LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND PUBLIC SERVICES
Since the Forest was extraparochial, provisions for
poor relief and other functions of parish government were unusual. In the 1670s and the
following decades a few people, mostly women,
received financial help from the county stock,
which also occasionally paid apprenticeship and
funeral expenses. (fn. 97) Seven women, one of them a
foster mother, received regular help in 1726 (fn. 98)
and a child abandoned at St. White's was reared
at the county's expense from 1768. (fn. 99) Because
paternity orders could not be obtained for illegitimate children born on extraparochial land it
became increasingly common in the late 18th
century for unmarried women from neighbouring parishes to enter the Forest for childbirth. (fn. 1)
Poverty was the general condition of miners in
the 1740s (fn. 2) and it remained widespread in the
Forest in the late 18th century. Although most
Foresters had legal settlement in adjoining parishes they often relied on the charity of their
neighbours and of others and at times of greatest
distress, when the parishes were unwilling or
unable to provide help, many faced starvation.
In 1801, at a time of exceptionally high grain
prices, local magistrates used £1,000 given by
the Crown for the Foresters' relief to sell them
rice, fish, potatoes, and other food at reduced
prices, the sales being conducted by the keepers
of the Forest walks. (fn. 3) The general poverty persisted in the early 19th century but the Foresters,
of whom a quarter had legal settlement in Newland parish in 1834, sought help from their
parishes only as a last resort and continued to
depend on voluntary gifts and subscriptions
raised by local farmers and other people. In
1834, when 102 of the Forest's 1,530 families
were receiving parish relief, many inhabitants
belonged to provident societies and some employers retained a surgeon for their workmen. (fn. 4)
A committee organizing relief for Foresters in
1842 (fn. 5) apparently employed them in building a
road between Hawthorns and Stenders, above
Mitcheldean. (fn. 6)
In 1835 a majority of commissioners considering a proposal to create civil parishes for the
Forest rejected it, citing among their reasons
difficulties in levying and collecting rates. (fn. 7) In
1842, however, the main part of the extraparochial area was divided for poor-law purposes
into two townships, that of East Dean being
included in the Westbury-on-Severn union and
that of West Dean in the Monmouth union. (fn. 8) At
Cinderford, where new building was mostly on
land in East Dean township, Flaxley parish, and
Lea Bailey tithing, three small extraparochial
places on Littledean hill remained outside the
poor-law system until 1869 when they were
constituted the parish of Hinder's Lane and
Dockham within the Westbury union. (fn. 9) That
parish disappeared in 1884 when East Dean's
boundaries were extended to include most of the
town. (fn. 10) Lea Bailey tithing, where Newland parish officers had administered relief only
intermittently and had never levied poor rates,
relieved its own poor from the late 17th century. (fn. 11) It came to be regarded as a separate parish
and in 1836 became part of the new Herefordshire poor-law union of Ross. (fn. 12) In the 1880s Lea
Bailey was dismembered and its constituent
parts added to various adjoining parishes. (fn. 13)
Lydbrook, which grew up on land in both East
and West Dean as well as the ancient parishes
of English Bicknor, Ruardean, and Newland, (fn. 14)
became in 1935 a new civil parish including
Stowfield, Worrall Hill, and Joy's Green. (fn. 15) East
Dean was divided in 1953 into the new civil
parishes of Cinderford, Drybrook, and Ruspidge. (fn. 16) In 1895 West Dean had become part of
West Dean rural district and East Dean part of
East Dean and United Parishes rural district, (fn. 17)
which in 1935 was reorganized as East Dean rural
district, Lydbrook parish being assigned to West
Dean district. (fn. 18) In 1974 Cinderford, Drybrook,
Ruspidge, Lydbrook, and West Dean parishes all
became part of the new Forest of Dean district.
In the later 19th century periods of economic
depression, particularly in the coal industry,
were marked by widespread unemployment and
some emigration. Plans to lower wages often
precipitated strikes. (fn. 19) Voluntary relief remained
of considerable importance and a committee set
up in 1877, during a particularly severe slump,
employed men in repairing roads. One member
of the committee, Thomas Nicholson, Baptist
minister of Yorkley, organized other forms of
help, including the distribution of cash, food,
seed potatoes, and clothing, and helped families
to emigrate and young people to find jobs elsewhere. (fn. 20) In 1897 another Baptist minister, A. W.
