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The Giant of Barnby - Amos Beamish Traditional Geocache

Hidden : 1/12/2013
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

This cache is situated near St John the Baptist Church, Barnby.  Limited Parking is available in the layby next to the church.  Please note that the layby is just off the Barnby Bends on Beccles Road, so please do take care when pulling in/out of the layby. The cache can also be accessed from the footpath at the rear of the church to avoid this busy stretch of road.

Amos Beamish was my great, great, great, grandfather’s cousin.  He was baptised (25th May 1845) and buried (4th March 1914) at St John The Baptist’s Church, Barnby.  He was a fisherman and agricultural labourer and was also known as "The Giant of Barnby"

Amos Beamish (1845-1914) of Barnby, Suffolk was and is a local hero. He stood six feet six inches tall and weighed 28 stones (3921bs/184ks).   Because of his size the hatchways of vessels he sailed on were enlarged, but since he was said to do the work of two men owners were pleased to modify their boats.  During a fishing voyage to Cornwall he was challenged by the Newlyn Giant to lift a stone weighing 60 stones (8401bs/395ks), which he did with ease, the Newlyn man failing. Amos could carry four hundredweight of cement at once, one bag tucked under each arm and a sack in each hand, a total of 448 1bs. He had a tremendous appetite and would eat 30 herrings at a sitting.


Victor W Beamish was fortunate to meet an old fisherman who sailed with Amos Beamish, the Barnby Giant, and who told the story that he and Amos were walking along what was then a lane from Barnby to Lowestoft to work, when they were confronted by two men intent upon robbing them. Amos did not hesitate. He threw the first man across one hedge and the second man over the other - while his young friend had only to stand by and watch the ill-matched contest. And Frank Beamish tells the story that his mother Frances, when visiting Amos and Louisa, was sitting in front of their cottage when Amos came home carrying a tree trunk on his shoulder; and when he threw it on the ground the whole cottage shook.

Legend has it that during the Barnby train crash Amos Beamish lifted the entire end of a carriage in order to release trapped passenger. The following extracts are taken from The Lowestoft Journal date 2nd January 1892.

TERRIBLE RAILWAY CATASTROPHE near Lowestoft.

Three men killed and more than thirty injured.

One of the most alarming and at the same time disastrous railway accidents with which this district has been visited for years, and which in some of its features recalls not a few terrible incidents ...  took place at Barnby siding on Christmas Eve, Dec .24th (1891), and caused the utmost consternation amidst the inhabitants of Lowestoft and the neighbourhood generally, and ...    Mist from the nearby marshes had obscured all vision. The down train from London was late arriving.  The up train from Lowestoft left the siding at Barnby, proceeding onto the single track, and  “... the Lowestoft train dashed into the other with such force as to deal out death and disaster in every direction, and by which three of our fellow creatures ... were suddenly deprived of their existence. ... Being a festive season, in the cottages at Barnby the villagers were lingering over the 'cup that cheers but not inebriates'...  At the local pub, too, there was a considerable number of visitors at the time, and these hurried with all possible speed to the place ... Foremost amongst these was Mr Amos Beamish, a man of almost gigantic strength, which he turned to such good account as to make one believe it was specially increased for the occasion. Those present who witnessed his exertions and were undoubtedly stimulated by them, speak in the highest possible manner of the service he
rendered.  It seems his wife had been visiting a sick relative, and had nearly reached her home, when she-heard the fearful collision of the two engines, and she rushed into the house telling her husband what had taken place and the  heart-rending screams to which she had been compelled to listen.  The brave fellow at once rushed out with an implement which lay at hand which he soon wielded with such effect as to be the means of rescuing numbers from their perilous position, and which might possibly have ended in their case also fatally.  By this time fires, made with portions of the wreck had been kindled, and amidst the cruel fog, which had been the prime cause of the disaster, might be seen his massive form moving from place to place, here assisting one from a quantity of debris and again with his axe cutting away the woodwork of the wrecked carriages and releasing the sufferers who had been literally embedded in the wreck of the ill-fated train.  Search was naturally initiated for any who might have been pitched out of the train as the fearful concussion occurred.  In this, too, as well as with others, Mr Beamish was successful.  Some were found in a dazed condition, severally perfectly helpless because of fractures, broken limbs, wounded scalps, benumbed frames and other sufferings, but eventually the full extent of the disaster was fairly well gauged, and when the medical men arrived and they had little to do but attend to their numerous patients.”





Barnby St John the Baptist’s church

The church is thatched and sits comfortably in its rural setting; hardly noticeable from the busy road it is hidden behind tall trees. Within the embattled tower, the single 15th c. bell is inscribed in Latin, “May the bell of St John resound for many years”. An irregular shaped stoup is inside the blocked north door. There are a number of wall paintings from the 15th c. and are well preserved. A very rare banner-stave locker is still maintained with its original door which is the only example in existence. The locker is roughly 80 inches high, 11 wide and 12 inches deep.

 

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Zhygv Gehax

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)