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Norfolk Towns and Villages
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This is a pretty village
on the edge of the Norfolk Broads which has
had a regular market since it was granted a
charter as far back as the 13th
century.
Its splendid Church of St Edmund King
and Martyr - which boasts a round tower and a
thatched roof - is 900 years old.
Acle is a
good location for further exploration. It has windpumps used to pump excess water from the
nearby Broads. |

Palmers Mill Wind Pump -
Photo:
Gareth Hughes
CCL |
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One of many beautiful little
villages in this part of North Norfolk, to the
north of Aylsham, Alby is served by an old church
without an aisle, the Church of St. Ethelbert,
about a mile from the village centre. A popular
attraction is a wide-ranging crafts centre housed
in farm buildings. Many different crafts are
displayed in a beautiful barn set within a garden.
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A small Saxon market town with
a village green, Attleborough boasts the
magnificent Norman Church of St Mary which has a
15th century oak rood screen 52 feet
wide spanning the nave. The town was well
established when St Edmund spent a year here
before becoming king in 856AD. Some local people
sailed to America with the Pilgrim Fathers. Each
June the town stages a week-long carnival.
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Bacton Beach - Photo:
Kim Burton
CCL |
Perfectly situated close to Cromer, Great
Yarmouth and Norwich, this small coastal
holiday resort has a sandy beach and a number
of caravan sites.
Its church of St Andrew
stands on a hill near the ocean. Nearby are
the ruins of Bromholm Priory (also known as
Bacton Abbey) which was founded by a
Cistercian order in 1113 as part of Castle
Acre Priory.
The building is mentioned in Chaucer’s
‘Canterbury Tales’ and was visited by Henry
111 in 1233. A number of man-made concrete sea
walls guard the coastline. |
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This interesting village
dominated by the Church of St Mary the Virgin
has a tree-lined village green and ancient
thatched houses with overhanging upper
storeys.
However, it is best-known as the site of
Banham Zoo, home to more than 1,000 animals
and birds from across the globe. The wildlife
park sits in 20 acres and includes a woodland
walk, deer park and ‘jungle island’ for
primates. |

Banham Village Green - Photo:
Ron Strutt
CCL |
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River Waveney - Photo:
David Medcalf
CCL |
Most of the old houses
in this fascinating village on the River
Waveney were burned down in fires during the
16th and 17th centuries but were replaced with
superb Georgian buildings in a variety of
subtle colours.
Many of the roofs are made from black glazed
tiles so typical of this picturesque area. St
Michael’s Church dates to the mid-14th
century. Its detached, four-storey bell tower
added in 1500 stands nearly 100 feet high and
was sold to the local council in 1977 for the
princely sum of one penny. |
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This is one of seven
lovely villages collectively known as ‘The
Burnhams’ within the Burn Valley.
It has a fine boulevard lined with Georgian
shops leading to a village green while the
Church of St Mary has a fine tower. Behind it
is 18th
century Westgate Hall.
Nearby Burnham Thorpe was
the birthplace of Horatio Nelson, son of a
local rector, in 1758.
He learned his sailing
and navigation skills here on the North
Norfolk coast. All Saint’s Church has a
lectern made from HMS Victory’s timbers as
well as flags flown at The Battle of Jutland.
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Remains of Norton Friary Gatehouse dating from
the 14th Century - Photo:
Graham Hardy
CCL
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Caister Beach - Photo:
Martyn Davies
CCL |
This
one-time Roman port is dominated by the tower
of a 13th century church and was
first established as a fortified camp.
The
biggest attraction here is a moated castle
with a 100ft tower built in the 15th
century by Sir John Fastoff, later
immortalised in three of Shakespeare’s plays
as Sir John Falstaff. |
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The real Sir John
commanded the English archers at the momentous
Battle of Agincourt. The castle is now home to
a motor museum, which boasts the largest
private collection of motor vehicles in the
country. These include the first ‘real’ motor
car, the 1893 Panhard at Lavassor. Nearby are Thrigby Hall
Wildlife Gardens at Filby and the Bygone Heritage Village at
Fleggburgh. The latter is a replica village set in
over 40 acres of countryside with, among other
things, classic vehicles, a village fair, pottery,
vintage steam collection and fairground organs. |
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This interesting fishing
port was transformed into a holiday resort in
the 19th
century after it was unwittingly popularised
by wealthy landlubbers from places like
Norwich. A little later the journalist Clement
Scott described the area as ‘poppyland’.
The
local lifeboat museum adds atmosphere and provides
plenty of evidence of sea-going interest.
Outside is a statue of Cromer’s real-life
local hero, Henry Blogg, who won three RLNI
gold medals, equivalent to the Victoria Cross. |

