By Steve Peak
(an Auxiliary Coastguard with the Hastings Company for 22 years)
2nd edition 2009
HM Coastguard is today a life-saving service,
but it owes it origins to the government’s attempts in the
18th and early 19th centuries to stop smuggling - “the offence
of importing or exporting specified goods that are subject to
customs or excise duties without having paid the requisite duties”
as A Dictionary of Law defines it. Coastguards and Smugglers tells
the story of the Coastguards in the Hastings area, and how the
‘sentinels’ of almost two centuries ago ‘blockaded’
the coast against the ‘runners’.
Smuggling began in the late 13th century, following
the imposition of an export duty on wool to protect English weavers.
Kent and Sussex had large flocks of sheep and were also England’s
closest ports to the continent, prompting many local entrepreneurs
to take up wool trading by stealth to avoid the tax. ‘Owling’,
as it was known, was a major illegal trade for the next three
centuries.
In the early days of smuggling, customs duties
were charged mainly on imports, while excise duties were initially
imposed on home-produced goods, such as beer, although it was
later put on a wide range of imported goods as well. Both the
taxes had the aim of raising funds for the government, often to
finance warfare. The Board of Excise was set up in 1643, with
the first excise duty being used to pay for the English Civil
War, then taking place. The Board of Customs was formed in 1671
to rationalise and improve the way the increasing number of import
duties were collected, and in an unsuccessful attempt to bring
owling to a halt. The two Boards were both responsible to the
Treasury, but they were to remain as completely separate, and
often competing, organisations until they were merged in 1909.
Customs officers since at least 1559 had had
the power to decide the only places around the coast where foreign
trading ships could discharge and load. The new Board of Customs
re-thought the system, resulting in the coastline being divided
into lengths called ‘Ports’, based around the most
significant port in that area. Within each Port the Board defined
which were the only legal quays and landing places for foreign
trade. As part of this, in 1680 Sussex was split into five Ports,
with Hastings designated a legal landing place in the ‘Port
of Rye’. (These three words are painted on the sterns of
Hastings fishing boats, because the 1843 Sea Fisheries Act required
all fishing boats to be registered at their local Customs Port;
hence also the letters RX in their registration number, meaning
Rye, SusseX.) The Port of Rye ran from Jury’s Gap to Beachy
Head, and the only other legal landing places within it initially
were Rye and a quay at Pevensey Bridge. Each had Customs officers
on duty, plus an office, often called the ‘Customs house’.
The Hastings landing place was defined as an “open place
or beach at Hastings from rock to rock, being the southernmost
part of the said town towards the sea” (ie, between the
East and West Hills).
The high cost of William III’s wars in
France, Scotland and Ireland after he seized the throne in 1689
resulted in the customs and excise taxes being greatly widened,
imposing high import duties on luxuries such as tea, tobacco,
brandy, wine and silks. This made smuggling even more financially
attractive to entrepreneurial law-dodgers, and from the 1690s
prompted a rapid escalation in armed and violent ‘running’.
This in turn forced the government to take tough new measures
to try to stop it, creating a virtual civil war.
The Board of Customs in 1698 was given the power
to set up two new protection services: the revenue cutters and
the riding officers. Cutters were an innovative form of fast sailing
vessel recently developed by the Dutch: single-masted, fore-and-aft
gaff-rigged vessels, capable of more sophisticated and complex
sailing manoeuvres than any other craft. The revenue cutters -
known briefly at first as ‘sloops’, then ‘cutters’
and finally as ‘cruisers’ - were stationed in 21 ports
round the coast of England and Wales, with one at each port. The
‘land guard’ of riding officers were a force of about
300 mounted Customs officers, who patrolled the coastline. Along
the Sussex and Kent coasts each officer had to cover, on his own,
a ‘guard’ of some four miles, whilst elsewhere around
Britain it was ten miles. In an emergency, the officer could ask
for military help, usually being a small local unit of dragoons
- regular mounted soldiers. The number of both revenue cutters
and riding officers fluctuated over the following decades, but
together they were to be the main government fighters against
the smugglers until 1809.
A revenue cutter pursuing the runners
The luxury goods - valuable but small in bulk
- were readily available just across the Channel, and demand for
them rose steadily in the early 18th century as the industrial
revolution increased the wealth of the upper class. This, combined
with economic depression affecting the lower class, led smuggling
to become a well-organised and highly profitable import and export
business. After about 1720 the emphasis of smuggling switched
from exporting wool to importing the luxuries. Sussex and Kent
were the front line counties straddling the shortest routes between
the suppliers across the Channel and the London markets for the
imports.
