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Category: Places and Buildings

Chelsea Pensioner’s Wife convicted of a Violent Assault

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

In the August of 1852, Rhoda Carter of Great Ellingham appeared before a special sitting of the Petty Sessions at Attleborough. She was charged with violently assaulting Elizabeth Fame of Hingham. However, the report in the Norfolk News of the 28th August, 1852, did not provide specific details of the offence. Was this just a…

Memories of the Lebbell family’s Blacksmith’s Smithy & Shop

Posted on November 4, 2021October 8, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Sue Fay spent her early life in the village of Great Ellingham and has connection to many Great Ellingham families, including her paternal line of Lebbell. Long Street with Lebbell’s Smithy to the right The Lebbell family had a smithy and shop in Long Street. Sue has a clear recollection of her family’s Smithy and…

John Roberts’ Bill for Repairs to the Church

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

Parish Chests The Poor Law of 1552 brought in mandatory legislation that every parish must have a strong chest, with three keys, in which to keep the alms for the poor. Earlier 16th century legislation required every parish to have a locked parish chest for the safe keeping of the Parish Registers and other parish…

The ‘Witches’ of Penhill Road & ‘Dragon’s Blood’ at Downham Market

Posted on October 31, 2021October 8, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Witchcraft & Folklore Witchcraft is very much interwoven with Norfolk folklore. Traditionally ‘Witches’ were perceived to have supernatural powers to control people or events. Most villages and towns had ‘wise-men’ or ‘wise-women’ who were acquainted with the old mysterious ways. Although much-feared, it is claimed that these ‘cunning folk’ made sick people better, located lost…

Prominent Footballer & Cricketer Plays for Great Ellingham Cricket Team

Posted on October 18, 2021July 12, 2024 by Heather Etteridge

Curate to Little & Great Ellingham The Old Parsonage, once the home of George Barkley Raikes In the summer of 1905, Little and Great Ellingham had a new curate, the Reverend George Barkley Raikes. Given that the previous curate, the Reverend Harry Parker, lived at The Parsonage in Great Ellingham, it follows that the Parsonage…

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….

Six of One and Half a Dozen of the Other

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

Guilty of Assault The Diss Express of Friday, 4th August, 1905, reported on proceedings at the East Harling Magistrates Court. This included the case concerning a fracas between two women in Great Ellingham. Widow Elvina M Rushbrooke of Great Ellingham was charged with assaulting her neighbour Maud Halls on the 23rd July. Halls was charged…

Ted & Alice Lincoln of The Cock Inn, Stanton

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

It can be difficult to ‘fill in the gaps’ between the birth or baptism of our ancestor, their marriage (if indeed one took place), and their ultimate death. All these ‘rights of passage’ are almost certainly recorded in the parish registers, which can date from as early as the sixteenth century. However in relatively recent…

A Triumph for the People

Posted on October 1, 2021February 18, 2023 by Heather Etteridge

Before parish councils were first established c.1894, the responsibility for the day to day administration of the parish fell to the rector and some of the more affluent landowners. The Norfolk News of the 26th April, 1873, published a report of a meeting attended by many discontented parishioners in Great Ellingham. A correspondent, who appears…

A Church with ‘No History’?

Posted on September 29, 2021March 2, 2025 by Heather Etteridge

Great Ellingham Parish Church of St James 1935 Archaeologists’ Tour A report of an archaeologists’ tour published in the Yarmouth Independent on the 18th May, 1935, caught my eye. Amongst the three churches visited in the Wymondham District was St James’s at Great Ellingham. A comment made by Mr E J Tench FIBA particularly grabbed…

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