View East taken from above the Pier -
Photo:
Gary Reggae
CCL |
The town’s fascinating museum
is contained within five old cottages and stages
exhibitions on topics such as natural history and
local geology. The Church of St Peter and St Paul
has a magnificent 160ft tower, the tallest in
Norfolk.
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Fellbrigg Hall - Photo:
Christine Matthews
CCL |
At Beacon Hill are 70
acres of iron workings dating from Saxon times
while, at low tide, a large ‘rock’ sometimes
pokes its head out of the sea in the bay. It
represents the remains of the neighbouring
village of Shipden, which slipped under the
waves in the 14th century. Not far from Cromer
stands Felbrigg Hall near the small village of
Felbrigg.
The Jacobean mansion was built in the 17th century and its beautiful
estate landscaped by Humphrey Repton. Now a
National Trust property, it has fine
paintings, a stunning library and walled
gardens. |
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This
picturesque market town with an unusually wide
main street dates back to the founding of a
nunnery in the 7th century by St. Withburga.
It has a number of important old buildings,
including the 19th century Corn Hall and a
museum housed in a cottage once owned by 16th century
cleric Bishop Bonner, chaplain to Cardinal
Wolsley.
A windmill stands nearby. St
Nicholas’s Church has a detached bell tower
and in the churchyard is the burial place of
the poet William Cowper (1731-1800) who spent
the last few years of his life here.
Writer
George Borrow (1803-81) was born close by in
the village of Dumpling Green. |

Church of St. Nicholas - Photo:
Rob Farrow
CCL |
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Diss Centre - Photo:
Ron Strutt
CCL |
Although it has a galaxy of fine old buildings
dating from the Middle Ages through to the
Victorian age, the real delight in Diss is a
six-acre mere which stands at the centre of
this small market town.
In fact the town’s
name derives from an Anglo-Saxon word meaning
‘standing water’. Lying on the River Waveney,
the town’s church stands at the head of a
triangular market square. The nearby Tudor
mansion Gissing Hall, set in five acres of
beautiful countryside, is now holiday
accommodation. |
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Once a market town based
around the sale of horses, Downham Market has
both history and elegance and lies on the edge
of the Fens.
Lord Nelson went to school here
as a child and in the centre of the town is a
neo-Gothic clock tower dating to 1878.
The
Church of St Edmund has a spire and a Gothic
crucifix. |
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Downham Market Victorian Clock Tower -
Photo:
Rodney Burton
CCL |
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Oxburgh Hall - Photo:
Christine Matthews
CCL |
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Eight miles from here is magnificent Oxburgh
Hall, a 15th century moated mansion, while in
the nearby village of Denver is a tower
windmill, a 13th
century church and a cast iron clock tower
with a glass chandelier. |
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Situated on the babbling River Wensum, this is
an interesting market town with a 15th
century church and a number of notable
Georgian buildings.
Nearby is Pensthorpe Waterfowl Park - one of
largest of its kind in the world with over 200
acres of woodland, meadows and waterside
walks. A few miles south stands Raynham Hall,
former home in the 18th
century of Viscount Townshend who invented a
unique style of crop rotation, earning him the
nickname Turnip Townshend. Meanwhile, East
Barsham Manor is a sumptuous, red-bricked
Tudor mansion that was once home of the Bee
Gees house. |

Pensthorpe Waterfowl Park -
Photo:
Rob Farrow
CCL |
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The Tall Ship Prince William -
Photo:
Sarah Maidment
CCL |
No visitor to Norfolk
should ignore this busy seaside resort built
within ancient walls. Not so long ago its
prosperity came from shipbuilding and North
Sea herring fishing. It has two piers and
within the town are many Tudor, Georgian and
Victorian buildings.
The town has numerous
museums ranging from the Tolhouse Museum – a
former jail - housed in Yarmouth’s oldest
building and the 16th century
Elizabethan House Museum, a Tudor merchant’s
house. Its parlour witnessed the signing of
Charles 1’s death warrant. Other places of
interest include the seafront Shipwrecked
Sailors Home, with lots of memorabilia, and 13th
century Greyfriar’s Cloisters.
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The local Maritime Museum
follows the turbulent history of Yarmouth
while beyond is Nelson’s Monument. Built in
1819 it stands 144ft high and offers
magnificent views.
A medieval model village
has a model railway while nearby is the
Norfolk Rare Breed Centre and Farm Museum and
the seafront Butterfly Farm. |

Britannia Pier - Photo:
Gary Reggae
CCL |
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Berney Arms Windmill -
Photo:
Pete Chapman
CCL |
This
tiny, attractive village with a handful of
thatched buildings stands within the Broads
National Park and is perhaps best-known for
the 19th century Berney Arms
Windmill, a magnificent 70ft working marsh
windmill - Norfolk’s tallest. Originally used
to grind cement clinker, it later pumped water
from the nearby marshes, now part of an
important nature reserve.
The nearby pub is
the remotest tavern in Britain and can be
reached only by boat or rail!
The
long-distance Weaver’s Way walk runs through
the village. |
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With
a selection of Georgian houses and a weekly
market, Harleston is typically East Anglian
and a good base from which to explore the
surrounding area. It lies on an attractive
stretch of the River Waveney.
There are many
other villages nearby, including Bungay which
has a Druidic stone said to be 2,000 years
old.
The Otter Trust at Earsham has one of the
largest collections of otters in the world.
The painter Sir Alfred Munnings (1878-1959), a
past President of the Royal Academy, was born
at Mendham. |

