TITLES Listed in Published Order 2
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
SUFFOLK REVIEW INDEX NEW SERIES Nos. 31 - 45 (1998 - 2005) and MILLENNIUM Issue SUFFOLK LOCAL HISTORY COUNCIL Compiler’s Note The material indexed comprises 80 articles on 638 pages. 15 issues average 4 articles each. The Millennium issue is different in several respects. It is twice as long; it contains 22 articles, substantially shorter, and celebrates societies and groups. About half the articles tell the story of those organisations, their named members being separately indexed (Section A, Persons 2). * The articles are first listed, and abstracts are offered in place of a Subject Index. The issue number (or M) is in bold type, followed by the pair of page numbers. * The Indexes that follow are on the `atlas` principle, not giving a single page number but the pair of page numbers of the article. (An exception is where a list of persons is given on a single page.) * Throughout, persons are not necessarily listed as individuals, for example when several family members appear in one article, such as the 20 or more Godballs of 33. Persons named only in end-notes and sources are not normally indexed. * ‘Places’ do not normally include rivers, town parishes, streets or buildings. Michael Stone C O N T E N T S Page TITLES listed in published order 2 TITLES (shorter) - with ABSTRACTS (except Millenium section A) 3 INDEX of PERSONS 11 INDEX of PERSONS (2) 33 Millennium issue, contemporary and recent lives INDEX of PLACES in SUFFOLK 34 INDEX of PLACES outside SUFFOLK 40 AUTHOR INDEX 46 1 TITLES listed in published order 31. Rev.Henry Sykes and the Restoration of Blythburgh Church: late Victorian Church Restoration 31 2-15 Cycling in Suffolk 31 16-25 The Sudbury Institute Museum 1841-72 31 26-34 32. Diverting Drama: the new road at Shrubland Park, 1843-5 32 2-19 The Ipswich Congregation of the (Catholic Apostolic) Church (‘Irvingite’) 32 20-26 Richard Hall Gower, his experimental ships and the Ipswich Lifeboat 32 27-33 33. William Godball: a musical life 33 18-31 Gainsborough’s Earliest Portrait 33 32-36 A Suffolk Miracle ? The Sea Pea Harvest of 1555 33 37-46 34. Shopping for clothes and Accessories in Ipswich, 1700-1815 34 2-16 Two Suffolk Artist Plantsmen 1. The Chadburn Irises 34 17-21 2. Cedric Morris and Benton End: a memoir 34 21-24 From Cheshire to Suffolk: the early 19th century removal of a Vagrant family 34 25-30 Samuel Duncon of Ipswich’s proposal for an Association of Counties in November 1642 34 31-34 Gainsborough`s Earliest Portrait and the Mystery of Tom Peartree: a Note and a Reply 34 35-37 35. Thomas Fonnereau (1699-1779) and the Inheritance to Christchurch Mansion 35 2-11 The Language of the Herring Fishing; a special branch of the Suffolk dialect 35 12-18 Anthony St George, Vicar of Bramford 1661-1686 35 19-21 Thomas Barrett-Lennard and the 1820 Ipswich Election 35 22-32 Millennium Articles in 2 sections : A. The story of a dozen societies and groups: their formation, activities, events and projects, publications, use of photography, researching and any archive or museum Bramford Local History Group M 3 Felixstowe Family History Society, The M 10-11 Great Barton History Society M 12 Haverhill & District Local History Group, The M 18-24 Long Melford Historical and Archaeological Society, The M 25-27 Lowestoft Archaeological and Local History Society M 34 Southwold Archaeological & Natural History Society, The M 43-45 Stutton Local History Group M 48 Suffolk Family History Society M 58-60 Tostock Past & Present Society M 61-67 Walsham le Willows Village History Group M 68 Wickhambrook & District Local History Society The M 75-78 Wickham Market Local History Reference Centre M 79-81 B. History Research Bramford The Population of Bramford, 1553-1700 M 4-9 Great Barton A Century of Service - the story of the Village Institute M 13-17 Long Melford The Inventory of Robert Smith, 1686 M 28-33 Lowestoft Porcelain M 35-42 Southwold ‘A Grievous Night of Terror’: Saturday January 31, 1953 M 46 Night of the Long Knives: June 17, 1987 M 46-47 Stutton Surface Finds M 49-52 Stutton Before 1066 M 53-54 Stutton Changes over 1000 Years M 55-57 Walsham le Willows Transported - never to return : two Walsham cases M 69-74 36. Buckenham House, Southwold 36 2-8 The Impact of War on one Suffolk Parish, in the mid-17th century: Cratfield 1639-1660 36 9-18 The Nichols Murder 36 19-29 Education in the Deanery of Lothingland in the 1840s: the role of the C of E in Educational provision for the Poor of Lowestoft and its environs 36 30-36 2 37. The Hadleigh-Bentley Railway 1847-1965 37 2-14 1932 and all that; a Methodist