Neha Patil (Editor)

Ditchingham

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Population
  
1,635 (2011)

Civil parish
  
Ditchingham

Country
  
England

Area
  
8.56 km²

Shire county
  
Norfolk

OS grid reference
  
TM 340 910

Region
  
East

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Local time
  
Wednesday 7:08 PM

District
  
South Norfolk

Ditchingham httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Weather
  
7°C, Wind SW at 10 km/h, 89% Humidity

Ditchingham day nursery good ofsted january 2015


Ditchingham is a village and civil parish in the English county of Norfolk. It is located across the River Waveney from Bungay, Suffolk near to The Broads National Park.

Contents

Map of Ditchingham, Bungay, UK

Overview

The civil parish has an area of 8.56 km2 (3.31 sq mi) and in the 2001 census had a population of 1614 in 695 households, increasing to 1,635 at the 2011 Census. For the purposes of local government, the parish falls within the district of South Norfolk.

In 1855 Lavinia Crosse founded the Anglican Community of All Hallows in Ditchingham.

The novelist Sir H. Rider Haggard, author of King Solomon's Mines, lived in Ditchingham and was churchwarden there for several years. He was born in Kessingland and had connections with the church in Bungay.

Lilias Rider Haggard, the novelist's daughter, edited I walked by Night, being the life and history of the King of the Norfolk Poachers, published in 1935 by Nicholson and Watson, London. She also edited The Rabbit Skin Cap, a tale of a Norfolk countryman's youth, first published in 1939 and reprinted by the Norfolk Library, 1974, 1975, 1976, which is the life story of George Baldry, a local inventor and poacher in the early C20. The picture on the front cover of the hardback edition was of a Ditchingham school boy, Douglas Walter Gower, taken from a painting by the artist Edward Seago. The boy later in life found a mammoth's tooth in a gravel pit near an ancient long barrow on the Broome Heath (see Prehistoric Norfolk), which is now in the Norwich Castle museum.

Victoria Cross recipient Victor Buller Turner lived at Ditchingham from after the Second World War until his death in 1972, and his ashes are buried in St Mary's churchyard.

Ditchingham is also the home of the "Chicken Roundabout", a traffic roundabout inhabited by a colony of chickens which has survived the construction of a bypass through their home. An attempt by the authorities to move them led to protests by local residents.

Governance

An electoral ward in the name of Ditchingham and Broome exists. The population of this ward at the 2011 Census was 2,333.

Industry

Parravani's ice creams were established in the village in the early C20 and Lamberts Coaches are another long established local company.

Much of the land surrounding the village belongs to the Ditchingham Hall estate, the seat of Earl Ferrers. The current owner is Robert Shirley, 14th Earl Ferrers.

References

Ditchingham Wikipedia