Index - Contents - Beginnings - Romans - Saxons - After 1066 - some 15th century parishioners - 15th to 17th Century - l8th Century - 19th Century - Churches - Phelps - Cement - Ferry - Hook Family - May Family - Papermill Fire 1906 - Papermill - Schools - Toll Roads
THE
PAPER MILL FIRE OF 1906
On Sunday, 12 August 1906 the paper mill was destroyed by fire,
unquestionably the most dramatic event in the history of the village. The
following account was printed in the Kent
Messenger of 18 August. The reporting puts all modern efforts into the
shade: finely written and extremely comprehensive, it vividly covers not only
the disaster, but also the first relief efforts, not forgetting enterprising
actions from some ready to feed the curiosity of those drawn to view to scene.
Together with the many surviving photographs of the event (some of which were
advertised), the horror is fully realized, as is the splendid and immediate
response of the Parish in mitigating the distress of those affected:
A fire occurred at
Snodland on Sunday which is without parallel in the annals of the village, and
which is one of the most serious known in Kent for at least 20 years past. It
entirely burned out the papermaking mills of Messrs Townsend Hook and Co.,
leaving only the carpenters and fitters' shops standing at one end of five or
six acres of ruins.
It created in a few hours damage estimated at from £150,000 to
£200,000; Deprived nearly 400 people of their ordinary employment; Caused
31 families to leave their cottages; Imperiled the Parish Church; Filled the air
with fragments of burnt paper -resembling a snowstorm - which the wind blew
about for a distance of seven or eight miles; and Engaged the services of six
fire brigades. We are in a position to announce, however, that The mill will be
rebuilt without delay; That, by arrangement with the Insurance Companies, as
many of the mill-men as circumstances permit will be employed on the work which
is immediately possible; That a relief fund has been started with subscriptions
of £20 from Colonel Warde, M.P., and £15. by Mr. W. H. L. Roberts,
J.P.; That the Parish Council have undertaken the administration of the money,
in conjunction with other prominent inhabitants; and That the Council have
accepted the offer of the 'Kent Messenger' to acknowledge the sums received
through its columns.
Origin of the Fire
The fire owed its
origin to some repairing work which was in progress on Sunday morning. A paper
mill, especially one supplying the wherewithal for the printing of the London
dailies, knows neither night nor day from Monday morning till Saturday night,
and it is only on Sundays, when it is still, that the machinery can be
overhauled. On Sunday last the opportunity was being taken to splice one of the
driving ropes in the machine room, the work being in the hands of a Lancashire
firm. The men were early at work, and to assist them had in use a paraffin lamp,
and it was in some way through the presence of this lamp no doubt that the fire
occurred.
Unfortunately
the rope caught, and as a fire-carrying agent there was nothing in the mill to
equal this, for, highly inflammatory as it was through the oil it had absorbed
in the course of countless revolutions of the great wheels, it carried the
flames from floor to floor, and brought about the doom of the whole
establishment.
The tide was out at the time, so that in the creek, which split up the
mill into two portions, a couple of barges, both heavily laden with pulp, lay
high and dry, and fell a prey to the fire. There was also at this time very
little pressure on the water main, and thus hampered neither the mill staff, who
were on the scene in next to no time, nor the Snodland Fire Brigade, were able
to make any impression on the fire; and by the time the Maidstone and Rochester,
and the Malling and Halling brigades arrived, it was seen that the mill was past
saving. Efforts were therefore made - and not without success - to confine the
conflagration to that property. All the dwelling houses around, however, were in
peril, and no fewer than 31 families, comprising upwards of 100 individuals,
found it advisable to turn out, although a dozen of the families were able to
move back again when the flames were subdued.
The scene can be imagined, with about six
acres of buildings and their highly inflammable contents on fire, with the
flames fanned by the wind, the smoke blown in great volumes over the river, the
air charged with the calcined remains of pulp and paper, and around the vast
cauldron of the mill a scene of chaos and havoc caused by the hurried emptying
of rows of cottages. One lot of cottages, called Mill-row, ran right down to the
mill gates; others, called Church-cottages, ran right and left of these and the
top of the row, facing the church and the station. Mill-row was quite untenable,
and the four end houses were burned beyond repair; the others were more or less
damaged. In Church-row, as the backs of the houses became unbearable, the people
broke the front windows and willing hands - too many and too willing - rushed
out the furniture, higgledy-piggledy heedless of its nature or its value. Thence
it was taken to a place of safety behind the church, or laid out in the goods
yard of the station until other accommodation was found for it.
