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OK
Below-grade pump? Perhaps they created a cistern to collect the water that was pumped. The cistern could have been no more than a bunch of rocks tossed aside to create a pool to pump from so the pump would keep it's prime. This may have only been run intermittently- it may have needed a pump attendant- turn it on, turn it off. The location could have been a "semi-seasonal" source of GOOD water. I am certain that if a gravity feed would have worked to get water to the tank, it would have been gravity feed.
The Selkirk bridge just west sits on blocks rather than stone, concrete or pilings. There were probably multiple aquifers in the area, possibly making it an area that would need adjustment on occasion and unfit for a more "permanent" solution. Perhaps just a simple gravity feed couldn't tap into an available aquifer that had sufficient flow.
Does this help?
Cheers
Stan
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