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The Spa Baths
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Heritage
Trail Location 6 - The Spa Baths |
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You
are now looking at the Spa Baths where the history of Woodhall Spa
began. It was here in 1821 that John Parkinson, a land agent for
Sir Joseph Banks of Revesby, sank a shaft to find coal, but instead
hit a spring of salt water. The shaft was abandoned in 1822 and the
water overflowed into a stream where it cured sick cattle who drank
it. People then started to drink the water
as a cure and initially bathed in an open
wooden tank.
This encouraged the local landowner and squire Thomas
Hotchkin, to build a brick bath and a windlass in about 1829/30.
Its fame spread and in 1838 / 1839 he built a proper bath house
with 6 treatment rooms and a hotel where all the latest treatments
were available to the visitor. Hotchkin also laid out parkland with
shrubbery and walks, all at a cost of (then) £30,000. This
was continually expanded
and in 1887 was bought by the "Syndicate",
a group of businessmen who enlarged the Spa Baths and the Spa Hotel
(later the Victoria Hotel), and laid out attractive wooded gardens
and walks. |
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The Spa Baths in about
1905 with the frontage and Pump Room built by the ‘Syndicate’ in 1886. The
bandstand on the left was later moved to the Spa grounds to the left
of the Kinema-in-the-woods. Photo courtesy Woodhall Spa Cottage
Museum |
The timbered roof of the pump room and the present
frontage was designed by C. F. Davis for the Syndicate. It is
the main visible feature left after the collapse of the well in 1983,
although the main part of the former Hotchkin bath house still exists
around the back, but is obscured by the pebble dash frontage.
The Syndicate included:
The Right Honourable Edward Stanhope, M.P. for
Horncastle,
The Right Honourable Henry Chaplin M.P.
Sir Richard Webster M.P.
T. Cheney Garfit Esq., Louth
The Reverend J. O. Stephens, Rector of Blankney (who was the
secretary).
Sir Stafford Northcote, (Lord Iddesleigh)
Lord Alverstone, Lord Chief Justice.
They also commissioned Richard Adolphus Came,
a London architect who later settled here, to design a "garden
city" for Woodhall Spa. The names of the "Syndicate" are
remembered in the road names to the South of the town which they
hoped would be a large suburban style housing estate. It was never
completed due to slowness of selling building plots and, consequently,
the investors lost most of their money.
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Why
look for coal at Woodhall Spa? |
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In
the early 19th century, this area was a desolate piece of sandy and
boggy wasteland. The area was largely uninhabited and, despite the
enclosures of the 18th century, largely uncultivated, especially
the area around the Tower of the Moor (a remnant of late medieval
building to the east of the Spa Baths). Kirkstead was the largest
village in the area with a population in 1811 of 110 with 26 houses:
an odd place to sink a coal mine.
In the early 19th century Britain was advancing into the industrial
revolution. Consequently, there was a tremendous demand for coal,
not only for the new steam engines but also for domestic heating.
In an isolated area like Lincolnshire, the cost of transport via
canals, the main form of transport for bulk cargo, was high. Entrepreneurs
looked enviously on the profits made by land owners sinking coal
mines on the sides of the Pennines. They also saw that the further
East, away from the Pennines the mines went, the deeper the mines
had to go to obtain coal, until they were too deep to be exploited
with the technology then available.
But surely, people argued, there must be coal close
to the surface in Lincolnshire!
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Areas
on the West side of the Wolds frequently turned up coal when they
were ploughed. Coal was also being washed up on the beach. This
was before steam ships and, although cargoes of coal from passing
ships were often washed up on the beach, this was not enough to account
for the coal found.
In 1816, a land surveyor, Mr. Edward Bogg, wrote
a paper for the recently formed Geological Society. In it he described
the geology and the rocks found in the Wolds area of Lincolnshire.
He also included a map, a copy of which, with some modifications
was published in 1820 by George Weir and is reproduced left.
The map shows rocks dipped to the East, and we now
know that they continue to extend under the North Sea. The map also
shows a large area on the West side of the Wolds covered by "alluvium
of shale" (green) and "alluvium of chalk" (grey).
They were called "alluvium" because they were laid on
top of the eastward dipping rocks and it was thought that they were
laid down during the Biblical flood. It was these "alluviums" that
contained fragments of coal oil shale, thought to be washed
out of the rocks just below the surface.
Similar oil shale and fragments of coalified timber
were found at Doddington on Bain in a bore hole sunk by Edward
and Thomas Bogg. They went down 100yds (92 metres). without success
but found enough evidence to convince them that the deeper they went,
the better the results would be.
Edward Bogg published their results and suggested
that seams should extend under the Wolds and out to sea where the
sea was washing the coal out of the rocks.