Latham, organized relief during a strike of tinplaters at Lydbrook. (fn. 21) In the early 20th century
widespread poverty led to strikes in the coal
industry, (fn. 22) notably the national strike of 1926
when many hundreds of Foresters received
emergency relief and there were hunger marches
to the Westbury-on-Severn workhouse. (fn. 23) Road
building figured among schemes to alleviate
unemployment in the 1920s and 1930s. (fn. 24)
In the 1670s responsibility for maintaining
roads and bridges within the Forest fell on the
inhabitants of St. Briavels hundred. The roads
included those converging on Coleford from
Mitcheldean, Littledean, and Purton passage on
the river Severn and the Dean road linking
Mitcheldean with Newnham and Blakeney, and
the bridges included those at Cinderford, Cannop, Parkend, and Whitecroft and those carrying
the Dean road over Soudley and Blackpool
brooks. (fn. 25) Although there was a levy on the
hundred as late as 1719 to pay for repairs, (fn. 26) by
that time roads and bridges were repaired by the
surveyor general of woods and his local deputy
on instruction from the Treasury and the costs
were met by sales of timber. In 1721 the Forest's
roads were described as impassable (fn. 27) and in 1737
Parkend bridge, which carried the Purton road,
was in danger of being swept away. (fn. 28) Later a
contractor made a causeway, presumably as part
of the Purton road, to take timber out of the
Forest (fn. 29) and in the period 1761-86 the Crown
spent over £11,500 on repairing roads and
bridges. (fn. 30) From 1796 the main roads crossing
Crown land, including a road to Lydbrook
branching from the Mitcheldean-Coleford road
at Mirystock and the section of the Dean road
between Mitcheldean and Littledean, were administered by a turnpike trust. The Crown,
which was to be relieved of its responsibility for
those roads on payment of £10,645 by way of a
loan to the trustees, (fn. 31) incurred some expenditure
on the Parkend-Coleford road in 1813. (fn. 32) The
turnpike trustees, who also looked after roads in
adjoining parishes, became responsible for more
roads in 1827 (fn. 33) and built several new roads
within the Forest. They levied tolls at gates on
the Forest boundary and elsewhere, and of the
16 gates operating in 1856 the most profitable
were those at Lydbrook and Drybrook, followed
by those west of Parkend and at the foot of
Plump hill. (fn. 34)
In the mid 19th century roads on the Abbots
wood estate were maintained by its owner,
Henry Crawshay. Several of them were declared
public rights of way in 1870 (fn. 35) but throughout
the whole Forest no highway rates were levied
and many roads, including sections of some
turnpikes, remained unmetalled in the early
1870s. Sometimes road users raised a subscription to repair a particular route and on one
occasion the Crown contributed to the cost of
work on the Yorkley-Whitecroft road. (fn. 36) Roads
in detached parts of Newland at Lower
Lydbrook and Pope's Hill were maintained from
1871 by the Coleford board of health. (fn. 37) The
Westbury poor-law guardians were designated
the highway authority in East Dean in 1876 and
the Monmouth guardians were given similar
powers in West Dean in 1883. Both authorities
maintained roads built with their consent by the
Crown. (fn. 38) After the Forest turnpike trust was
abolished in 1888 (fn. 39) the county council took over
the main roads. (fn. 40)
For much of the 19th century settlement in the
Forest grew with an almost total lack of services.