Church-row screened
the Parish Church from the fire, but on top of the tower the heat was very
great, and in time became unbearable to those who made the ascent in order to
get a bird's-eye view of the fire. From this vantage point they say the sight
was awful. First came the insidious curling of the smoke through the roofs, then
little tongues of fire, then the all-devouring flames, followed by the collapse
of roofs, amid still larger bursts of flames as fresh fuel was thus added to the
fire below, fed as it already was by tons upon tons of paper and pulp.
One fortunate
circumstance was that the wind was blowing away from the town, otherwise in all
probability the fire would have travelled up the High-street, with results too
horrible to contemplate. Even more fortunate is it that amid all the ruin no
lives were lost nor serious personal injury caused.
With the wind as it was, it was possible
to work the railway service without great inconvenience - for the mill walls
abutted right on the railway line, and the mill owners had their own siding not
far from the railway platform. In fact the mill, the railway station, and the
church, with numerous cottages in between, amde up in a close group on the banks
of the Medway a not unimportant part of the village.
An Eye
Witness's Description
An eye-witness of the fire, who also knows something of the mill, helped
us to some valuable information. He explained that the rope which caught fire
was of cotton, of innumerable strands, twisted cable-fashion until it formed a
rope of about two inches in diameter. It was the driving rope of the great
double crank engine, which with its enormous wheels, 140 or 150 feet in
circumference, worked the whole machinery of the mill. From the engine room, the
flames "ran along them like fireworks." First they led to the beating
room, the floors of which were laid in pitch in order to make them drip-proof.
Therefore the fire at once obtained a substantial hold, and the further it
spread the more perishable were the materials it found to feed upon. There were
at least 100 tons of rosin; a thousand tons of printing paper in reels ready for
delivery; a large number of parcels of paper; many sacks of waste paper from the
Government departments; quite 400 tons of dry wood pulp, and one stack of not
less than 900 tons of wet pulp, which, in spite of its wetness, was burnt to
ashes. There were also the two
barge-loads of pulp, each containing about 100 tons.
The barges, which lay fast on the
mud-banks, belonged to Messrs. Goldsmith, of Grays. One was practically burnt to
the water's edge, and the other, though an iron one, is probably past repair.
Both were inhabited when the fire caught them, and the wife of one of the
captains had to leave in dishabille.
We gathered, further, that there were
five modern paper-making machines in the mill; that seven new patent
"tower-beaters," which were an excellent invention, had been installed
hardly 12 months; and that the output of the mill was 200 tons a week or
more.
Curiously, the only
machine saved is the very first one installed in the mill by the late Mr.
Townsend Hook and originally worked by water power; while another remarkable
fact is that the great engine, from which the fire spread, is believed to be
capable of repair. Other survivals are the carpenters' and fitters' shops, which
stand on the Maidstone side of the creek amid the buildings that formed the old
mill and are now utilised for storage.
Yet another interesting fact pointed out
was that the iron frame of one of the large sheds had been in two fires. It was
part of the Crystal Palace, and after the fire there was purchased by Colonel
Holland and put up here. The girders and standards are still intact, though
somewhat bent by the heat.
A word of praise is due to the fire brigades. They, it appears, had no
chance with the mill from the first, but great as was the conflagration, it
would have been greater still had they not been present. The Snodland Brigade
naturally were the first on the scene, and with some of the mill men, had just
got the hose attached to the gas engine for pumping, when, to avoid risk of
explosion, the gas was turned off at the gas works, and they were helpless.
Halling, Malling, Rochester and Chatham, and Maidstone Brigades afterwards
arrived, and the Maidstone engine probably pumped as much water on the buildings
as all the rest put together. Among much efficient and well-directed service -
rendered with almost miraculous immunity from serious accident - our informant
singled out that of Captain Stevens, of Snodland, and Captain Gates, of
Maidstone, for special praise, and his tribute was, from all we hear, well
deserved. But, as he says, from the first everything was in favour of the fire:
the inflammable material, the high wind, the low tide, and (at first) the low
pressure on the wate main. The direction of the wind was fortunate, however, for
it blew away from the town and from the manager's house, which is within the
mill enclosure. Had this caught it would have brought the fire within reach of a
densely populated locality.
The loss to the cottagers:
Monday
Every train
today, up and down, brought crowds of people curious to see the havoc wrought by
the fire, and it was not until the shades of evening fell that the animation in
the vicinity of the church and the ruins at all subsided.