In the early 19th Century the coal
seams were thought to extend under the
Lincolnshire Wolds and be eroded under the sea to produce coal fragments
found on the beach. ‘Jetty
coal’ is a old word for woody coal. |
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Armed
with this, and similar information, coal prospectors realised that
the further West they went from the Wolds, the closer the coal would
be to the surface. Since the land to the West of the River Witham
was covered with limestone and sandstones; just East of the
River Witham would be a good place. South of Horncastle, and in ditches
near Stixwould patches of the same clays investigated by Bogg were
found. A well drained site, slightly higher than the then marshy
areas around like the Woodhall Spa area which sits on patches of
sandy gravel on top of the clays, would be an ideal place,.
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Digging
for Coal |
Possibly two shafts had been sunk in the area when
it was reported that some coal had been found as early as 1813.
Several speculators were involved before a more
serious attempt was made about quarter of a mile east of Kirkstead
Bridge by a Samuel Stainforth in 1819. After reaching a depth of
about 190 metres the attempt was abandoned because only thin
seams of coalified material had been found.
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A view
down the Spa Baths well showing the barrel used to lift the
spa water. The sides of the well show brickwork and paler
rings which are the rings of oak blocks to which the original
ladders and staging was fixed. Photographed by J. Wield c.1890. Photo
courtesy: Woodhall
Spa Cottage Museum |
Eventually a land agent for the Banks estate, John
Parkinson, became involved in the attempt. John Parkinson had three
aims; to build a city, to plant a forest, and to sink a coal mine.
The first was the development of New Bolingbroke, the second later
became the Ostler's Plantation on Kirkby Moor, and the third was
the Woodhall coal mine, started in 1821, on land owned by Thomas
Hotchkin, the Lord of the Manor of Woodhall. All three proved to
be financial disasters. The miners were encouraged to
keep going by finds of small amounts of coal and carbonised wood,
and the hope, in the light of the then geological thinking that better
coal would be found deeper down.
A 3 metre diameter shaft was dug down to a depth
of 256 metres, using a system of stage and ladder construction.
Strata containing the weaker shale was bricked up with dry brickwork
and every couple of metres or so a ring of oak blocks was fitted
in to which could be fixed ladders and staging.
It was probable that mine waste was lifted up by
a horse gin since this was only a trial shaft and bringing in a steam
engine and the coal to fuel it would have been costly. The railways
did not come into the area until 1844. Eventually, after boring
a further 110 metres, at a total depth of 368 metres (1200ft),
the attempt was abandoned in 1823 and the mine covered over. In 1826
Parkinson went bankrupt.
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So
what went wrong? |
There are no thick seams of coal in the Upper Jurassic
Shale, where the miners thought that they would find coal. There
are oil shales in the top part near the Wolds, and these will burn,
but poorly. We now know that the "alluvium" was in fact
laid down by glaciers about 400,000 years ago, and these glaciers
came from the North bringing coal scraped off the Pennines and North
Yorkshire. Similar glacial deposits containing coal, also occur off
the East side of the Wolds, but are of a different date, and it is
from these deposits that the sea washes out the coal.
When John Parkinson didn't find the coal he was
convinced was there, he went deeper and deeper. No records were made
at the time and he probably didn't realise that he had gone through
the shales that he was trying to find coal in, especially as he found
similar shale beneath the Middle Jurassic from which the Spa water
comes. The rocks that Parkinson stopped boring in come to the surface
West of Lincoln, near the Trent.
Today we know that there are thick coal seams under
Woodhall Spa, but at over 1500 meters deep they are much too deep
for even today’s technology. However, they have generated
gas where they pass out under the North Sea. |
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The
Rise of the Spa |
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Section of the
Spa Baths well showing the strata the miners passed through and
the source of the Woodhall Spa water. It is now thought that
some of the water came from the other strata the well passed
through.
Czajkowski M.J., ‘The Source of the Woodhall Spa Mineral water’,
Mercian Geol., vol. 15 part 2, (2001). |
During the sinking of the 3 metre
diameter shaft, the miners had cut across a spring at a depth of
159 metres (520 feet), which they had then bricked up to prevent
the flooding of the shaft.
Eventually this water seeped into
the shaft and filled it up. The water, so the story goes, overflowed
into the stream by the side where it was drunk by some sick cattle
owned by Thomas Hotchkin. The cattle were cured and the water, as
early as 1824, began to get a reputation as a health cure.
This encouraged the local Squire, Thomas Hotchkin,
to build a small bath house, containing eight bathing rooms, in 1839.
The Spa's reputation spread and following the advice of Dr. Granville,
a well known authority on Spas, the bathing rooms were improved
and the water analysed. The water was found to be unusual because
is contained very high levels of iodine and bromine, thought to be
beneficial in curing all ailments in 19th Century Britain.