Squalid conditions developed in Cinderford,
where in the late 1860s sewage flowed down the
hillside in open drains from house to house,
water was obtained from a few wells, and overcrowding, particularly in terraces near
Cinderford bridge, caused outbreaks of disease. (fn. 41) In 1867 a local board of health was formed
to improve sanitary conditions in the East Dean
part of Cinderford but its schemes were
thwarted by the Crown's refusal and ratepayers'
reluctance to contribute towards their cost and
in 1870 it was dissolved. (fn. 42) Following a resolution
of the Flaxley parish vestry in 1869 a drainage
authority was appointed for the Flaxley Meend
district of Cinderford but the task of laying
sewers was delayed by the absence of an outfall
system in East Dean. (fn. 43) Conditions in Cinderford
improved after 1875 when the sanitary authority,
at that time the Westbury guardians, acquired
greater powers there. (fn. 44) The Flaxley Meend
drainage authority, despite the wish of the Flaxley vestry to have it dissolved, (fn. 45) remained in
existence until 1884. (fn. 46) An underground drainage
and sewerage system built for Cinderford and
Ruspidge between 1876 and 1878 emptied into
Soudley brook at treatment works above
Soudley. (fn. 47) The system was extended later and
the sewage works were enlarged several times
before 1936 when they were rebuilt in a scheme,
completed in 1938, serving part of Drybrook. (fn. 48)
By 1973 there were also sewage works west of
the town beyond Bilson green. (fn. 49)
In 1877 the Westbury guardians began constructing what became known as the Cinderford
works to supply Cinderford, Ruspidge, and
parts of Ruardean Hill, Harrow Hill, and Drybrook with water pumped from an ore mine near
Green Bottom. (fn. 50) The system, which included a
small circular reservoir on Littledean hill, was
gradually extended and 841 houses had mains
water by 1885. The reservoir was enlarged and
covered over in 1896 and, to increase supplies,
a well was sunk at the pumping station in 1907. (fn. 51)
From 1923, when a reservoir was completed on
Ruardean hill, the system reached as far as
Upper Lydbrook and in 1924 mains were laid
to Plump Hill and down the Soudley valley to
Blakeney Hill. (fn. 52) At Blakeney Hill the supply
superseded an earlier scheme, which from 1891
had pumped water from a well beside Blackpool
brook up to a reservoir. (fn. 53) Other small systems
replaced by the main supply included one in
Horsepool bottom, built from a spring by 1897,
and one at Joy's Green, built from a mine in
1921. (fn. 54) In the late 1920s houses at Lower
Lydbrook still relied on a standpipe supplied
from a spring. (fn. 55) To improve the main supply a
second well was completed at Green Bottom in
1937 and a new reservoir was commissioned on
Littledean hill in 1939. After the Second World
War the supply, which also served neighbouring
parishes such as Mitcheldean, was augmented
from springs at Blakeney Hill and Lydbrook.
The Blakeney Hill scheme, which included a
pumping station and a reservoir, also served
Awre and Viney Hill and was completed in 1952.
The Lydbrook scheme, a joint venture of East
and West Dean rural district councils involving
a reservoir at the Pludds, was finished in 1954. (fn. 56)
In the western part of the Forest piped water
was supplied from Upper Redbrook from 1931
in a scheme incorporating a reservoir at Sling
and a tower at Yorkley. (fn. 57)
In 1965 the undertakings of East and West
Dean rural districts were acquired by the North
West Gloucestershire water board, which in
1974 was superseded by the new Severn-Trent
water authority. In 1969 supplies in the Cinderford area, which had been augmented from the
Newent works, were increased by the completion of a pumping station at Buckshaft, in
Ruspidge, to extract water from flooded ore
mines. From 1973 a water shortage in the Bream
and Yorkley areas was relieved from a new
pumping station near Redbrook. From 1976
much of the Forest region and some other parts
of the county were supplied with water from the
river Wye through treatment works at Wigpool,
above Mitcheldean, and in the following years
new reservoirs were built on Ruardean and
Littledean hills and at Sling. (fn. 58)
In 1859 local businessmen headed by Aaron
Goold formed a limited company to provide gas
in the Cinderford area for industrial and domestic use. The company, which built its works on
Bilson green and started production the following year, was known as the Bilson Gas Light &
Coke Co. until 1907 (fn. 59) when it was re-formed as
the Cinderford Gas Co. (fn. 60) By 1885 gas lamps
provided by a local tradesmen's association lit
parts of Cinderford's streets. (fn. 61) Oil lamps were
also provided but the town's street lighting
remained inadequate in 1905 when East Dean
parish council assumed responsibilty for it. The
gas company erected new lamps for the council,
which from 1913 also provided street lighting in
Ruspidge. (fn. 62) There were 113 public lamps in
Cinderford and Ruspidge in 1925 when electricity, newly introduced to the town by the West
Gloucestershire Power Co. from its Norchard
works, at Lydney, was first used for street
lighting. (fn. 63) Abbotswood and several other houses
in Ruspidge received electricity from Eastern
United colliery from 1919 and until the colliery
joined the electricity company's supply in
1924. (fn. 64) The Bilson gasworks, which were modernized after nationalization in 1948, closed in
1955 and Cinderford's gas supply, along with
that of much of west Gloucestershire, was piped
from Bristol by way of the Severn railway
bridge. (fn. 65) After the bridge was partially destroyed
in 1960 the supply was rerouted to a crossing
higher up the river. (fn. 66)
The Forest of Dean Recreative and Medical
Aid Association, formed before 1889 and based
in Cinderford, (fn. 67) provided an ambulance, and M.
