CLEETHORPES – SOLUTION
T
|
H
|
E
|
R
|
T
|
N
|
E
|
C
|
E
|
R
|
U
|
S
|
I
|
E
|
L
|
E
|
S
|
T
|
U
|
L
|
M
|
P
|
E
|
T
|
E
|
R
|
B
|
L
|
U
|
N
|
D
|
E
|
L
|
L
|
P
|
S
|
A
|
N
|
H
|
I
|
D
|
R
|
N
|
H
|
U
|
M
|
B
|
E
|
R
|
S
|
T
|
O
|
N
|
O
|
O
|
T
|
T
|
S
|
S
|
G
|
E
|
G
|
E
|
A
|
T
|
O
|
N
|
O
|
I
|
T
|
A
|
T
|
S
|
I
|
L
|
N
|
R
|
T
|
I
|
H
|
G
|
N
|
O
|
F
|
I
|
H
|
T
|
R
|
E
|
L
|
T
|
S
|
A
|
C
|
S
|
S
|
O
|
R
|
R
|
T
|
A
|
I
|
L
|
E
|
E
|
D
|
R
|
T
|
N
|
I
|
O
|
P
|
N
|
R
|
U
|
P
|
S
|
O
|
A
|
H
|
L
|
T
|
I
|
S
|
S
|
I
|
I
|
U
|
L
|
E
|
N
|
T
|
W
|
I
|
T
|
N
|
E
|
S
|
P
|
O
|
L
|
T
|
T
|
E
|
S
|
S
|
E
|
R
|
N
|
T
|
H
|
O
|
R
|
P
|
E
|
S
|
R
|
E
|
Y
|
U
|
I
|
O
|
H
|
U
|
M
|
B
|
E
|
R
|
E
|
S
|
T
|
U
|
A
|
R
|
Y
|
S
|
Y
|
R
|
B
|
S
|
V
|
P
|
I
|
T
|
T
|
E
|
R
|
B
|
Y
|
M
|
C
|
T
|
H
|
E
|
S
|
E
|
A
|
E
|
S
|
E
|
G
|
S
|
C
|
L
|
E
|
G
|
G
|
Y
|
O
|
F
|
H
|
O
|
A
|
T
|
I
|
M
|
D
|
D
|
L
|
E
|
N
|
O
|
R
|
A
|
F
|
M
|
A
|
N
|
B
|
Y
|
W
|
C
|
E
|
H
|
E
|
N
|
I
|
I
|
E
|
O
|
I
|
F
|
E
|
N
|
E
|
O
|
T
|
O
|
O
|
B
|
G
|
N
|
I
|
K
|
A
|
E
|
L
|
S
|
E
|
F
|
H
|
U
|
M
|
B
|
E
|
R
|
F
|
O
|
R
|
T
|
S
|
T
|
H
|
W
|
E
|
G
|
O
|
A
|
W
|
R
|
S
|
E
|
A
|
C
|
O
|
A
|
S
|
T
|
G
|
U
|
A
|
R
|
D
|
A
|
N
|
T
|
H
|
E
|
F
|
O
|
I
|
R
|
I
|
E
|
S
|
E
|
I
|
R
|
E
|
H
|
S
|
I
|
F
|
-
|
R
|
E
|
T
|
S
|
Y
|
O
|
F
|
S
|
N
|
T
|
L
|
L
|
I
|
B
|
E
|
R
|
U
|
S
|
O
|
L
|
C
|
N
|
E
|
S
|
C
|
O
|
O
|
V
|
S
|
E
|
A
|
-
|
B
|
A
|
T
|
H
|
I
|
N
|
G
|
E
|
R
|
E
|
D
|
R
|
T
|
L
|
B
|
O
|
A
|
T
|
I
|
N
|
G
|
L
|
A
|
K
|
E
|
B
|
R
|
O
|
N
|
Z
|
E
|
A
|
G
|
E
|
R
|
A
|
C
|
T
|
S
|
R
|
E
|
T
|
A
|
W
|
L
|
A
|
N
|
I
|
C
|
I
|
D
|
E
|
M
|
S
|
SOURCE OF QUOTATION
In
A History of Clee and the Thorpes of Clee:
Being a Brief Account of the Townships of
Clee, Hoole, Itterby, Thrunscoe, Weelsby, Holm, Cleethorpes, New Clee,
Beaconthorpe, and New Cleethorpes; Comprising the Parish of Clee in the County
of Lincoln, local historian and pastor of the Congregational Church in
Lymm, Cheshire, C. Ernest Watson (1901:3), describes the environment
surrounding present-day Cleethorpes as it was at the beginning of the twentieth century, with “stumps and roots of trees which may be seen here in common
with other places on the English coast, at the far low-water mark. Silent
witnesses, these, of a time when one of the great forests covered tracts which
have since been successively river-bed, sandflats, marsh-lands and meadows.”
REFERENCES
Watson, C.
Ernest. 1901. A History of Clee and the
Thorpes of Clee: Being a Brief
Account of the Townships of Clee, Hoole, Itterby, Thrunscoe, Weelsby, Holm,
Cleethorpes, New Clee, Beaconthorpe, and New Cleethorpes; Comprising the Parish
of Clee in the County of Lincoln. Great Grimsby: Grimsby News.