Graham Smith says in Something to Declare: “From
the late 17th up until the early 19th century, smuggling was a
major crime conducted on a colossal scale, the execution of which
was violent, ruthless and bloody in the extreme, even when judged
by the brutal standards of the time. The smugglers were encouraged
and financed by the local gentry, protected by compliant magistrates,
condoned by the clergy, aided and abetted by the ordinary people
and at times facilitated by venal revenue officers. The illegal
trade extended throughout the country and permeated every level
of society; the smuggled goods found their way into virtually
all households, from the most lowly to the highest.”
Smugglers were especially brutal and murderous
in the 1720s-40s, killing anyone - revenue man, informer, helper
- who stood in their way. Until the wiping out of the ruthless
and violent Hawkhurst gang in 1748-49, the government’s
forces trying to stop smuggling were inadequate and ineffective,
with groups of up to a hundred armed ‘runners’ doing
as they wished in much of the countryside. The Hawkhurst conflict
brought an end to their wanton brutality but the smuggling trade
increased dramatically during the following decades, as duties
increased and the development of seaside resorts like Hastings
boosted the demand for sophisticated goods. By the 1770s ‘running’
had become so prevalent in Kent and Sussex that there were entrepreneurs
in every town and in almost all villages. Smugglers had become
‘free traders’, as they preferred to be known, openly
engaging in a popular business.
Many smugglers in ports like Hastings were individuals
or small groups of people operating at a local level, using their
own boats and distributing in the neighbourhood. Hiding places
for illegal goods included cellars, graves, churches, secret passages,
barns, caves (like St Clements on the West Hill) and pubs, such
as the Stag in All Saints Street and Hastings Arms in George Street.
But there was also large-scale smuggling, often
organised by London traders. This was labour-intensive, requiring
large numbers of helpers. Local people usually specialised in
either shipping the goods across the Channel in small, fast craft,
or in the land transport by night in horse convoys of the contraband
to and from the beaches. Incoming goods were moved inland as quickly
as possible, often being hidden in the dense woods and valleys
of the Weald, on their way to the wholesale dealers in London.
These London traders hired separate gangs in the coastal districts
(such as Hastings and Rye) and in the Wealden parishes inland
en route to London (eg, Hawkhurst, for Hastings and Rye). The
large convoys were especially vulnerable to detection and needed
to be heavily guarded. A typical clash happened at Hollington
in 1735, with one smuggler shot dead.
A ‘tubman’ carries the goods ...
... and a ‘batman’ defends him
Smuggling was widely supported by all types of
people, because to the lower classes the transport of contraband
was - like poaching, wrecking and bread-rioting - an assertion
of traditional rights in difficult times, while the supporting
gentry and trading classes saw it as a blow against the corruption
of London politicians and monopolistic company merchants. It offered
high wages to the lower class in an area where fishing, weaving
and iron production were declining industries, and it gave a boost
to the income of the upper class for giving a helping hand and
turning a blind eye.
As Rudyard Kipling wrote in 'A Smuggler’s
Song' -
“If you wake at midnight
and hear a horse’s feet,
Don’t go drawing back the blind, or looking in the street,
Them that ask no questions isn’t told a lie,
Watch the wall, my darling, while the Gentlemen go by!
Five and twenty ponies,
Trotting through the dark;
Brandy for the Parson,
Baccy for the Clerk;
Laces for a lady, letters for a spy,
And watch the wall, my darling, while the Gentlemen go by!”
“Watch the wall, my darling”
Britain was engaged in a series of wars through
the 18th century, and the duties were steadily increased to raise
the needed finance. But as duties went up, so did the incentive
for smuggling. The Customs service was therefore further expanded
where possible. One method was to improve the local Customs houses,
which most ports and landing places had had since the late 17th
century. Customs staff collected dues from boats and searched
cargoes, while the house itself was the meeting place for merchants,
shipowners and ships’ master to discuss commerce and seek
information on all aspects of shipping. In Hastings there was
a Customs house from at least the early 18th century, and probably
earlier.
Hastings was an obvious smugglers’ base
because it was a long-established port, if not an official Customs
‘Port’. It had a large number of indigenous fishermen
and seafarers who were used to handling small boats in difficult
conditions, and for whom smuggling could bring much better earnings.
In addition, the many cliffs, glens and inlets between Galley
Hill in the west and Cliff End in the east provided well-hidden
landing places. Hastings for many centuries had also had strong
trading and cultural connections with France, as Boulogne was
only 45 sailing miles from the town, in an easy straight line,
while London was more than 140 difficult twisting and turning
miles.
