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GALE AND STORM.
WEEK OF WILD WEATHER.
DAMAGE ALONG THE FYLDE COAST.
The storm
which swept the coast last weekend wrought considerable
havoc all along the Fylde seaboard, and it will be memorable
for the heavy rains by which it was accompanied. Hundreds of
pounds damage to property was done, and traffic was
disorganised for a day and a half.
But in
spite of the severity of the storm, the velocity of the wind
on Friday evening was not so high as many people imagined,
and in many cases it has been exceeded in storms in recent
years. The highest velocity registered on Friday was sixty
miles an hour, while in a storm last winter the wind blew at
over seventy miles an hour. From seven o'clock on Friday
evening until five o'clock on Saturday morning, the wind
maintained the speed of between fifty and sixty miles an
hour. On Thursday the highest gust recorded was forty-eight
miles an hour.
ST. ANNES.
At St.
Annes all telephonic and telegraphic communication with the
outer world was cut off for a time. Great drifts of sand
blocked the railway at South Shore, some of the drifts being
six and eight feet deep. The motor-rail service was entirely
suspended during Saturday, and passengers from inland towns
to St. Annes, Ansdell and Lytham, had to change at Kirkham
and be brought forward by a local relief train. All
passengers between St. Annes and Blackpool had to travel via
Kirkham. Gangs of Men were employed in clearing the sand,
but it was not until Sunday afternoon that the service was
resumed. Traffic on the Blackpool, St. Annes and Lytham
Tramway was disorganised on Friday evening, owing to the
over head wires breaking.

Chimneys,
slates and ridge tiles were dislodged in many parts of the
town. At the corner or Lightburne Avenue and South Promenade
the entire chimney of a house crashed through the roof and
smashed the purlings, doing damage to the extent of many
pounds. A portion of the chimney stack at Mrs. Wade's, St.
Andrew's Road South was blown down. Six plate-glass windows
were blown in—three at Messrs. Gill and Read's, and one each
at Boots, Julietts, and Cookson's. Yet at the Pier, where
the full force of the gale was felt, not an inch of glass
was broken, the only damage being the lifting of some lead
sheeting. Part of the scaffolding on the additions to the
Imperial Hydro was blown down and other damage down. Great
quantities of sand were again blown over the Promenade onto
the Esplanade Gardens. An electric light standard in St.
Annes Road West, near the Pier, was blown down.

Fortunately
the tides were not high so that there were no inundations by
the sea. But the seas ran high, and two of the big buoys;
which mark the Ribble channel broke loose from their
moorings and came ashore at St.Annes. The Packington buoy,
somewhat similar to the Nelson buoy in shape and size, was
cast ashore near Fort William, and Salter's buoy was washed
up opposite East Bank Road. Part of the high wooden fence on
the westerly side of the Clifton Park Racecourse was also
smashed.
BLACKPOOL.
At
Blackpool there was also considerable damage to property.
Chimney stacks, ventilators, windows, window blinds, and
advertisement hoardings, were the principal victims of the
gale. The gale also caused a stoppage of the Promenade
tramway service and some of the tramway men did not get
their cars back to the depot until after 2-0 o'clock on
Saturday morning, while others were out even longer. Part of
the glass roof over the main platform at Talbot Road,
Station was broken by the fury of the wind, and fell with a
great clatter on to the platform, but fortunately no one was
hit. An alarming incident was the blowing, down of a portion
of a large advertisement hoarding in Whitegate Drive whilst
a motor-car was passing. Some of the wood crashed on the
car, but the occupants were not injured.
Three of
the older houses in Hawes Side Lane suffered rather
seriously, the front walls giving way, causing considerable
harm to the inhabitants, while some premises in Back Dean
Street, South Shore, were also damaged.
FLEETWOOD.
Fleetwood
escaped luckily, for with the exception of a few slates
being dislodged, no damage was done to property, and no
casualties to shipping were reported.
The "Duke
of Cumberland," from Belfast to Fleetwood, on Friday night,
had a very rough passage. Heavy and continuous seas broke
over her, and she did not arrive in Fleetwood until after
8-0 o'clock on Saturday morning. When the vessel was west of
Lune Buoy, she felt the full force of the gale. The bridge
end telegraph to the engine-rooms was swept away, the panels
of the fan-room were smashed in by the waves, and the top of
the capstan was wrenched off and sent through the rails. The
steerage was flooded; and the passengers had to leave their
quarters. Owing to the strong wind, it was impossible to
reach the saloon.
The "Duke
of Cornwall,"- on her outward journey from Fleetwood to
Belfast the same night, also experienced the full force of
the gale during most of the passage. Tremendous seas swept
over her, and seats in the after-part of the saloon and in
the poop were wrenched from their fastenings, and thrown
against the rails with considerable violence, smashing them
in several places. The "Cornwall"' arrived back at Fleetwood
On Sunday morning, in good time, without encountering any
further mishap. The damage to both Steamers is being
repaired in Fleetwood.
The crews
of the trawlers which arrived during, the week-end reported
having experienced very rough weather, but fortunately no
damage was sustained by any of them.
The rough
weather had a disastrous effect on the fishing industry. The
supplies at Fleetwood during the week-end were very meagre,
and famine prices ruled.
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