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Category: Barnard

The Building of the Baptist Chapel

Posted on November 1, 2025October 27, 2025 by Heather Etteridge

Baptist Chapel, Long Street, Great EllinghamAttleborough Heritage Group The listing for the Great Ellingham Baptist Chapel on the British Listed Buildings website describes the building as: Baptist chapel. 1824. Brick with gabled pantile roof. 2 storeys. Pair of modified Doric columns on plinths support Ionic architrave to form porch. One sash window left and right…

The Baptist’s Meeting House in Long Street

Posted on November 1, 2025October 27, 2025 by Heather Etteridge

Members of the Baptist Church have met together in Great Ellingham since at least 1699.  The semi-circular tablet in the front wall of the chapel gives the year ‘1699’. However this is the year of the formation of a Baptist Church in Great Ellingham, and not when the building was built. The chapel was built…

Timeline of the History of The Crown

Posted on October 4, 2025 by Heather Etteridge

Church Street including the Old Thatche Shoppe to the left, Islay House to the right and the Crown Public House with adjoining shops in the centre. Date unknownAttleborough Heritage Group For centuries, the Crown Public House has been an integral part of Great Ellingham. It is one of five known pubs in Great Ellingham and…

Edward Gaskin and his link to Tanyard Farm

Posted on October 1, 2025September 29, 2025 by Heather Etteridge

Tanyard Farm. Photograph Lucinda Bell-Tye There is no doubt that a last will and testament can provide family historians with valuable information. However, it can throw up more questions than answers! Here we look at the content of the will of Edward Gaskin dated the 15th October, 1763. A time when George III occupies the…

John Whittred buys Brooke’s Farm

Posted on August 1, 2025August 1, 2025 by Heather Etteridge

It was around 1812 that John Whittred purchased a modest farm in Long Street from John Wiggett. The premises comprised a house with a barn, stable, yard and garden. The purchase also included some 30 acres of land. Much later, this farm became known as Cemetery Farm and, in more recent times, Home Farm. However…

The History of Glenfield House & Cottage – Part I

Posted on December 1, 2024December 1, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

Photograph taken December 2023 Despite many changes over the last two centuries, the above scene at the corner of Attleborough Road and Church Street, will still be recognisable to those who lived in village at the turn of the 19th century. In this article we look at the history of Glenfield House and Glenfield Cottage….

The History of Glenfield House & Cottage – Part II

Posted on December 1, 2024December 1, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

Photograph taken December 2023 Great Ellingham is fortunate to have a wealth of historical houses. Many of these may have narrowly escaped the fate of demolition, as happened to so many of the village’s old cottages. Glenfield House and Glenfield Cottage comprise the characterful thatched house standing along the Attleborough Road, near to the junction…

The History of the Double Cottage built on Pennell Common – Part I

Posted on November 23, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

Double Cottage at Penhill Road. Photograph courtesy of McDouall family For nearly two centuries, the above double cottage is one of just a few houses in Penhill Road. It was built around 1810 on a piece of land formerly part of of ‘Pennell Common’. Like many other historical houses in the village, the cottage has…

The History of The Crown Public House – Part II

Posted on November 1, 2024November 9, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

In the past, there were at least five pubs in Great Ellingham. Today, The Crown is the only pub remaining. The Crown Public House, the venue for the Heritage Open Days’ events in 2023 & 2024 There has been an inn or public house on either the exact same spot, or very near to, the…

The History of The Crown Public House – Part III

Posted on November 1, 2024November 19, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

The Crown Public House possible 1960s. Courtesy Tony Brooks The Crown in Church Street is one of at least five pubs and beer houses which were once in Great Ellingham. However, it is now the only surviving public house in the village. The origins of the pub go back over 200 years. The first mention…

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