The origins of Bourne

Water gushes from St Peter's Pool, the very heart of Bourne's water

supply, feeding the Bourne Eau at its source

Bourne has always been associated with water and we have to look to the Wellhead or St Peter's Pool for its origins because the name indicates that this is a place near to the source of a spring or stream and it is the course of the ensuing waterway that gives the town its name. The Old English word burna, common in the early Anglo-Saxon period and found in modern form as burn, especially in Scotland, means stream and also spring although this particular Bourne was recorded in a document of about 960 as Brunne. Over the years, this became Bourn and then in the late 19th century is was changed to Bourne to avoid confusion with other places of similar name, particularly Bourn in Cambridgeshire that had already caused difficulties with the postal and railway services.

The water from the Wellhead springs runs into the Bourne Eau, a name that has also puzzled many people who have decided that the word eau comes from the French, meaning water, but that is not so. It actually derives from , a pure Old English word that was erroneously given by cartographers on their maps as eau and few examples of this spelling occur in documents before the 18th century. Although the modern tendency is to go for a French sound when pronouncing eau, this does appear to be a very recent practice. is a dialectical survival in its own right meaning drain and far more accurate than the French when relating to a Lincolnshire watercourse and older people in many parts of the county still say Eddick rather than Eaudyke. 

And so the water connection is correct and it seems quite probable that the early settlement which later grew into the town of Bourne originated around the Wellhead, a natural feature reputed to be replenished by seven springs that would have provided an abundant supply of water for the early settlers. In fact the water here has been so productive in past years that Willingham Franklin Rawnsley in his informative book Highways & Byways of Lincolnshire published in 1914 wrote that "near the castle hill is a strong spring called Peter's Pool or Bourne Wellhead, the water of which runs through the town and is copious enough to furnish a water supply for Spalding". 

This water from the Bourne area was also reputed to have curative properties and a century ago one of the most important springs was Braceborough Spa where it gushed from the limestone at the rate of a million and a half gallons daily. There was another source five miles to the west at Holywell and a chalybeate spring at Billingborough was described as "continually gushing up" near the church while there were others at Great Ponton and Stoke Rochford that was said to "abound in springs of pure water rising out of the rock and running into the River Witham". 

The springs at Bourne are possibly one of the most ancient sites of artesian water supply in the country, figuring so prominently in the history of the town that at times, quite remarkable traditions have gathered around them. One of these was still current in the mid-19th century and asserted that the Bourne Eau flowed underground from Stoke Rochford, sixteen miles away, and that a white duck which was immersed at Stoke, was later seen to rise at the Wellhead, a tale that owes more to the imagination than actuality. 

See also     Water supplies     When Bourn became Bourne

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