Suffolk Review

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Suffolk Review SUFFOLK REVIEW INDEX NEW SERIES Nos. 46 - 60 (2006 - 2013) SUFFOLK LOCAL HISTORY COUNCIL Compiler’s Note The material indexed comprises 69 articles on 615 pages in 15 issues. The articles are first listed, and abstracts are offered in place of a Subject Index. The issue number 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.) Persons are not necessarily listed as individuals, for example when several family members appear in one article. Persons named only in end-notes and sources are not normally indexed. `Places` do not normally include rivers, town parishes, streets or buildings, and the names of countries are sometimes omitted. Notes at the head of some sections explain special arrangements. Michael Stone C O N T E N T S page SUBJECTS in previous Index [New Series nos. 31-45 (1998-2005)] 2 TITLES in issues 46 – 60 listed in published order 2 ABSTRACTS with shorter titles 4 INDEX of PERSONS (1) pre 1500 13 INDEX of PERSONS (2) post 1500 25 INDEX of PLACES in SUFFOLK 45 INDEX of PLACES outside SUFFOLK 52 AUTHOR INDEX 57 1 SUBJECTS in previous index [New Series nos.31-45 (1998-2005)] See that Index for details. 31. Blythburgh Church Restoration, Cycling, Sudbury Museum 1841-72 32. Shrubland Park road diversion, ‘Irvingite’ Church Ipswich, Gower & Ipswich Lifeboat 33. William Godball musician, Gainsborough`s Earliest Portrait, Sea Pea Harvest of 1555 34. Clothes Shops Ipswich 1700 on, Chadburn Irises, Cedric Morris, Vagrant removal Samuel Duncon (1642), Gainsborough (Note and Reply) 35. Fonnereau (1699 on) & Christchurch Mansion, Herring Fishing Suffolk dialect, Vicar of Bramford 1661 on, T. Barrett-Lennard & 1820 Election Millennium A: A dozen societies and groups: their formation, activities, events and projects, publications, use of photography, researching and any archive or museum Bramford, Felixstowe (Family), Great Barton, Haverhill & District, Long Melford, Lowestoft, Southwold, Stutton, Suffolk (Family), Tostock, Walsham le Willows, Wickhambrook & D, Wickham Market B: History Research Bramford (1553-1700), Great Barton (Institute), Long Melford (Robert Smith, 1686), Lowestoft (Porcelain), Southwold (Night of Terror: 1953) (Night of Long Knives: 1987), Stutton (Surface Finds) (Before 1066) (Changes over 1000 Years), Walsham le Willows (Transported) 36. Buckenham House, Southwold, Impact of War: Cratfield 1639-60, Nichols Murder, Education for the Poor Lowestoft (1840s) 37. Hadleigh-Bentley Railway 1847-1965, Methodism 1932 &c., Railway Wagons & Delivery Vehicles, Suffolk Gentleman-Smuggler 38. Medical Recipe Book (Spring Family), Bramford Rebels 1381, Poor in Barham 1830, Suffolk & India 39. Servant Problem early C19th, Diaries of Isabella Brett 1867-73, Stowmarket Navigation and the Economy, Bury St Edmunds 1784-1874 40. Celebrations of Peace and Victory, Napoleonic Wars, John Ripon, Rector of Kedington 1385-88, Inclosure in Monks Eleigh (1450), Suffolk Rural Transport since 1918, 3 First World War Images 41. Sir Wm Middleton of Shrubland (burial), Printing in Ipswich (C19th), Col.George Tomline (Orwell Park) 42. Wm Goodwin`s Diaries 1785-1810, Photographic Survey: Progress, Bramford Court Rolls, 1400-1600 43. Women’s Land Army 1939-50, Photographic Survey: Wartime, Samuel Noller of Debenham (carrier) 44. Floods (part 1), Naval Ops off Suffolk 1914-18, Established Church 1800-35, Shottisham Place-Names 45. Monks Eleigh Manor: Lease of Demesne (1400), Hadleigh: Civil War to Restoration, A Daughter of Suffolk, Final Floods (part 2): Felixstowe. TITLES listed in published order 46. Samuel Belcher Chapman and the Girl’s Industrial Home, Ipswich, 1857-1921 46 2-13 Arson in Suffolk in the 1840s: the case of Samuel Jacob 46 14-26 Buttrams - a family of Millers 46 27-34 Corrupt Practice in Ipswich in the General Election of 1885 - a landmark case 46 35-42 The Manor of Illegh Monachorum: Appendix A; the Lease of November 1400 46 43-45 47. The Old Poor Law in Suffolk, 1727-1834 47 2-27 Capel Lofft, 1751-1824 47 28-33 Notes on the History and Development of St John the Baptist, Onehouse 47 34-43 Lawrence at Felixstowe 47 44-46 48 The Formation of the Suffolk Humane Society 48 2-6 Landscape of East Bergholt in the Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth centuries - I 48 7-23 George Martin and the Poslingford Lockout 48 24-38 Chancel Repairs – ‘Can they make me pay?’ 48 39-40 49. Making Probate Inventories in Bildeston, 1576-1764 49 2-11 Landscape of East Bergholt in the Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth centuries - II 49 12-19 Thomas Clarkson, Friend of Slaves 49 20-28 1917: the U-Boat, the Lowestoft