Mystery 37 15-20 Of Railway Wagons and Delivery Vehicles 37 21-22 A Suffolk Gentleman-Smuggler 37 23-38 38. The Medical Recipe Book of the Spring Family 38 2-15 The Bramford Rebels and the Uprising of 1381 38 16-25 A Census of the Poor: Barham in 1830 38 26-34 Suffolk and India 38 35-38 39. Below Stairs, or the Servant Problem: the Vicarage at Coddenham in the early C19th 39 2-8 Behind the façade: Domestic Discord in a Victorian Household - the Diaries of Isabella Brett of Ipswich 1867-73 39 9-19 The Stowmarket Navigation and its effect on the Economy of the Gipping Valley 39 20-26 The Indian Summer of a Suffolk Regional Centre: Bury St Edmunds 1784-1874 39 27-35 40. Peace at Last: Celebrations of Peace and Victory, during & after the Napoleonic Wars 40 2-18 Little known Royal Functionary: brief career of John Ripon, Rector of Kedington 1385-88 40 19-22 A 15th century Inclosure: the Little Highfield in Monks Eleigh of 1450 40 23-34 Developments in Suffolk`s Rural Transport since 1918 40 35-39 War & Peace: Reflections on 3 First World War Images 40 40-42 41. Where to be buried? A sequel: Sir William Middleton of Shrubland Park 41 2-3 An investigation of the Printing Industry in 19th Century Ipswich 41 4-21 War and Peace: Reflections on three First World War images - a correction 41 22 Colonel George Tomline of Orwell Park 41 23-34 42. William Goodwin`s Diaries 1785-1810 42 2-17 The Suffolk Photographic Survey: a Progress Report 42 18-24 v Li ing in Bramford 1400-1600, as revealed by Court Rolls 42 25-38 43. The Women`s Land Army in East Anglia, 1939-50 43 3-32 They also Served: a wartime selection from the Suffolk Photographic Surve 43 33-40 Samuel Noller of Debenham, farmer, carrier and emigration agent 43 41-44 44. Final Floods (part 1) 44 2-27 Naval Operations off the Suffolk Coast, 1914-18 44 28-36 Some Comments on the Established Church in Suffolk 1800-35 44 37-39 Shottisham, Halgestou and Margaretstowe: a note on Place-Names 44 40-42 45. Manor of Illegh Monachorum (Monks Eleigh, Suffolk): Lease of Demesne, 21 Nov 1400 45 2-19 Hadleigh during the Civil War, Commonwealth and Restoration 45 20-23 A Daughter of Suffolk 45 24-27 Final Floods (part 2): The Felixstowe Experience 45 28-45 ABSTRACTS 31-45 & Millenium section B (with short titles) 31. Restoration of Blythburgh Church 31 2-15 Blythburgh Church was long in poor repair. In 1879 Henry Sykes new incumbent, replacing decayed fabric: `Restoration`. He used as architects the controversial G.E. and A.E. Street. His actions antagonised both the patron Sir John Blois and the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (SPAB). SPAB advocated `Preservation`, merely stopping further decay. Superficially polite to SPAB, Sykes progressed his plans, informing them late, delaying their Report. The church was re-opened on Easter Day 1884, but with restoration short of Sykes` vision. Nor did Sykes cooperate with Sir John. When they both left the scene, SPAB persevered for another 20 years. 31. Cycling in Suffolk 31 16-25 A treadle-worked velocipede in Norfolk,1819. More significantly, cranks fitted to axle of a `hobby horse` in Paris (1861). A pioneer racing cyclist (Paris 1868, 1874) was James Moore, born in Bury St Edmunds. A two-man 3-wheeler was designed and built in Suffolk (1869). Next advances were the`boneshaker`, the `penny-farthing` or `ordinary`, and in the 1880s the `safety bicycle`. Both sport and recreation cycling flourished. By 1908 there were in Suffolk 37 bicycles 3 manufacturers. Numerous clubs + social implications. Rules of the road necessary. Business uses proliferated. Then (1914-18) the military authorities formed bicycle units. In peacetime, cycling retained popularity. 31. Sudbury Museum 1841-72 31 26-34 In 1841, Sudbury opened the second Suffolk museum, formed by the Mechanics Institute in a new building in Friar Street. Specimens were donated. At first, opening hours limited, but evening opening followed, for the working class. Numerical high point 1845 with local press support, an events week and free for schools. Bury St Edmunds followed, but the peak soon passed. After later revival, came further dwindling of membership numbers and funds. In 1872, whole collection offered for sale by lots. Main purchasers: Saffron Walden Museum and a Cambridge professor. The Institute survives as a club in other premises. Later museums in Sudbury had shorter lives. 32. New road, Shrubland Park, 1843-5 32 2-19 Shrubland Park lies mainly in the parishes of Coddenham, Barham. Sir William F.F. Middleton, the second baronet, wished to extend the park by taking in land beyond Sandy Lane which led from Coddenham via Barham to Ipswich.