1864(Sheffield Local Studies Library Picture
Sheffield w00447)