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Category: Barnard

Sale of Reversion or Remainder in fee expectant on the decease of Widow

Posted on September 1, 2021August 1, 2025 by Heather Etteridge

1818 Auction of Freehold Property On the 28th February, 1818, the Norfolk Chronicle published the notice of a forthcoming auction of premises in Great Ellingham. The auction would take place at four o’clock on the 12th March, 1818, at the Crown Public House in Great Ellingham. The premises appeared in two lots: This throws up…

Cousin’s Widow inherits Great Ellingham Cottages

Posted on September 1, 2021October 8, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

The blog ‘Love Letter or Letter of Apology?‘ touched on a missive written in 1819 by Richard Clarke to Harriet Barnard of Great Ellingham Hall. The couple later married. I wondered whether any other correspondence between Richard and Harriet Clarke survived. If so, who may have been the custodian of the family letters over the…

Love Letter or Letter of Apology?

Posted on August 1, 2021October 8, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

I am always pleased to hear from visitors to the website. An email from John Forster from Northamptonshire was no exception. John came across my article ‘Robert Barnard of Great Ellingham Hall‘. He told me of the existence of a letter dated July 12th, 1819, addressed to Harriet Barnard at Great Ellingham Hall. The sender…

William Yeomans sentenced to Confinement in Asylum for Arson

Posted on August 1, 2021October 26, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

Crown Court At the beginning of August, 1879, 34-year-old labourer William Yeomans appeared at the Crown Court in Norwich. Yeomans pleaded guilty to the charge of ‘unlawfully and maliciously’ setting fire to a stack of wheat at Great Ellingham on the 7th June. The stack was the property of farmer, William Barnard. Defence of Insanity…

Guilty of Theft of Sack of Oats from John Dixon

Posted on August 1, 2021June 18, 2026 by Heather Etteridge

Illustration Christine Fuller The illustration is creative interpretation and intended for humour only. No offence is intended or implied. Odd Hands In January 1916, farmer John Dixon employed two local labourers, Walter Lister and Charles Hall, to help with the threshing of a stack of oats. Lister and Hall worked at Dixon’s farm at Town…

Sarah Thompson Reeder 1874-1951

Posted on July 1, 2021October 8, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Sampler stitched by 12 year old Sarah Thompson Reeder in 1886. Photograph courtesy of Rosemary Jones In 1886, 12 year old Sarah Thompson demonstrated her needlework skills by stitching a sampler at her school in Great Ellingham. By the time the girls at the Board School finished their education, most (if not all) of the…

Messuage built upon the tenement Greenhouse – Part II

Posted on June 1, 2021November 19, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

The delightful thatched house on the corner of Church Street and Chequers Lane. Postcard possibly dates from the early 1900s. Courtesy of Carol Ewin The Story of the Owners and Occupiers of the House We continue the story of the owners (and some of the occupiers), of the delightful thatched house in the centre of…

Messuage built upon the tenement Greenhouse – Part III

Posted on June 1, 2021November 19, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

The delightful south facing thatched house with adjoining cottages to the east on the corner of Church Street and Chequers Lane. Postcard possibly dates from the early 1900s. Courtesy of Carol Ewin The Story of the Owners and Occupiers of the House In Part I we began to explore the owners and occupiers of an…

Great Ellingham’s Pubs and Beer-houses

Posted on April 5, 2021July 20, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

The Crown Public House in the centre. Courtesy of Attleborough Heritage Group Village pubs have always been a focal point of a community. Great Ellingham is no exception. During the Victorian period, Great Ellingham had five public houses, some of which were former beer-houses. Today, the village has one remaining pub. At the end of…

Robert Brooke’s Farmhouse in Long Street

Posted on April 1, 2021May 24, 2025 by Heather Etteridge

Robert Brooke (c.1757-1829) Robert Brooke of Great Ellingham died in March 1829. He was 73 years old, a bachelor, and a yeoman i.e. a farmer owning a reasonable amount of property and land, but not sufficient to be classed as ‘gentry’. Variations of Name During my research, I have found that this family’s surname ‘Brooke‘…

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