W. Colchester-Wemyss, one of the association's
founders, (fn. 68) gave East Dean parish council a
horse-drawn vehicle for an ambulance in 1903. (fn. 69)
An ambulance kept at Cannop for taking injured
miners to hospitals in Gloucester or Monmouth
was perhaps that recorded in 1917. (fn. 70) In 1923 a
hospital built in memory of Sir Charles Dilke, a
former M.P. for the Forest, opened on the road
between Cinderford and the Speech House. Paid
for by grants and voluntary contributions, many
of them from miners, it was a single-storeyed
building with 16 beds and its running costs were
met by subscriptions. The subscribers received
free treatment. A three-storeyed block was
added in 1926 and a maternity ward in 1940.
The Dilke Memorial hospital became part of the
National Health Service in 1948 and a geriatric
wing was opened in 1968. The maternity ward
closed in 1988. (fn. 71) In 1993 the hospital was run
by the Gloucester district health authority.
In 1893 the Westbury guardians had a small
isolation hospital at Soudley. (fn. 72) It closed in 1896
when East Dean and United Parishes rural
district council, acting as a sanitary authority,
took over an iron hospital near Green Bottom
put up by the guardians earlier that year during
a smallpox epidemic in Gloucester. (fn. 73) In 1908
that hospital was moved a short distance (fn. 74) and
from 1911 it was run by a joint board representing also the urban districts of Awre,
Newnham, and Westbury. (fn. 75) It closed in 1921
but the building was retained as a smallpox
hospital for west Gloucestershire and additional
wards were erected in 1923. The hospital was
dismantled after the Second World War. (fn. 76) A
tuberculosis dispensary opened in Cinderford by
1925 (fn. 77) had moved from Belle Vue Road to
Station Street by 1935. (fn. 78) A mental hospital for
elderly people was opened in the town in 1988. (fn. 79)
To meet a shortage of burial places within the
Forest the East Dean rural district council
opened a cemetery on the road from Cinderford
to the Speech House in 1956 (fn. 80) and the West
Dean district council a cemetery at Mile End for
an area covering Milkwall, Berry Hill, and
Lydbrook in 1967. (fn. 81)
The county police authority opened stations
in several places in the Forest in the mid 19th
century. The first, recorded from 1848, was at
Upper Lydbrook. (fn. 82) In Lower Lydbrook some
policing was undertaken by constables appointed by the English Bicknor parish vestry
in the early 1860s. (fn. 83) A police station at Littledean Hill in 1869 (fn. 84) moved to a new building
in Cinderford town centre in 1877. (fn. 85) Parkend
had a police station in 1876 (fn. 86) and among other
places with a police presence later were Drybrook by 1897 (fn. 87) and Yorkley by 1920. (fn. 88)
Cinderford had no fire service in 1869 when
a blaze at the town hall, then under construction, was attended by the Coleford fire
brigade. (fn. 89) East Dean and United Parishes rural
district council provided fire-fighting equipment for the town and for Ruspidge and
Drybrook in 1895 (fn. 90) but there was no regular
fire brigade in Cinderford until after 1923. (fn. 91) A
fire station in Belle Vue Road, built by the
county fire service in the mid 1960s, was
replaced by a new station in Valley Road in
1987. (fn. 92)