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E.R. Cooper's
name is well-known to historians of Suffolk and his books and articles
reveal his gifts for research and for vivid writing. But his life
had many sides. He was a skilled yachtsman and a solicitor and Town
Clerk of Southwold from 1895. Born in 1865, he was brought up at
Westwood lodge and by 1891 he was living and practising in Southwold.
Constantly in boats himself, he felt a great affinity with the local
fishermen, especially those he met and worked with on the lifeboats,
and he knew the poverty they endured and which at this time was
widespread in the town. He was also painfully aware that Southwold
harbour which in earlier days had brought trade and work to the
town was now derelict. He considered also that the harbour piers
and the flowing out of the river were vital to the defence of Southwold
against the sea. But he knew too that the impoverished town council
could never find money to rescue the harbour and in face of this
he conceived his daring scheme to make Southwold into a third East
Anglian port for the Scottish herring fishery which was booming
at this time.
A preliminary
attempt to procure a better rail link failed but he pressed on and
in 1898 after a fund-raising effort the Council obtained re-possession
of its harbour. Bodies representing Scots fishermen and fishcurers
were then approached and their positive response induced Messrs
Fasey & Son of Leytonstone to take over as developers of the
harbour, backed by a grant from the Board of Trade. Plans for receiving
250 fishing drifters went ahead. The harbour piers were to be extended
and along the quay there was to be a 1000 foot wall, behind which
the sales office and the curing plots would be accommodated. The
fish, packed in barrels, would be rolled straight on to German steamers
for export, thus solving the transport problem.
In July the
Corporation sold the harbour to Faseys and work began, only to be
soon impeded by the need to lengthen the north pier. Fasey asked
the Council to contribute to this expense and having no money the
Council agreed instead to schedule an additional 27 acres of town
land. A local row broke out over the 27 acres and this frightened
Fasey into stopping the works - a delay which the project could
ill-afford. However, at last in October 1907, the first Scottish
drifter entered the harbour. Cooper was both Clerk to the Council
and also Secretary and Manager of the Harbour Company, a dual position
which some people attacked. He maintained that he was only keeping
the books but his experience as a seaman must have been invaluable.
Large numbers
of drifters entered in 1908-9 and the Scots girls who lodged in
the town were busy in the curing plots. 1910 however was stormy
and only 477 fishing boats came. Consequently only two curing firms
operated in 1911, and again fishing was poor causing the curers
finally to desert. 1912 and 1913 were record seasons on Lowestoft
but no drifters came to Southwold. Locals landed sprats which only
high-lighted the lack of rail transport. Not until November 1914
was a branch line from the Southwold railway constructed and its
gauge was still three feet.
The war and
the later decline of the herring fishing ended any hopes for Cooper's
great scheme but he could still claim that he had saved the harbour
from dereliction.
See: Suffolk Review, Autumn 1997, pp.2-12.
Rachel Lawrence, Southwold, January 1998
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