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Category: Houchen

Edward Howchen, Primitive Methodist Preacher

Posted on June 1, 2020September 25, 2025 by Heather Etteridge

Church Street. Methodist Church. Postcard courtesy of Carol Ewin At the age of 75, Edward Howchen was laid to rest in the cemetery in Wymondham in the August of 1892. The 1891 census captures Edward Howchen with his wife Maria living in Middleton Street, Wymondham. The census tells us that Edward was a Primitive Methodist…

‘Stranger in Blood’ Hannah Saunders

Posted on June 1, 2020July 13, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

Extract from 28th January 1898 Inland Revenue Account of Succession to real or leasehold property completed by R W H Venn, Solicitor, Attleborough for the Executors of William Lebbell deceased The above extract from an Inland Revenue Account dated 28th January 1898, confirms that Hannah Saunders, a beneficiary of property under the Will of the…

Ellis Houchen Admitted as Copyhold Tenant

Posted on June 1, 2020October 9, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

In the nineteenth century, some of the land in Great Ellingham was freehold (or held on a long lease). However, other land was copyhold. This was another form of property ownership before its abolition in the 1920s. There were three Manors in Great Ellingham: Ellingham Rectory, Ellingham Hall and, the largest, Bury Hall. Most of…

The Tale of a Pair of Trousers being made at the top of the Spire!

Posted on June 1, 2020October 9, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Spire of the Church of St James Great Ellingham. Photograph taken May 2020 During the winter months, the lights which usually adorn the church tower of St James at Christmas draw our attention to the tower and spire, but I wonder how many of us look up at the spire at any other time? Top…

Penalty & Costs of Thirty Shillings

Posted on June 1, 2020October 9, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Furious Driving James Wilkins of Great Ellingham appeared before the Magistrates at the Petty Sessions held at New Buckenham in early May 1864. An account of the offence of furious driving on the road from Great Ellingham to Stow Bedon was given by Police Constable Bugg. James Wilkins was convicted and adjudged to pay 30s…

What’s In a Name?

Posted on June 1, 2020October 9, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Frank Newby with three of his children at Watton Road, Great Ellingham . Photograph courtesy of Sue Gent When researching family history, it is not unusual to find the name by which an individual is known differing between census returns and other documentation, such as registrations of birth, marriages and deaths. In other blogs, I…

A Long Marriage of 52 Years

Posted on May 12, 2020October 9, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

William & Emily Houchen. Photograph taken 1921. Courtesy Pauline Bezant William and Emily Houchen had completed 52 years of marriage when William died in 1934. The couple had lived for many years in Reymerston before retiring to Yaxham. Early Life in Great Ellingham However, both William Houchen and his wife Emily (neĆ© Rivett) were born…

Great Ellingham ‘Born and Bred’

Posted on May 12, 2020October 9, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Mary Ann Rivett nee Warren. c.1810 to 1888. Photograph courtesy of Pauline Bezant Mary Ann Rivett, the wife of Jonathan Rivett, was very much a ‘Great Ellingham girl’. She lived in the village for her entire life. Warren Family Baptised in the Church of St James on the 28th January 1810, Mary Ann was the…

Jane Houchen 1847-1925

Posted on May 12, 2020September 17, 2025 by Heather Etteridge

Sampler worked by Jane Houchen in 1858. Courtesy of Pauline Bezant Jane Houchen may well have been approaching her eleventh birthday when she completed this piece of needlework. In days gone by, ‘Samplers’ were produced by young girls as a means of showing their skill in needlework. Often worked in embroidery or cross-stitching, some Samplers…

The Erection of the British School in 1855

Posted on March 1, 2020October 9, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Before the nineteenth century, there was no national system for education. Opportunities for formal education were generally only available to those who could afford to pay. The schools that did exist relied on the generosity of local benefactors or people trying to make a living. Very few children received any schooling. The former British School…

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