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Category: Hardiman

The History of Swamp Lane Cottages – Part I

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

‘Swamp’ can mean an area of low-lying, boggy or marshy uncultivated land. We can apply some of this description to ‘Swamp Lane’ in Great Ellingham. The area on the eastern side of the lane is certainly low, and was once part of the common of Great Ellingham. A stream or rivulet borders this area and…

The History of Swamp Lane Cottages – Part II

Posted on January 1, 2025December 30, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

At the turn of the 19th century, there were very few dwellings along the lane which we know today as Swamp Lane. Those that did exist were at the northern end of the lane. Part I In Part I, we discovered that at the time of the Great Ellingham Inclosures, the Commissioners awarded Alice Jessup…

The History of Swamp Lane Cottages – Part III

Posted on January 1, 2025December 30, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

It is not until the 1901 census that I find the name ‘Swamp Lane’ recorded on the census returns. However, earlier electoral registers going back to at least 1878, refer to the area as ‘The Swamp’ or ‘Swamp’. Nevertheless, some of the census returns prior to 1901 refer to the few cottages along the lane…

The Leath Sisters agree to divide their Allotment

Posted on January 1, 2025December 30, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

At the time of the Great Ellingham Inclosures c.1802, Alice Jessup claimed the following freehold properties: Messuage and 3 roods of land, occupied by herselfCottage and Garden occupied by Robert TookeCottage and Garden occupied by Edward SteelCottage and Garden occupied by Stephen Howchen Alice also claimed the following rights in respect of each of the…

Brief History of the former ‘Beer House’ the Queen’s Head

Posted on September 1, 2024August 30, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

The former Beer House and Queen’s Head Public HousePhotograph taken 2019 Historic England describes the Grade II Listed Building ‘The Old Queen’s Head’ as a late 17th century timber framed building. With a thatched gabled roof, the building is constructed on a flint plinth with a rendered wattle and daub infill. Built during the reign…

Messuage built upon the tenement Greenhouse – Part V

Posted on April 1, 2022November 19, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

On the left is a fine thatched house (formerly a copyhold messuage) with a pair of cottages built onto the eastern wall (to the right) on the corner of Church Street (the Street) Chequers Lane & Long Street. Postcard courtesy Carol Ewin The Story of the Owners and Occupiers In Parts I, II, III and…

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