As I write this evening, the flames still
keep spurting out from among the debris, the Halling and Snodland firemen, from
the half-dozen Fire Brigades summoned, are still active and are likely to be
throughout the night.
It is truly a scene of ruin from which the two tall chimney stacks of
the mill - the old and the new - seem to rise Phoenix-like. The oldest of these,
which has for some time been decapitated for safety, stands well away from the
buildings which have now been gutted by the fire. The other was at the very
centre of the conflagration. As people look at [it] - it may be their
imagination - they declare they see it sway in the breeze; and it is probable
that it will have to be demolished. However, for the time being, there it stands
sentinel over the ruins - the skeletons of iron and brickwork and tons of
useless debris.
It is the mill that represents loss and ruin, but the pathos of it all
is most vividly realised when one returns to the cottages and the churchyard.
Some of the upper rooms are absolutedly denuded of their windows, and the rooms
themselves are empty. Downstairs one sees furniture of all kinds crowded
promiscuously into one confused heap. In teh churchyard are fragments of
crockery, broken ornaments, dresses, mattresses, chairs, washing stands and all
sorts of domestic utensils, unusable, abandoned, showing the panic with which
they were tumbled out - anywhere away from the fire.
The dispossessed cottagers come and sadly
survey these remnants of their goods, and search for that which they cannot
fins, and prompt as were the steps taken for their assistance by a provisional
Committee, many must suffer the loss of goods rashly precipitated from the
tenements by thoughtless but well-meaning persons.
I learn from Mr. Hilder that as early as
12 o'clock on Sunday morning a number of prominent inhabitants formed themselves
into a Committee to cope with the emergency arising among these cottagers. The
Rector (the Rev. Finch-Smith), who is away on holiday, was represented by his
father, and there were also present the Revs. Hetherington (curate), Galpin
(Congregational), and Ronald (Christ Church), Mr. W.L.H. Roberts, Mr.
Streatfield, Mr. F. Roberts, Drs. Freeland, Gash and Palmer, Mr. Trechman, Mr.
J.H. Burke, Mr. Gooding, Mr. T. Hilder, and subsequently Mr. Hodgkinson. Mr.
Roberts was appointed chairman, and Mr. Hilder secretary. They at once proceeded
to deal with the accommodation of the dispossessed tenants, and during the day
the whole 31 families had been temporarily provided for. By the close of the
day, 12 families had been able to return to their homes. Other moved their
furniture back into the rooms, and were taken in by friends. Others went into
the empty cottages which were found here and there in the village, and several
families found accommodation at the old Post Office, placed at their disposal by
Mr. Roberts, while a quantity of furniture was stored in the sheds behind the
building. The Committee made themselves responsible for the rent where
necessary, and Mr. Roberts opened a relief fund with a promise of £15.
Today he has lent seven or eight vans, which have further assisted in the
removal of the furniture to the new abodes of the owners. I find today all who
are in a position of any responsibility impressed with the seriousness of the
outlook.
The service at
the Parish Church yesterday morning was abandoned, the curate simply reading the
Litany to the Rector's father, while in the evening only a shortened form of
service was read, owing to the want of gas.
The station-master (Mr. Horton), whose
first duty was to have three trucks removed from the mill siding, had for some
time an anxious task in looking after the safety of passengers, who even on
Sunday evening poured intot he village in immense numbers to see the fire. Three
down trains had to be run past to Maidstone on the up line, which entailed
special signalling on the line; and, in fact, the precautions had to be
maintained on Monday and Tuesday, when the wall overlooking the line was pulled
down as a precaution at the instigation of the Railway Company. The station
premises were also made good use of on Sunday, for it was here the books of the
mill-owners were first removed, while the station yard as well as the church
yard became the receptacle of the furniture which was summarily removed from the
houses.
The urgent need for help: Tuesday
There has been a perceptable diminution
of visitors today, but the deprivation caused by the loss of work and of
household belongings is beginning to be keenly felt. A practical step, however,
has been taken to deal with the worst phases of the distress (as reported
below).
One of the
most piteable cases is that of a widow and her family who lived in Mill Row. She
was left with eight children, two of whom worked in the mill and are now
deprived of employment. She said to a "Kent Messenger"
representative:-
"I was just getting the younger children off to the Sunday school,
when one of them ran back saying 'Oh, mother, there's smoke coming from the
mill'. Well, smoke is a usual thing here, and I took no alarm, but soon there
was no doubt that the mill was on fire. Even then I did not think the houses
would be touched, and those of whom I enquired assured me that we were safe, but
as the flames spead and it was seen the houses were doomed, everybody was eager
to turn the furniture out. No doubt they thought they were helping, but there
were so many of them that I don't know what they did do, except that in the
result I lost nearly all my furniture. In the upset I even left my money
upstairs - my daughter's savings and the money I had ready to pay the tradesmen
- and here I am now without a penny and with very little furniture."
