Directory.] Brandeston. [Suffolk.]
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Railways List
A guide and list to a collection of Historic Railway Documents www.railarchive.org.uk to e mail click here December 2017 1 Since July 1971, this private collection of printed railway documents from pre grouping and pre nationalisation railway companies based in the UK; has sought to expand it‟s collection with the aim of obtaining a printed sample from each independent railway company which operated (or obtained it‟s act of parliament and started construction). There were over 1,500 such companies and to date the Rail Archive has sourced samples from over 800 of these companies. Early in 2001 the collection needed to be assessed for insurance purposes to identify a suitable premium. The premium cost was significant enough to warrant a more secure and sustainable future for the collection. In 2002 The Rail Archive was set up with the following objectives: secure an on-going future for the collection in a public institution reduce the insurance premium continue to add to the collection add a private collection of railway photographs from 1970‟s onwards provide a public access facility promote the collection ensure that the collection remains together in perpetuity where practical ensure that sufficient finances were in place to achieve to above objectives The archive is now retained by The Bodleian Library in Oxford to deliver the above objectives. This guide which gives details of paperwork in the collection and a list of railway companies from which material is wanted. The aim is to collect an item of printed paperwork from each UK railway company ever opened. -
The Parishes of Brandeston and Kettleburgh
THE PARISHES OF BRANDESTON AND KETTLEBURGH Dear Friends “Thank you”. I’ve found myself wanting to say thank you at various moments and to various people during the last month or so. I’ve wanted to say thank you to everyone who made our Harvest Festivals such memorable events earlier this month, and to all those people whose donations will provide positive improvements to the lives of people in the third World; and thank you, too, for the wonderful Harvest Lunches and Suppers which so many of us enjoyed. Thank you, also, to all who helped with the annual clean-up and tidy of Churches and Church-yards in the benefice. The spirit with which so many people took part made these occasions fun as well as achieving their purpose. And thank you, too, for all the help that you have given to your Church throughout the last year. The Church is there for you when you need it; and it is wonderful that so many people have continued to support their Church this year, in all the ways they have. Of course, November is the month each year when we express our eternal thankfulness for all those who served their country during time of war; we do this in our annual “Remembrance” of those who have lost their lives. A few weeks ago, I met a Journalist who spent six months of 2008 in Afghanistan, working with 16 th Air Assault Brigade, the Army Formation based in Colchester. He has now published a book describing the conditions under which our young men and women serve there. -
THE PARISHES of BRANDESTON and KETTLEBURGH Dear Friends
THE PARISHES OF BRANDESTON AND KETTLEBURGH Dear Friends Please think back, for a moment, to the Christmas just past; to those “Gift Services” that we had in each Church, in the weeks before Christmas, that enable your motive of giving to our own family and friends at Christmas to overflow into a form of less personal giving, for the benefit of children for whom, otherwise, Christmas might have been a lean time. Three days before Christmas, I took the presents from Brandeston’s and Easton’s Gift Services to the Ormiston Children’s Centre in Ipswich. I found myself immensely moved by the warm enthusiasm with which your presents were received by those who were preparing Christmas for the families to whom the work of the Centre is so important. Quite apart from the enjoyment your parcels would give to those who unwrap them, they carried an immensely encouraging message