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mg / l |
Na |
7 693 |
K |
9 |
Ca |
555 |
Mg |
301 |
CO3 |
116 |
Cl |
13 514 |
SO4 |
79 |
I |
5.7 |
Br |
47 |
SiO2 |
8.5 |
iron etc. |
2.9 |
NH3 |
9.4 |
tds |
22 624 |
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chemical ratios |
Na / Cl |
Br / Cl |
I / Cl |
Spa Bath Shaft water |
0.51 |
0.0035 |
0.00042 |
sea water |
0.53 |
0.0034 |
0.000003 |
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Analysis
of the spa water made by Frankland 1891. Numerous analyses were
made, all fairly similar. On the right is a table showing the
comparison with sea water showing the particular high concentration
of iodine ( I ). Iron etc, is Fe in various forms; tds = total
dissolved solids. Above comparison of seawater with iodine (
I ) and bromine
( Br ). Czajkowski
M.J., ‘The Source of the Woodhall Spa Mineral
water’, Mercian Geol., vol. 15 part 2, (2001). |
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Fragment
of an aerial view of the Spa Baths and hotel (later the Victoria
Hotel) drawn in about 1865 by Thomas Wield. It shows the Spa
Baths built by Hotchkin in 1839 – 49. Note the well and
well head gear is outside the spa building. Later it was enclosed
by the extensions made by the ‘Syndicate’. Image
courtesy: Woodhall Spa Cottage Museum. |
By 1849 a complex involving a high class bath house and a hotel,
the Woodhall Spa Iodine Hotel, later called the Victoria Hotel, had
been constructed. In the 1880's and 90's the complex was again modernised
and enlarged by the Syndicate.
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Watercolour painted by Miss Hotchkin in about
1865. The two low side buildings contained the treatment rooms.
Image courtesy: Woodhall Spa Cottage Museum. |
Woodhall Spas heyday was from perhaps 1890 to the
First World War. During this time adits (horizontal tunnels) were
sunk into the Kellaways sandstone, the source of the water, to obtain
more water though supply was always difficult when demand was high,
resulting in closure of Spa Baths during the winter months.
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General
plan of the Spa baths after extensions by the ‘Syndicate’ in
1887. The original Hotchkin building (yellow) was enclosed
by the later buildings now fronted with pebbledash and have
remained largely intact. Adapted from various sources
including a prospectus published by the ‘Syndicate’ in
1887 |
The water was originally drawn
off by a hydraulic belt, a continuous felt belt, like a roller towel,
which was dipped in the well and then squeezed though rollers to
remove the water. Later a steam engine, made by Roby of Lincoln,
was installed in the 1880s. The steam engine was removed in the early
1960's, when an electric pump was fitted, and is now in the Museum
of Lincolnshire Life, along with the barrel in which the water was
lifted.
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Steam engine by Roby of
Lincoln installed in 1880. The barrel contained non returnable
valves which allowed the water to be hoisted up. A tray was swung
under the barrel, the valves opened and the water drained by chutes
under the floor to storage tanks. >
Photo courtesy - Woodhall Spa Cottage Museum. |
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Whilst in
the mid 19th Century treatments were related to the benefits of
drinking the water, or bathing in it, to relieve gout, there was
a change towards rheumatic treatments in the 20th century. The water
being used in pools because of the extra buoyancy it gave when patients'
joints were exercised.
Numerous other treatments were offered. These included
treatments fibrositis, nervous disorders, heat disease,
intestine ailments and various skin treatments.
Treatment methods also included the use of “Fango”,
the salt impregnated mud extracted from the source rock when the
adits were cleaned or enlarged (this was done on a regular basis),
heated and applied as a poultice. “Motherlye”, a
concentration of spa water and hot wax treatment was also used. By
the 1920s interests in radiotherapy meant that ultraviolet ray and
electrical heat treatment was being offered.
During and after the First World War the Spa went
into a decline; the Spa Baths closed for a time and was eventually
bought by the Weigalls, who owned Petwood House, now a hotel. In
the 1930s they set up the Spa Baths Trust to keep the Baths going
before they left the area. Petwood House became a Hotel. The Spa
Baths continued to supply treatment for rheumatism using the spa
water. Water was still drunk locally, though not to the same extent
as in the 19th Century. |
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Various
treatment rooms described in brochures issued by the Spa Baths in
the early1920s |
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Mineral baths with douche
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Schnee bath to immerse limbs |
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Dowsing radient heat bath
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electric light bath
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douche and massage
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Aix douche massage bath room
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Post
Second World War |
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The
Spa well collapsed, on the morning of the 23rd September.
The upper brickwork has collapsed and is being enlarged by
the swirling water. Parts of the surrounding buildings are
beginning to collapse into the hole. Photo courtesy - Woodhall
Spa Cottage Museum. |
With the setting up of the National Health Service
in 1946, the Spa Baths supplied spa water for rheumatic treatment.