The family had moved
into an empty house in another part of the village where, by dint of much
cleaning, they had made two of the rooms presentable, and in incongruous
collections on the newly scrubbed floor lay a miscellaneous assortment
assortment of furniture quite inadequate for any definite purpose.
"This,"
said the poor woman, "I went and picked out of the heaps in the Churchyard.
But what is it? Here's the top and end of a bedstead, but not a single piece to
connect them; here are a couple of cot mattresses; here's a broken washstand
from the back bedroom. I suppose all my best furniture perished. I have just
found a couple of spoons, but I haven't a knife and only one cup and a few
plates; here's part of one thing and part of another, and I feel as if I had
lost all my home - and I an a widow. Both my children, you see, are thrown out
of work by the fire, and so are my near relatives; and as to my little children,
I lost all their clothes except what they had on - didn't even save a
pinafore."
The prospect of this wrecked home was truly enough to dismay the
stoutest heart. At the time we saw the mother, little was known about the relief
fund, and she knew not whence her daily sustenance was coming, let alone the
restoration of a home.
Other families, always used to earning an honest living and come in to a
comfortable if humble abode, are in a plight only a degree less pitiable, and
one can hardly imagine circumstances which should appeal more keenly to the
heart of charity.
No doubt among the honestly inclined there were some nefarious robbers
on Sunday, but with such a crowd as the oldest inhabitant cannot remember in
Snodland, and the excitement and alarm created by such a tremendous
conflagration, it is not surprising that confusion, damage and loss should have
resulted.
The Parish Council as Relief Committee
Mr. W.L.H. Roberts attended the meeting
of the Parish Council on Tuesday evening, and introduced the question of a
Relief Committee. Directly this disaster was avident, he said, a few of us who
were on the spot formed ourselves into a Provisional Committee, as we could see
at once how necessary it was that house-room should be found for the
dispossessed people. Now it is incumbent on us to see what we can do for them. I
had a talk with Dr. Palmer this morning, and he was of opinion that it would be
best if the constituted authority in the village - the Parish Council - took the
matter in hand. They, it was suggested, could form themselves into a special
Committee, with power to add to their number, and I for one, if they cared to
elect me, would be willing to act with them; so would others who take an
interest in the matter. I have not yet been able to consult Mr. Woodburn. I went
down today, but it was rather too much to expect anyone connected with the mill,
fully engaged as they were with the insurance assessors, to do anything then, so
I came away; but I hope before long to be able to go into the matter with him
and see exactly what the Company propose to do and what they would like us to do
in the face of this possible distress among their workpeople. I had a visit from
Colonel Warde, M.P., who came over to know what he could do. He said he was
prepared to set to work and make a collection among his friends, while he
generously gave me £20 himself. Further, a friend of mine, Mr. Thynne,
gave me a £5 note today, so that we have quite a nice beginning to our
fund. Tomorrow, I propose to say a few words to one of the Committee of the
County Council, when a good many of the gentlemen of the county will be gathered
together, and to distribute bankers' slips for them to fill in. Having got the
money, we shall have to consider the best form of distributing it. So far as I
can gather, those likely to suffer most from the disaster will be the women who
have been the support of their homes. Many of the men will be employed, I
understand, in various kinds of labouring work pending and during the
re-erection of the mill, and they, though inconvenienced, will not perhaps be
actually distressed; but the Committee will be bound to do something for the
women who were the bread-winners of their families and who have been thrown out
of work. I have no doubt, from what I gather from Colonel Warde, that the county
gentlemen will show their sympathy with us in this district, and help us to
overcome the untoward circumstances; while, in consultation with the managers
and directors of the mill, we shall no doubt be guided as to the best way to
distribute the money when we have got it, and meet the cases of distress as they
arise; for, under the conditions that have occurred, we cannot expect otherwise
that that distress will ensue unless means are taken to alleviate it.
Mr. Hodgkinson moved
that the Council express their deep sympathy with the sufferers by the fire, and
their great thanks to Colonel Warde, as well as to Mr. Roberts; and further
that, as Mr. Roberts suggested, the Council form themselves into a Relief
Committee, with power to add to their number.