of support to those engaged in helping others. There is another way in which your giving has reached further than you might expect! Because local Church accounts cover the calendar year, the turn of the year is when PCCs consider and conclude their programme of “charitable giving” for the previous twelve months. Again, this is an opportunity for the generosity of Christmas giving to “cross-over” into areas that far exceed expectations when the PCC is making financial decisions. Elsewhere in this magazine you will find a description of Nansambo First Primary School in Malawi, to which Brandeston PCC has agreed to give financial support. I suspect that Nansambo is typical of hundreds of rural schools in many African countries. -
Halesworth Area History Notes
Halesworth Area History Notes I. HALESWORTH IN THE 11 th CENTURY Modern Halesworth was founded during the Middle Saxon period (650AD=850AD), and probably situated on the side of a ridge of sand and gravel close to the Town River. The evidence we have of early Halesworth includes a row of large post-holes, a burial of possibly a male of middle age radio-carbon dated to 740AD, and a sub-circular pit containing sheep, pig and ox bones. The ox bones show evidence of butchery. Sherds of ‘Ipswich Ware’ pottery found near the post-holes suggest trading links with the large industrial and mercantile settlement of Ipswich. It is now thought likely that ‘Ipswich Ware’ did not find its way to North Suffolk until after about 720AD. Perhaps Halesworth was also a dependent settlement of the Royal Estate at Blythburgh. By the 11 th century the settlement had moved to the top of the ridge east of the church. It’s possible that ‘Halesuworda’ had become a strategic crossing place where the Town River and its marshy flood plain, were narrow enough to be crossed. Perhaps Halesworth was also a tax centre for the payment of geld, as well as a collecting point for produce from the surrounding countryside with craft goods, agricultural produce and food rents moving up and down the river between Halesworth, Blythburgh and the coastal port of Dunwich. At the time of the Norman Conquest ‘Halesuworda’ consisted of a rural estate held by Aelfric, and two smaller manors whose freemen were under the patronage of Ralph the Constable and Edric of Laxfield. -
Site Allocations Assessment 2014 SCDC
MAP BOOKLET to accompany Issues and Options consultation on Site Allocations and Area Specific Policies Local Plan Document Consultation Period 15th December 2014 - 27th February 2015 Suffolk Coastal…where quality of life counts Framlingham Housing Market Area Housing Market Settlement/Parish Area Framlingham Badingham, Bramfield, Brandeston, Bruisyard, Chediston, Cookley, Cransford, Cratfield, Dennington, Earl Soham, Easton, Framlingham, Great Glemham, Heveningham, Huntingfield, Kettleburgh, Linstead Magna, Linstead Parva, Marlesford, Parham, Peasenhall, Rendham, Saxtead, Sibton, Sweffling, Thorington, Ubbeston, Walpole, Wenhaston, Yoxford Settlements & Parishes with no maps Settlement/Parish No change in settlement due to: Cookley Settlement in Countryside (as defined in Policy SP19 Settlement Hierarchy) Framlingham Currently working on a Neighbourhood Plan, so not considered in Site Allocations and Area Specific Policies DPD Great Glemham No Physical Limits, no defined Area to be Protected from Development (AP28) Huntingfield No Physical Limits, no defined Area to be Protected from Development (AP28) Linstead Magna Settlement in Countryside (as defined in Policy SP19 Settlement Hierarchy) Linstead Parva Settlement in Countryside (as defined in Policy SP19 Settlement Hierarchy) Sibton Settlement in Countryside (as defined in Policy SP19 Settlement Hierarchy) Thorington Settlement in Countryside (as defined in Policy SP19 Settlement Hierarchy) Ubbeston Settlement in Countryside (as defined in Policy SP19 Settlement Hierarchy) Walpole No Physical Limits, no defined Area to be Protected from Development (AP28) The Settlement Hierarchy (Policy SP19) is explained in the Suffolk Coastal District Local Plan, on page 61 and can be found via the following link: http://www.suffolkcoastal.gov.uk/assets/Documents/LDF/SuffolkCoastalDistrictLocalPlanJuly2013.p df This document contains a number of maps, with each one containing different information. -