From 1733 the Customs onshore anti-smuggling
forces of Kent were run by the most influential man in Hastings,
John Collier (1685-1760), a solicitor, judge advocate, property
manager, banker and government agent. In 1756 he passed on his
anti-smuggling role - called Surveyor General of the Customs for
Kent - and leading position in the town to his son-in-law Edward
Milward Snr (1723-1811). Local legend has it that Collier and
Milward (who was mayor of Hastings 26 times) received large incomes
from their liaison with the chief smugglers over several decades,
as did other Customs officers around the coast. The senior officers
were well-known for having little effect, because their positions
were often filled by political jobbery; corruption, inefficiency
and laxity were widespread
Edward Milward Jnr inherited the fortunes and
large estates of both his father and Collier, and this included
the three miles of cliffs east from Rock-a-Nore to Fairlight that
have always formed a major part of the coastline covered by the
Hastings Coastguards. This attractive area, now part of the Hastings
Country Park Nature Reserve, was never sold for development because
most of the inheritors of the Milward estate were public-spirited
charity benefactors who loved the glens, cliffs and woodland.
Hastings was a base not only for smugglers and
their opponents, but also for ship-builders who supplied both
sides of the war with high quality vessels with which to fight
each other. The favourite vessel of both friend and foe was the
gaff cutter, the design of which had evolved into a true thoroughbred
by the 1780s, thanks to the key role the vessel played in both
carrying out smuggling and in trying to stop it. By then the revenue
cutters had acquired a large sail area and a very long bowsprit,
up to four-fifths the length of the hull, which together made
the vessel especially agile and fast. A law of 1787 made it illegal
for any other craft to have such a bowsprit.
One of the best-known builders of the cutters
on the south coast was the Hastings partnership Ransom and Ridley.
William Ransom and William Ridley, both born 1770, were making
vessels by at least 1801. They built their first revenue cutter
in 1811 and made them on a regular basis for the Customs from
1822 until 1841, being then one of the Board’s three preferred
builders on the south coast. In those two decades this respected
firm built many craft, of all shapes and sizes, for ports all
round the coast. In 1833 they constructed a 72-ton revenue cruiser
called Prince George, which Prince George himself launched that
April, the only recorded launching of any revenue vessel by royalty.
Their shipyard was on the beach where today Albert Road meets
the A259.
Increasing hostilities with the French from the
late 1780s, and the aid given to Napoleon by the smuggling trade,
led the British government to try to strengthen the coastal defence
forces. But the 1780s had been the boom years of smuggling - their
anarchic heyday - and strong action had to be taken to stop the
‘running’. In 1809 the Customs were given the go-ahead
by the government to strengthen its preventive forces by setting
up the Preventive Water Guard (PWG). In addition, the new Martello
towers, built from 1805 against the French invasion that never
happened, became good bases for the anti-smuggling units.
A Preventive man
But the ending of the Napoleonic War in 1815
brought the discharge - and therefore unemployment - of about
330,000 soldiers and sailors, a good recruiting ground for smuggling
at a time of widespread poverty in the rural south. The badly-run
PWG was unable to stop the post-war surge in smuggling, so in
1816 the PWG was transferred from the control of the Board of
Customs to the Admiralty, becoming more of a military force. In
addition, the Navy from late 1816 replaced the PWG on the Kent
and Sussex coast with a new ‘coastal blockade’ of
armed sailors and marines on foot patrol. This was the first time
regular units of the Navy had been used onshore in England as
a law enforcement service. The PWG eventually merged with the
other Customs forces to become the Coastguard in 1822, although
the blockaded coast remained under the Admiralty until 1831
Smugglers had always been ready to forcefully
defend themselves or to attack intruding officers, but the conflict
became most violent in the clashes in the hard years of the 1820s,
with both sides often being ready to fight to the finish. The
last major conflicts in the Hastings area were at Sidley in 1828,
Fairlight Glen in 1831 and Pevensey in 1833. But by 1831 the Navy
had largely won its war against smuggling, and this, plus a Whitehall
economy drive, brought an end to the coast blockade. .From the
early 1840s a great reduction in import duties, plus a decline
in public support for smuggling and the use of modern harbours
rather than beaches as landing places, resulted in smuggling in
places like Hastings almost disappearing. At the same time world
trade was rapidly increasing, bringing a steady rise in shipping
accidents. So from about 1850 the Coastguard began focusing on
life-saving, now its main role
A fight to the death - Preventive men and smugglers