Harleston Street and Clocktower -
Photo:
Ron Strutt
CCL |
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Baconsthorpe Castle -
Photo:
Christine Matthews
CCL |
This
one of the most pleasing towns in Norfolk with
a series of Georgian buildings – built
following a great fire in 1708 – forming a
queue in the main street.
The town is best
known for Gresham's public school, founded in
1555 by Sir Thomas Gresham.
He was a Lord
Mayor of London and founder of the Royal
Exchange. Horse-drawn buses run the three
miles from the Railway Tavern to the North
Norfolk Railway at High Keiling.
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Nearby
is 18th century Letheringsett
Watermill and the remains of 15th
century Baconsthorpe Castle, a fortified manor
with a beautiful moat. Holt’s country park is
mostly coniferous woodland. A short drive
takes you to picturesque Cley Next The Sea and
its 19th century windmill.
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Lying on the shimmering River Bure, Horning is
a boating paradise and one of the prettiest
villages on the Broads.
It dates back to Roman times and a ferry is
said to have operated here for 1,000 years
close to the present Horning Ferry Inn.
An annual regatta is held each August while a
Three Rivers Race is held each June.
The parish church of St Benedict has a
priest’s doorway from the 13th
century. |

View East from Horning -
Photo:
Gary Reggae
CCL |
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Bure Valley Miniature Railway -
Photo:
Ken
Cosby
CCL |
Busily picturesque, Hoveton is a favourite
spot with Broads’ lovers, many of whom come
here to visit beautiful Hoveton Hall Gardens
and Grounds, which provide the perfect
environment for many woodland birds and
butterflies.
St. John’s Church dates to the 13th
century and has a flint tower and an historic
priest’s door. Nearby are broads known as
Great and Little and there’s a quaint
hump-backed bridge over the River Bure.
Another major attraction in the area is the
Bure Valley Miniature Railway. |
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This is the largest holiday resort in western
Norfolk - and the only East Anglian town to
face west!
It was established as a resort in the mid
19th century and still offers pleasant sandy
beaches and shallow water protected by
interesting cliffs.
The old quarter dates from 855AD when St.
Edmund was shipwrecked here.
The bridge over the River Hun is reputedly
Roman.
The town’s golf course is of championship
standard. |

Stripey Cliffs at Hunstanton -
Photo:
Val Vannet
CCL |
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Hunstanton Sunset -
Photo:
Kim Slater
CCL |
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A few miles from here stands
the magnificent royal house of Sandringham, bought
by Queen Victoria in 1826 as a residence for the
future Edward VII.
It has superlative parkland and
is one of Norfolk’s hottest tourist spots.
Worth visiting are Great
Bircham Mill – boasting five floors and a bakery
with a 200-year-old oven – and Heacham’s
sweet-scented Lavender Distillery. |
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This fascinating town
originally developed as a seaport and was known as
Bishop’s Lynn until Henry V111 changed its name
during the dissolution of the monasteries in the
16th century. Its buildings largely reflect its
seafaring wealth amassed in particular during the
14th and 17th centuries.
It has two guildhalls, one of which is the flint
town hall built around 1420. The oldest surviving
guildhall in England, it has a Great Hall that
measures 100ft in length.
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Within this remarkable
building are some of the finest treasures in
Britain, including the 700-year-old silver and
enamel King John Cup, one of oldest paper
books in existence and the King John Sword.
Lynn Museum has information on the geology,
archaeology and natural history of the area as
well as Bronze Age weapons, while the Town
Museum of Lynn Life offers displays of
costumes and toys along with a reconstructed
Victorian kitchen.
The 12th century Church of St Margaret was
once part of a Benedictine monastery.
Special places of interest include the Old
Gaol House, which illustrates the deprivations
of prison life in the 18th century, and the
medieval merchant’s house Hampton Court.
Clifton House is another ancient merchant’s
house with a garden.
The Red Mount at King's Lynn, also known
as the Chapel of Our Lady of the Mount was a
place of pilgrimage. It was built in the reign
of Richard III (1483-85) by Robert Curraunt.
It is in "The Walks" park in King's Lynn.
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The Red Mount -
Photo:
Rob Farrow
CCL |
Caithness Crystal Factory
offers demonstrations of glass making and has a
resident engraver.
Nearby is the Palladian Houghton Hall built in the
early 18th century for Robert Walpole, England’s
first prime Minister.
Now owned by the 6th Marquis Hugh, Lord Great
Chamberlain to the Queen, it contains a remarkable
collection of 20,000 model soldiers.
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St. Andrews Church at East Lexham -
Photo:
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