London to Ipswich
GREAT EASTERN MAIN LINE LONDON TO IPSWICH © Copyright RailSimulator.com 2012, all rights reserved Release Version 1.0 Train Simulator – GEML London Ipswich 1 ROUTE INFORMATIONINFORMATION................................................................................................................................................................................................................... ........................... 444 1.1 History ....................................................................................................................4 1.1.1 Liverpool Street Station ................................................................................................. 5 1.1.2 Electrification................................................................................................................ 5 1.1.3 Line Features ................................................................................................................ 5 1.2 Rolling Stock .............................................................................................................6 1.3 Franchise History .......................................................................................................6 2 CLASS 360 ‘DESIRO’ ELECTRIC MULTIPLE UNUNITITITIT................................................................................... ..................... 777 2.1 Class 360 .................................................................................................................7 2.2 Design & Specification ................................................................................................7 -
Brandeston and Kettleburgh Parish News May 2017
BRANDESTON AND KETTLEBURGH PARISH NEWS MAY 2017 1 PARISHES OF BRANDESTON AND KETTLEBURGH Dear Friends For many of us, the availability of life’s necessities is something we take for granted. Thankfully, I have now eaten all the chocolate I was given at Easter, and I do not wish to see any more for the foreseeable future, however it’s sweetness will take a little longer to work out of my system. My sweet tooth will be ‘glad’ or maybe ‘not glad’. While planning a service recently, with two members of the ministry team, I learned something I had never known before, something so beyond my imagination that it could have been a ‘windup’, something that was such a surprise that I decided to share it with you (just in case you need a little more sweetness in your diet, especially if like me all your Easter eggs are gone!) Bassett’s jelly babies carry a Christian message! Am I the only person in Suffolk I asked myself, not to know that? It’s true, they do!! They’ve been around since at least 1885, being rebranded in 1918 as ‘peace babies’. It is only the Basset black jellies which carry the shape of a heart on them representing the sin in our lives! On the red jellies, you will find a ‘B’ for the blood Christ shed to show how much he loved us. The pink jellies are babies, and serve as a reminder that when we become Christians we become a ‘Child of God’. If you look closely on the green jellies, the baby is crying, showing God’s great sadness that people don’t always know, or fail to remember, the way to heaven. -
TO JUNE 2020 (Issue 711) Abbreviations
MIDLAND & GREAT NORTHERN CIRCLE COMBINED INDEX OF BULLETINS AUGUST 1959 (Issue 1) TO JUNE 2020 (Issue 711) Abbreviations: ASLEF Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers M&GSW Midland, Glasgow & South Western Railway and Firemen M&NB Midland and North British Joint Railway ASRS Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants MR Midland Railway BoT Board of Trade Mr M Mr William Marriott B&L Bourn & Lynn Joint Railway MRN Model Railway News BR British Rail[ways] M&GN Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway BTC British Transport Commission N&S Norwich & Spalding Railway B’s Circle Bulletins N&SJt Norfolk & Suffolk Joint Railway CAB Coaching