Neha Patil (Editor)

Ingham, Suffolk

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Population
  
419 (2001)451 (2011)

Civil parish
  
Ingham

Country
  
Local time
  
Monday 4:37 AM

District
  
St Edmundsbury

UK parliament constituency
  
OS grid reference
  
TL850700

Region
  
Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Shire county
  
Dialling code
  
01284

Ingham, Suffolk

Weather
  
7°C, Wind NW at 13 km/h, 92% Humidity

Ingham is a small village in Suffolk, England, located about six miles north of Bury St Edmunds on the A143 to Thetford in Norfolk. The village boasts a single church, post office and a pub, the Cadogan Arms which closed in 2006 for refurbishment.

Map of Ingham, UK

Ingham is mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086. Possible etymologies are "homestead or village of a man called Inga" or "home of the Inguiones" (an ancient Germanic tribe).

The Church is dedicated to St. Bartholomew and is Church of England. The post office provides some local library links. The village school was a one room school serving the small class of all grades. It closed in the mid 1980s as a result of declining numbers, despite the expansion of the village with the new housing estate in the 1960s and 1970s. Locals are mainly employed in Bury St Edmunds or Thetford, commuting to work, though some work locally in agriculture or transport industries.

Situated on a slight rise north of Bury St Edmunds the village has a large green, formerly including school playing fields to the east of the main road reached by a lane between the Church and the Post Office. Beyond the green lies the abandoned railway cutting - the line and Ingham railway station closed in the 1950s, though Ingham is still served by buses.

Thetford Forest lies a few miles to the north west.

References

Ingham, Suffolk Wikipedia


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