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Old Times at Otterbourne (1891)

by Charlotte Mary Yonge

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"[...] There must have been a great quickening of activity in Otterbourne soon after the Restoration, for it was then that the Itchen canal or barge river, as it used to be called, was dug, to convey coals from Southampton, and, of course, this much improved the irrigation of the water meadows.  This canal was one of the first made in England, and was very valuable for nearly two hundred years, until the time of railways. In 1690, a larger parchment register was provided, and every two years it appears to have been shown up to the[...]".… (more)
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"[...] There must have been a great quickening of activity in Otterbourne soon after the Restoration, for it was then that the Itchen canal or barge river, as it used to be called, was dug, to convey coals from Southampton, and, of course, this much improved the irrigation of the water meadows.  This canal was one of the first made in England, and was very valuable for nearly two hundred years, until the time of railways. In 1690, a larger parchment register was provided, and every two years it appears to have been shown up to the[...]".

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