Arrangement Book NCC Norfolk County Council CLC Cheshire Lines Committee NNR North Norfolk Railway [preserved] Cttee Committee NRM National Railway Museum, York E&MR Eastern & Midlands Railway NUR National Union of Railwaymen EDP Eastern Daily Press. O.S. Ordnance Survey GCR Great Central Railway PW&SB Peterborough, Wisbech & Sutton Bridge Rly GER Great Eastern Railway RAF Royal Air Force GNoSR Great North of Scotland Railway Rly Railway GNR Great Northern Railway RCA Railway Clerks’ Association GNWR Glasgow & North Western Railway RCH Railway Clearing House GY&S Great Yarmouth & Stalham Light Railway RDC Rural District Council H&WNR Hunstanton & West Norfolk Railway S&B Spalding & Bourn[e] Railway Jct Junction S&DJR Somerset & Dorset Joint Railway L&FR Lynn & Fakenham Railway SM Station Master L&HR Lynn & Hunstanton Railway SVR Severn Valley Railway L&SB Lynn & Sutton Bridge Railway TMO Traffic Manager’s -
SATURDAY 19Th MARCH 7.30 Pm VILLAGE HALL
Issue No 120 Mar 2005 The annual Tattler Quiz is here again and there are still a few tables left if you would like to join in. Please ring 785588 for tickets - a table of six is £30 - as soon as possible. Each table is encouraged to bring glasses and liquid refreshment though there is food served in the interval. The quiz is on SATURDAY Thank you to Jane Pitcher for this lovely snow photo taken last 19th MARCH week, featuring David labouring 7.30 pm his way up the hill in Tuddenham; VILLAGE HALL what a contrast to the scene on the back cover. Inside this issue…. All tables need to provide wire cutters, plastic comb, wire strippers, slotted 3mm screwdriver & T.A.D.P.O.L.E.spotato peeler in orderPage 2to take part. If you would like to supply a raffleExercise prize Classes that would bePage most 3 appreciated. Money raised will support The Tattler throughQuiz the and next Burns year Night and thePage raffle 3 money will go towards the Village Hall Extension Fund. I look forward to seeing you all promptly for aOrwell 7.30 start Park to Observa- what I hopePage will be a fun evening. As ever, thank you for your supporttory in fi nancing The Tattler4/5/6/7 and its work in Tuddenham. Road and embankment Page 8 works Page 2 March‘05 www.tuddenhamtattler.com Christchurch Mansion are Village Hall Extension hosting a costume collection based on dish cloths until May, Great news - we have been awarded designed by Jayne Lawless, as £5000 from the “Awards for All” lottery well as a gallery of John grant. -
14 Rolling Estate Claylands EP/Edit1/02.08.10
14 Rolling Estate Claylands EP/Edit1/02.08.10 Rolling Estate Claylands Key Characteristics • Rolling valley-side landscape • Medium clay and loamy soils • Organic pattern of fields • Occasional areas of more rational planned fields • Numerous landscape parks • Substantial villages • Fragmented woodland cover, both ancient and plantation • Winding hedged and occasionally sunken lanes Location This landscape character type occurs in east Suffolk as linear bands in the middle reaches of the valleys of these rivers: • The Yox from Sibton eastward to Theberton • The Fromus around Kelsale and Carlton • The Alde around the Glemhams • The Ore from Parham eastward to Blaxhall • The Deben from Brandeston south-eastwards to Easton and Glevering Geology, landform and soils This landscape, on the eastern edge of the central Suffolk clay plateau, consists of gently sloping valley sides and plateau fringes. Its soils range from occasionally waterlogged clays to sandy loams overlying glacial till and other glacial outwash materials. In most cases the valley heads have the heaviest soils, becoming lighter and occasionally gravely in the lower reaches. Landholding and enclosure pattern The field patterns are slightly organic in appearance, but with a tendency to a co-axial arrangement with the principal axes at right angles to the rivers. In the lower reaches there can be more planned-looking landscapes resulting from late enclosure or estate-inspired reorganisation. The soils are generally well-drained, so greens are infrequent, but there are examples at Middleton Moor and the former Carlton Green and Curlew Green in Kelsale. Landscape Suffolk Landscape Character Assessment 14 Rolling Estate Claylands EP/Edit1/02.08.10 parks, are, however, numerous: Sibton Park, Cockfield Hall in Yoxford, Rookery Park in Yoxford, Theberton Hall and Theberton House, Darsham House, Carlton Park, Glemham House, Marlesford Hall, Brandeston Hall, Easton Park (part) and Glevering House and Glevering Park (part) in Hacheston. -
