Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Sutton, Bedfordshire

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OS grid reference
  
TL219444

Unitary authority
  
Central Bedfordshire

Country
  
England

Dialling code
  
01767

Post town
  
Sandy

Civil parish
  
Sutton

Region
  
East

Local time
  
Saturday 6:48 PM

Ceremonial county
  
Bedfordshire

UK parliament constituency
  
North East Bedfordshire

Sutton, Bedfordshire

Population
  
299 (2001 Census) 366 (2011 Census including Eyeworth)

Weather
  
14°C, Wind W at 10 km/h, 60% Humidity

Sutton is a village and civil parish in the Central Bedfordshire district of Bedfordshire, England. It is just over a mile south of Potton and near the market towns of Sandy and Biggleswade. At the 2001 Census, its population was 299.

Contents

Map of Sutton, UK

History

The first written record of the village is its listing in the Domesday Book. Sutton Castle was built c1220, though now an oval motte is all that remains. Unusually, the castle is a long way from the village and church.

John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster, son of King Edward III, held the manor of Sutton in the 14th Century. A moat near the John O'Gaunt Golf Club, in Sutton Park, is said to be the site of his manor house. The present house is modern, but to the north of it is a large earthen mound, said to be the site of the original house, and undoubtedly of early date. It has been encircled by a ditch, and local tradition has it that the village was formerly near to it.

Sutton was the birthplace of General John Burgoyne the British army officer, politician and dramatist best known for his role in the American War of Independence. He lived with his family at Sutton Park (now the John O'Gaunt Golf Club). In 1741, the Sutton Enclosure Act was passed. Such local Enclosure Acts allowed the major landowners in the area to reorganise their widely separated landholdings. This produced a larger estate for the Burgoynes. Sutton Park House was destroyed by a fire in 1825. It was subsequently re-designed in 1876. There are monuments to the Burgoynes in All Saints Church. The tomb of Sir John Burgoyne, by Edward Stanton, is dated 1604. The monument to Sir Roger, who died in 1679, is by Grinling Gibbons

The village pub, the John O'Gaunt Public House, was licensed in 1835 and created in 1836. The pub was created from three 18th-century thatched cottages.

The village school, Sutton V.A. Lower School, was opened in 1870.

Packhorse bridge and ford

The Packhorse bridge is a small, double arch bridge beside the ford across Potton Brook, a tributary of the River Ivel. The bridge was built in the 14th or 15th century from local sandstone. It is thought to be the only surviving bridge of its type in Bedfordshire. The bridge was situated on an important trade route involving wool between the towns of Bedford and Dunstable.

In 1941 Bedfordshire County Council assumed responsibility for the Packhorse bridge, and carried out repairs in 1986. The repairs later earnt the council a Civic Trust award in 1988.

All Saints' parish church

The Church of England parish church of All Saints has a barrel organ and was once under the control of the scandalous Reverend Edward Drax Free. A detailed study of the architecture was taken in 2003 and can be read at English Church Architecture

References

Sutton, Bedfordshire Wikipedia


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