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Category: Reeder

Joseph & Elizabeth Reeder, with roots firmly in Great Ellingham

Posted on December 12, 2023December 12, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Joseph Reeder 1862-1953 Courtesy Betty Reeder Above is a wonderful image of a true Great Ellingham man, Joseph (Joe) Reeder. In 1883, Joe (then 21) married 19 year old Elizabeth Reeder. Joseph and Elizabeth were both great grandchildren of Peter Reeder and his wife Hannah nèe Hewitt. This made them ‘second cousins’. However, this was…

Private 22891 John J Reeder 1st Battalion Norfolk Regiment

Posted on November 1, 2023November 2, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Fellow local historian, Cynthia Budd, has meticulously researched the men listed on the Great War Memorials throughout the Shellrock Benefice (Great Ellingham, Little Ellingham, Rockland All Saints, Rockland St Peter and Shropham with Snetterton). She has kindly allowed me to reproduce her tributes to the Great Ellingham men, on the Great Ellingham One-Place Study website….

Double Cottage in Long Street Built by Local Builder

Posted on October 1, 2022February 21, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

‘Roselands’ Long Street Great Ellingham. Photograph taken September 2022 The delightful house with the name of ‘Roselands’ sits on the western side at the southern end of Long Street, Great Ellingham. It was built by a local builder during the mid-Victorian era. Over the last 160 years or so, the house will have seen the…

Pair of Cottages become Owner Occupied after 150 years

Posted on August 1, 2022October 7, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Extract from 1906 Ordnance Survey Map. Second Edition. Surveyed in 1881. Author’s Collection For nearly 150 years, two clay and tiled semi-detached cottages standing along the Attleborough Road, Great Ellingham, were occupied by tenants and not by the owners. During this time, the cottages saw the comings and goings of several families. However, the Wenn…

Thomas Warren’s Cottages at Pennell Common

Posted on April 1, 2022October 7, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

The Great Ellingham Inclosures documentation not only provides the names of the landowners and their tenants, but allows us to pinpoint where many of the inhabitants were living at the turn of the 19th century. The Statement of Claims c.1799 and a Particulars & Valuation of Great Ellingham 1800, show that farmer Thomas Warren owned…

Messuage in Long Street later known as Fir Tree Farm

Posted on April 1, 2022October 8, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Inclosures At the beginning of the 19th century Thomas Warren owned and occupied a house in Long Street. This house was later known as Fir Tree Farm. A Statement of Claims c.1799 relating to the Great Ellingham Inclosures, provide details of the owners and occupiers of houses, cottages and the various parcels of land in…

Increase & Decline in the Population of Great Ellingham in the 19th Century

Posted on January 1, 2022October 8, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Increase At the beginning of the 19th century, and over a period of 30 years, the population of Great Ellingham gradually increased from 655 in 1801 to 882 in 1831. Decrease However, save for a small increase in the populace in 1871, there began a steady decline in the population over the next 70 years….

Lincoln Family’s Migration from Great Ellingham to Yorkshire

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

Movement of People Like many rural communities during the Victorian period, Great Ellingham saw movement in the population. In 1836, several families left the village for a new life ‘on the other side of the world’. A few were ‘forced’ to embark on a journey to Van Diemen’s Land (later Tasmania) following a criminal conviction….

John Lincoln, son of Robert & Esther

Posted on October 1, 2021April 19, 2025 by Heather Etteridge

I am always delighted to hear from descendants of people who once lived in Great Ellingham. An email from Andrea Hunter is no exception. Andrea kindly sent me a copy of her photograph, the subject of which is believed to be John Lincoln who was born in Great Ellingham in 1839. Andrea descends from John…

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…

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