A larger pool was built within an old storage tank in a building
at the back and equipment was installed to assist patients to enter
and leave the pool.
The patients were brought by ambulance or stayed
at the Alexander Hospital which was originally built on the instigation
of Rev. Otter J. Stephens of Blankney, one of the "Syndicate" in
1890. This hospital is the large building just past and opposite
the Golf Hotel, built in the Queen Anne Revival Style. It continued
to be used by the National Health for patients attending the Spa
Baths until 1983. It is now a block of flats.
Most of the treatments used in the 20th century
relied on application of heat, either through the hot water douches
and massages in the various treatment rooms illustrated above, or
immersion in the swimming pool.
On the morning of the 21 September 1983, the secretary of the Spa
Baths was called to the Well Room by the engineer, Mr. Bob Bloom.
The water in the old spa water shaft was churning round and around
and parts of the well sides were seen to collapse into the well.
Within a few hours the hole had opened so that the outer wall gave
way followed by partial collapse of the roof. |
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Buildings continued to
collapse as the hole enlarged. Eventually on the next day the
large chimney, formally used for the steam engine boiler,
fell into the well, sealing the hole. Photo
Courtesy - Woodhall Spa Cottage Museum |
Within a day
the foundations of the large chimney, formally used for the steam
boilers, were undermined. It crashed down into the hole, striking
the side of the water tower, and taking much of the remaining
outer buildings with it. The enlargement of the hole having then
stopped, the remains of the surrounding damaged buildings, plus several
tons of limestone, was then bulldozed into the hole.
This incident marked the end of the Spa Bath shaft
and since the North Lincolnshire Hospital Board had already decided
to build a new treatment centre in Lincoln, the Spa Baths Trust that
managed the Spa Baths was unable to continue in its former form.
They still continue to provide grants towards medical services from
the income from the sale of the Baths and the Alexandera Hospital.
Spa treatments began to go out of favour in the
1960s and by the 1980s there was declining interest from the National
Health Service. It was generally considered that the application
of radiant heat did little to promote permanent cures, though the
treatment gave considerable relief for a short time which promoted
considerable well being. It was generally considered that the drinking
or application of the spa water was of little benefit.
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After
the collapse, the rubble from the destroyed and damaged buildings
were bulldozed down the hole, followed by 500 tonnes of limestone.
Photo courtesy Woodhall Spa Cottage Museum. |
However some research in Bath suggested that immersion
and drinking the spa water may have had some success in the 19th
and early 20th Century for successfully treating some forms of gout.
This was because, it was suggested, many of the forms of ailments
described as gout in the 19th century were in fact cases of lead
poisoning. Lead was commonly used for table glasses, lead pipes and
various lead glazes uses in pottery increasingly throughout the industrial
revolution until the 1950s. Much of this lead got into the diet producing
chronic lead poisoning. Immersion and drinking water with a high
specific gravity helped to purge the lead from the system, thus relieving
the “gout”.
Spas and spa water is still actively used on the
continent, particularly in Eastern Europe and it is an interesting
fact that the Woodhall Spa Baths was better know in Germany in
the 1970s than it was in Britain.
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The Spa Baths today |
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Rear view of the Pump room from
near the well head. Photo from webmaster's collection |
The Spa
Baths were subsequently closed and went into private ownership.
They have not been used or maintained for the past 23 years. |
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Inside the Pump room looking towards the
Main Entrance. Photo from webmaster's
collection |
Needless to say, the historic
buildings to which Woodhall Spa owes its existence have become
an eyesore! |
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One of the Woodhall Spa sign illustrating the legend of the beginnings of the
Spa. |
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The Heritage Trail |
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Click
on the numbers on the map to visit the next point on the Woodhall Spa Heritage
Trail ( locations 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 10, 11, 16, 17 & 19
are currently active) |
The trail
can be started at any location, but we suggest you also visit the
Cottage Museum to see the photographs taken by John Wield during
the heyday of the Spa and items associated with this
unique Victorian Spa town.
The Trail is just one of several projects in the hands of the Woodhall Spa Parish Council sponsored Heritage Committee. Click here if you are interested in the committee or their projects.
How
well do you know Woodhall Spa?
See
if you can identify the location of these architectural
features and items of street furniture! Or find the Letterbox
Find out more abouit the Woodhall Spa Conservation
Area |
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Acknowledgements
Photographs and diagrams;- Woodhall Cottage Museum &
Michael Czajkowski
Text;- Michael Czajkowski
Produced by;- Woodhall Spa Heritage Committee.
Funded by;-
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If you
possess any interesting old photographs of Woodhall Spa and you
don't mind them appearing on this website then please contact
the webmaster.
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last updated 17 Feb
07 |
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