Fishing Smack and my Dad 49 29-32 50. Suffolk Agriculture in the Second World War - I 50 2-22 Rediscovering 16th century Haughley: the Survey of the Manor of Haughley 50 23-32 Reginald Tyrwhitt, the Harwich Force and the action off Lowestoft and Yarmouth 50 33-37 Wessex, Suffolk and Two Novelists 50 38-42 51. The Suit of the Suffolk Horseman 51 3-10 2 Riding the Goaf 51 11-18 Hoxne and St Edmund - the Enigma Reviewed 51 19-28 Suffolk Agriculture in the Second World War- II 51 29-36 My account of the ten happiest, healthiest, hardest years of my life, when I became a member of the Women`s Land Army 51 37-39 An unexpected connection - Suffolk and North America 51 41-42 52. Number 80 High Street Lowestoft and Wilde family connections 52 2-17 The Adventures of Skipper Tom Phillips in the 1914/18 War 52 18-24 The Search for Elizabeth Inchbald’s Birthplace 52 25-29 The Ship Owners of Ipswich in 1283: a Maritime Community 52 30-43 53. George Ewart Evans, Champion of the people of Suffolk: his Legacy - a challenge for further enquiry 53 3-11 Redevelopment of The Mount, Ipswich: Profile of a Community 1900-39 53 12-30 Aldham - a Changed Village 53 31-37 ‘Wherof Womenkinde’, or confusion worse compounded: a cautionary tale of evidence, myth and primary and secondary sources 53 38-41 A Rumburgh Priory Inventory from the 15th century 53 42-45 54. Redevelopment of The Mount, Ipswich: Profile of a Community 1900-39 - II 54 2-11 Ipswich Tallage Roll 1227: an Introduction 54-12-20 Ipswich Tallage Roll 1227: translation 54 22-26 Greens and Commons in 100 Suffolk parishes - Hodskinson`s Map of 1783 re-visited 54 27-40 + 55 2 55. A Little History of Wickhambrook 55 3-18 Suffolk’s Travelling Fair People 55 19-35 Two Kessingland Stalwarts of the Fishing Industry 55 36-41 The Devereux Family, Viscounts Hereford 55 42-44 56. Gas Production in 19th century East Suffolk 56 2-17 Bramfield, Suffolk: Putting its head above the parapet or Standing and being counted 56 18-23 Ipswich Literary Institution - the Early Years 56 24-30 The Tale of Daniel Lewis, Suffolk Goldminer 56 31-34 Fleetwood, Henry and Robert: the Hulls of 19th century Newmarket 56 35-37 57. The Supply and Uses of Water in Ipswich before 1700 57 2-25 Floating Hospitals and Vaccination - how the Lowestoft Authorities dealt with the 1872-3 Smallpox Epidemic 57 26-30 To the New World and Back - an Emigrant from Ipswich 57 31-35 Beacon, Post and Telegraph - Signalling on the Coast 57 36-41 Peter Northeast`s Published Works (listed) 57 42-43 58. The Half-hundred of Mutford: a Domesday Investigation 58 2-30 Commemorating Ipswich’s Greatest Son, Thomas Wolsey: a long overdue Town-&-Gown Project 58 31-34 Before the Railways: the Public Transport Network in Suffolk 1796 and 1826 58 35-38 Evidence of Water Milling and River Management on an East Suffolk Manor during the Middle Ages 58 39-47 59. The CMVC in Suffolk – the First Caravan Journey in 1893 59 3-11 Brass bands in Suffolk 59 12-14 The ‘Brunel of East Anglia’, Peter Schuyler Bruff 1812-1900: a Suffolk Bi-Centenary 59 15-22 Suffolk’s Earliest Football Match at Hollesley in 1320 (in Whitsuntide Week?) 59 23-27 A Tale of Two Brothers: Henry Crabb Robinson and Thomas Robinson 59 28-30 Wickhambrook at Work 1841-1901 59 31-36 ‘This Ipswich Fellow’s Insolence’: Thomas Wolsey Again 59 37-40 60. Catherine Tollemache, in marriage and in memoriam 60 2-20 Jacob John Whittington: the man who almost stopped the erection of Downing College 60 21-33 The History of Chantry Park 60 34-42 Tuddenham: an Experiment in farming Charity Land 60 43-44 3 ABSTRACTS [with shorter titles] 46. Girl’s Industrial Home, Ipswich, 1857-1921 46 2-13 Industrial Schools/ Homes gave a second chance to less seriously offending children, some admitted voluntarily, some by Magistrates. From the 1850s, Homes supplemented private charity with public subsidy, accepting annual inspection. Samuel Belcher Chapman JP, endowed one in Ipswich, (1857) becoming ‘Honorary Manager and Secretary’. The courtyard of cottages was entered from Black Horse Lane (off Westgate Street). When space was added, the number of residents rose to 45 (aged from 11 upwards). Schooling included regular physical exercise, and training for domestic service (eg. laundry). Under two long-serving ladies, the Home received good reports. In 1880, both Mr Chapman and the Superintendent died. By 1920, the regime being `insufficiently strict`, certification was withdrawn. 46. Arson in the 1840s: Samuel Jacob 46 14-26 In July 1844 young Samuel Jacob was sentenced for transportation for life by Ipswich Assizes for arson at his employer`s farm (Columbine Hall Stowupland).
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