Mr. Woodburn remarked that he had already
been entrusted with some money for the fund, and numbers of people had written
expressing their willingness to start subscription lists; while he was sure the
mill authorities would be only too pleased to help.
Replying to a question, Mr. Woodburn said
that by the courtesy of the Insurance Companies the mill-owners had been given a
free hand in the employment of labour where it was possible to employ it under
present conditions, and they would give as much work as they could to their own
hands; but they had the winter to face, and with many people out of employment
and suffering the loss of their goods, he was sure there would be no difficulty
in well spending all the money they received. He agreed with Mr. Roberts as to
the widows and other women who earned their own living, and mentioned a sad case
in which a wife with an invalid husband was the mainstay of the home through her
work at the mill. He was quite sure, however, from the expressions of sympathy
he had received, that once the fund was started it would be generously
supported.
By the
courtesy of the Chairman (Mr. Burke), a representative of the "Kent
Messenger" who was present was permitted to make a few remarks, offering
the services of this newspaper, both in the way of advocating the fund and of
acknowledging the amounts that were received. Such acknowledgement, he thought,
would be an incentive to others to subscribe.
Mr. Hodgkinson's motion was unanimously
adopted, and on the proposition of Mr. Stevens, who made a courteous reference
to this paper, the offer made on behalf of the "Kent Messenger" was
also accepted with thanks.
First meeting of the
Committee
The Relief
Committee met on Wednesday evening, and adopted as a general principle that
money should not be distributed if it could be avoided, but that relief should
be given by way of orders on grocers, bakers and other tradesmen, and by the
payment of rent. Particular care is also to be taken that there is no
overlapping.
A subcommittee
of seven was appointed to go into the immediate applications, and it was decided
to ask Mrs. Freeland to form a committee of ladies to investigate the
requirements in the nature of clothing, some of the people having been
dispossessed of almost everything.
Sixpence admission
So many applications
have been received, that arrangements have been made to show visitors over the
ruins, on Saturday and Sunday, at a charge of 6d. each, the proceeds to go to
the relief fund. The taking of photographs will be allowed only by special
arrangement.
Adult schools and the Relief Fund
At the Kent Adult School quarterly
Council meeting held at Tunbridge Wells on Wednesday, it was unanimously decided
to ask all the schools in Kent to immediately make collections for those
suffering from distress through the disaster of last Sunday at Snodland, so that
the principles the Adult School movement preaches may be practised.
Incidentals
Such a crowd as
gathered in Snodland on Sunday evening has never been seen in the village
before. There was quite an army of snapshotters among them, but many of their
products were indifferent.
The late Mr.
Townsend Hook, founder of the mill, had previously carried on business at
Maidstone. He commenced the mill with one machine.
The West Kent Hospital will suffer by the fire, for the present works
manager, Mr. Taylor, had instituted a fortnightly collection of 1d. from each
employee.
The National School
children's fete was postponed from Thursday, and it is said that the money
collected for their prizes will be diverted to the Relief Fund.
None of the buildings of the old mill were
burned.
Between 50 and 100
firemen were engaged trying to battle with the flames. All but a few of these
have been withdrawn in order to give work to the mill men.
The Company's books were saved, the office
being fireproof.
The presence
of thousands of old postal orders at the mill was due to a contract with the
Government. They are brought to Snodland to be destroyed and be reconverted by
an ingenious process into paper. An official of the post office sees to the
destruction.
The Company were
full up with orders, and appeared to be in for a prosperous time. Latterly their
shares have risen on the market. It is providential that this disaster did not
come during the depression in the cement industry, in which many of the
villagers are employed.
About two
dozen of the mill hands belong to the Amalgamated Society of Papermakers. Their
out-of-work pay is 14s. a week.
The loss to
the Company is said to be all covered by insurance. The policies were shared
among several offices.
The Mill
Company have made arrangements for placing their orders, and so keeping their
business connection.
The capacity of the Maidstone steam fire engine is 350 gallons per
minute. Thanks to the Fire Brigades, coal in the yard was saved.
SNODLAND MILL FIRE - Four photographic
post-cards, 1s. post free - BROWN, Winton House, West Malling - Advt.
POSTCARDS OF THE FIRE -
Five pictures for 6d., postage 1d. Shops supplied at special prices.- R. Mason
and Sons, Snodland.- Advt.
Go or send to Hambrook's Bazaar, High street, Snodland, for
the best photographs and postcards of the Mill Fire.-Advt.