No Doubting the Dowsers
The UK press got very excited recently when
it was revealed that most of the UK’s water companies use water diviners to
find leaks. It prompted Christopher Hassall of Leeds University to say: “This
isn’t a technique, it’s witchcraft” and “The statutory bodies need to be
stepping in. It is analogous to using homeopathy and reiki on the NHS. These
are unproven practices that waste time and money.”
Seemingly, only Northern Ireland Water and
Wessex Water “did not rely on esoteric energies to find their leaks.”
How times have changed, here in the province.
Back in the 1950s, those responsible for
providing water for homes and schools - and even hospitals – in rural parts of
Northern Ireland would often employ water diviners.
We had a lot of faith in their abilities. For
example, in May 1953, when a sub-committee reported to Derry Rural Council that
the water supply to council owned houses in Edenreagh had dried up and that
their engineers had drilled three wells without finding water, the council
recommended that “the services of a water diviner be sought.”
Such was the strength of our faith in the
diviners, that when those digging a well failed to strike water, it was rarely
considered to be the fault of the diviner who had divined its location. In
September 1951, at a meeting of the Tyrone Education Committee, when
it was reported that, despite following the water diviner’s directions to the
letter, the contractor had failed to strike water after sinking a well to 43
feet - by the diviner’s “calculations,” he should have struck water at 36 feet,
the committee recommended that the contractor continue digging.
And in August of 1951, contractors working on
behalf of Cookstown Rural Council had sunk a well to a depth of 70 feet – twice
as deep as the diviner had specified, without finding water. The diviner complained
that the contractor had dug the well two feet from where he had been told to
dig it. So, at the 35 feet mark, the contractor began tunnelling. Still he
found no water. The council’s solution? Keep digging.
Not everyone shared this faith in the
diviners, however. At a meeting of the Dungannon Regional Committee in August
1939, the committee were trying to establish who was to blame for the waterless
60 feet deep well at the new primary school in Ballynahaye. Mr Leebody said the
contractor was to blame because he had sunk the well, at a cost of £102,
instead of boring it, which would have cost
£24. But Mr Busby blamed the diviner, and the punishment, he believed,
should be severe. “I wouldn’t give you much for divining,” he said. “There
should be an Act of Parliament decreeing that all sorcerers and such like
should be burned. I don’t believe that any man can divine where there is water,
because it is only savouring of witchcraft.”
But, at the end of this meeting, despite
Busby’s feelings on the matter and Leebody expressing that “the whole procedure
in connection with the well had been irregular,” the committee decided that, regardless
of who was to blame, another diviner should be hired.
Why this strange devotion to these
waterfinders? Why, as the Rev. David Graham asked the County Armagh Education
in June 1954, “in these days of modern science, is it still necessary to employ
a water diviner?”
Cost, Graham was told: geologists could find
water, but diviners were cheaper. But is that accurate? Is that the only
reason?
What if an organisation had the funds to hire
a geologist and a diviner?
This was the scenario in Tyrone in September
1951, when the West Tyrone Hospital Committee was wrestling with the problem of
the hospital’s inadequate water supply. According to the diviner they had
hired, there was spring water, at a depth of 30 feet, in the ground of the
hospital. Ballcocks, said the geologist who had surveyed the area.
The committee favoured the opinion of the
dowser and instructed that digging should begin at the site he had identified.
When January came and they still hadn’t found
water, rather than cut their losses, swallow their pride and bring back the
geologist, the committee decided that the best course of action was to hire
“one of the very best water diviners in Ireland,” Archdeacon Pratt from
Enniskillen.
I have no idea if he was
successful. If he was, the committee kept it to themselves.
Sources:
- The Derry Journal, 4 May 1953
- The Guardian, 21 November 2017
- The Londonderry Sentinel, 24 January 1952
- The Mid-Ulster Mail, 12 August 1939, 18 August & 29 September 1951
- The Northern Whig, 19 September 1951
- The Portadown Times, 18 June 1954
- The Telegraph, 21 November 2017
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