East Suffolk Parliamentary Constituencies
East Suffolk - Parliamentary Constituencies East Suffolk Council Scale Crown Copyright, all rights reserved. Scale: 1:70000 0 800 1600 2400 3200 4000 m Map produced on 26 November 2018 at 10:55 East Suffolk Council LA 100019684 Lound CP Somerleyton, Ashby and Herringfleet CP Corton Blundeston CP Flixton CP Oulton CP Lowestoft Oulton Broad Carlton Colville CP Barnby CP Beccles CP Mettingham CP Worlingham CP North Cove CP Shipmeadow CP Barsham CP Bungay CP Mutford CP Gisleham CP St. John, Ilketshall CP Rushmere CP Ellough CP Ringsfield CP Weston CP Kessingland CP Flixton CP Waveney Constituency St. Andrew, Ilketshall CP Henstead with Hulver Street CP Willingham St. Mary CP St. Mary, South Elmham Otherwise Homersfield CP St. Margaret, Ilketshall CP St. Lawrence, Ilketshall CP Sotterley CP St. Peter, South Elmham CP Redisham CP Shadingfield CP St. Margaret, South Elmham CP Benacre CP St. Cross, South Elmham CP St. Michael, South Elmham CP Wrentham CP All Saints and St. Nicholas, South Elmham CP Brampton with Stoven CP Rumburgh CP Frostenden CP Covehithe CP Westhall CP Spexhall CP St. James, South Elmham CP Uggeshall CP South Cove CP Wissett CP Sotherton CP Holton CP Wangford with Henham CP Chediston CP Reydon CP Linstead Parva CP Blyford CP Halesworth CP Linstead Magna CP Southwold CP Cookley CP Wenhaston with Mells Hamlet CP Cratfield CP Huntingfield CP Walberswick CP Blythburgh CP Walpole CP Bramfield CP Thorington CP Ubbeston CP Heveningham CP Dunwich CP Darsham CP Sibton CP Peasenhall CP Westleton CP Yoxford CP Dennington CP Badingham CP Middleton CP Bruisyard CP Rendham CP Saxtead CP Kelsale cum Carlton CP Cransford CP Theberton CP Swefling CP Leiston CP Framlingham CP Earl Soham CP Saxmundham CP Central Suffolk & North Ipswich Great Glemham CP Kettleburgh CP Constituency Benhall CP Knodishall CP Brandeston CP Parham CP Sternfield CP Aldringham cum Thorpe CP Stratford St. -
Pearce Higgins, Selwyn Archive List
NATIONAL RAILWAY MUSEUM INVENTORY NUMBER 1997-7923 SELWYN PEARCE HIGGINS ARCHIVE CONTENTS PERSONAL PAPERS 3 RAILWAY NOTES AND DIARIES 4 Main Series 4 Rough Notes 7 RESEARCH AND WORKING PAPERS 11 Research Papers 11 Working Papers 13 SOCIETIES AND PRESERVATION 16 Clubs and Societies 16 RAILWAY AND TRAMWAY PAPERS 23 Light Railways and Tramways 23 Railway Companies 24 British Railways PSH/5/2/ 24 Cheshire Lines Railway PSH/5/3/ 24 Furness Railway PSH/5/4/ 25 Great Northern Railway PSH/5/7/ 25 Great Western Railway PSH/5/8/ 25 Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway PSH/5/9/ 26 London Midland and Scottish Railway PSH/5/10/ 26 London & North Eastern Railway PSH/5/11/ 27 London & North Western Railway PSH/5/12/ 27 London and South Western Railway PSH/5/13/ 28 Midland Railway PSH/5/14/ 28 Midland & Great Northern Joint Railway PSH/5/15/ 28 Midland and South Western Junction Railway PSH/5/16 28 North Eastern Railway PSH/5/17 29 North London Railway PSH/5/18 29 North Staffordshire Railway PSH/5/19 29 Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway PSH/5/20 29 Stratford-upon-Avon and Midland Junction Railway PSH/5/21 30 Railway and General Papers 30 EARLY LOCOMOTIVES AND LOCOMOTIVES BUILDING 51 Locomotives 51 Locomotive Builders 52 Individual firms 54 Rolling Stock Builders 67 SIGNALLING AND PERMANENT WAY 68 MISCELLANEOUS NOTEBOOKS AND PAPERS 69 Notebooks 69 Papers, Files and Volumes 85 CORRESPONDENCE 87 PAPERS OF J F BRUTON, J H WALKER AND W H WRIGHT 93 EPHEMERA 96 MAPS AND PLANS 114 POSTCARDS 118 POSTERS AND NOTICES 120 TIMETABLES 123 MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS 134 INDEX 137 Original catalogue prepared by Richard Durack, Curator Archive Collections, National Railway Museum 1996.