"On this line was the most fearful amount of devastation swept over the country in a torrent nearly 200 yards wide, and, by measurement at Tundridge Mill, Suckley, the water was more than twenty feet above the ordinary level of the brook! Houses
and bridges were swept away before it; some orchards were totally destroyed...
All the mills on the line of the brook suffered most severely. The occupier of
Tundridge Mill, on arriving home from Worcester, found his house
unapproachable; it was submerged, all but the upper apartments, and the inmates
had barely time to get clear from the kitchen below. The water washed through
the mill, injuring the machinery, blowing up the weir, and whirling barrels
from the drink-house to the opposite side of the premises. ..
Some idea may be formed of the state of the flood at Tundridge Mill,
from the fact that a fowling-piece, hanging by hooks above the kitchen chimney,
was floated off, and in its place chairs were found suspended, when the
unwelcome waters retired. A cat, in company with a tea-caddy, was found mounted
on a flitch of bacon, hanging from the roof."
Lees, Edwin. Pictures of nature in the silurian region around the
Malvern hills ... Malvern: 1856
~~~
The old firelock hung upon two hooks by the kitchen chimney in the dwelling of every farmer…
Foster, Eden Borroughs. A north-side view of slavery: a sermon on the crime against freedom, in Kansas..., 1856 ~~~
The old firelock hung upon two hooks by the kitchen chimney in the dwelling of every farmer…
~~~
Thirty-five years… quartered with my regiment… [Ireland]…
“The house is attacked… there are always loaded guns above the kitchen fireplace.”
Maxwell, William Hamilton. Wild Sports of the West. London: 1838
~~~
“One afternoon, when I was quite a little chit in a pinafore, I got possession of a horse-pistol which had been hanging up over the kitchen mantel shelf till it was as rusty as an old rat-trap.”
Chambers’s Journal. Nov 3, 1860
~~~
"On the chimneypiece stood, between two tall pewter candlesticks, an alarum clock, loud enough to have broken the rest of the Seven Sleepers. … One other object hung on brass hooks above the chimneypiece. It was a gun."
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