Blakeney, Norfolk Explained

Official Name:Blakeney
Country:England
Region:East of England
Shire District:North Norfolk
Shire County:Norfolk
Civil Parish:Blakeney CP
Static Image Name:Village Sign, Blackeney, 24th March 2009.JPG
Static Image Caption:The village sign in Blakeney (March 2009)
Population:801
Population Ref:(whole administrative parish, 2011 census)[1]
Area Total Km2:9.90
Os Grid Reference:TG020430
Coordinates:52.9542°N 1.0192°W
Post Town:HOLT
Postcode Area:NR
Postcode District:NR25
Dial Code:01263
Constituency Westminster:North Norfolk

Blakeney is a coastal village and civil parish in the English county of Norfolk.[2] Blakeney lies within the Norfolk Coast AONB (Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty) and the North Norfolk Heritage Coast. The North Norfolk Coastal Path travels along its quayside.[3] The village is north west of Norwich, NNW of the larger settlement of Holt, west of Cromer and NNE of London.

The civil parish has an area of 9.9km2 and in the 2001 census had a population of 789 in 402 households. For the purposes of local government, the parish falls within the district of North Norfolk.[4]

Description

Blakeney was a commercial seaport until the early 20th century. Now the harbour is silted up, and only small boats can make their way out past Blakeney Point to the sea. Adjacent to the hill, at the foot of the village's High Street, is the old Guildhall with a 14th-century undercroft.

Higher up the village, the Church of St Nicholas has two towers: the main tower is more than 100 ft (30 m) high and a well-known landmark for miles around; the smaller tower was built as a beacon to guide boats into Blakeney Harbour.

History

In the Domesday Book of 1086,[5] Blakeney is recorded under the name Esnuterle (later, Snitterley); the main landholders are noted as Walter Gifford and William de Noyers. The settlement first appears under the name Blakeney in a document which dates from 1340.[5] Around the same period Edward III's wife, Queen Philippa is said to have dined on fish caught by Blakeney's fishermen.[5]

The village's name means 'Black island'.

Haven

Blakeney Haven was a deeper inlet on the north coast of Norfolk into which the River Glaven flowed. Sheltered behind Blakeney Point, it was a major shipping area in the Middle Ages, with relatively important North Norfolk ports at Wiveton, Cley next the Sea and Blakeney itself. Cley and Wiveton silted up in the 17th century, but Blakeney prospered, especially after the channel to the Haven was deepened in 1817. Packet ships ran from that port to Hull and London from 1840. This trade declined as ships became too large for the harbour, and it is now silted up with access only for small boats.[6]

From the 12th century Blakeney had a reputation for acts of piracy: between 1328 and 1350 it is recorded that men of Blakeney boarded two vessels sailing from Flanders and sailed them back to Blakeney haven, where they were stripped of their cargoes. Many a foreign merchant ship which sought shelter in the haven found its cargo stolen. Such was the lawlessness of the residents that the village refused to supply a ship for the battle against the Spanish Armada.[5] [7]

'Chapel'

See main article: Blakeney Chapel. This building now in adjoining Cley next the Sea appears never to have been a chapel and may merely have been a hermitage. Indeed, the calendar of England's Patent Rolls dated 20 April 1343, confirms a grant of alms-seeking across the realms to a local hermit.

Friary

This was among the junior houses of a Carmelite region (distinctio) which included Burnham Norton, King's Lynne and Yarmouth the crypt of its senior house is intact and is converted to part of Norwich's Printing Museum which is run by an active printing firm, Jarrold's in the city.[8]

The northern part of Friary Park by the seashore is a modest caravan park for visitors, with the remainder being the relatively small Friary Farm.

Friary Farmhouse incorporates remains of the Carmelite Friary founded in 1296 with its church consecrated in 1302. This was the gift of Maud de Roos or latterly de Ros, née de Vaux, wife of William de Ros, 1st Baron de Ros who distinguished himself in the Crusades, was knighted and granted land at Cley and Blakeney.

In 1321 their son, William completed the foundation.

The house has a date-stone: "1667 T.R.I" and is made of flint and brick with some stone quoins. Despite modern windows and most exterior work it incorporates medieval walling, a buttress, various blocked openings, fragments of window surrounds and stonework including a re-used carved kneeler on the south-west gable with coat of arms.

Windmill

See main article: Blakeney Windmill. Blakeney Mill in Friary Park is a Grade II listed building and is chiefly of flint with brick dressings (mostly its upper parts) across its three storeys. It appears on a map of 1769 in this exact location, following earlier mention from the Domesday Book of mills in the village.

Railway

In the 19th century a rail branch line from Holt to a new station at Blakeney was planned by the Midland & Great Northern Joint Railway. The scheme was never completed, although the junction site at High Kelling now serves as Holt station on the North Norfolk Railway. A rival proposal for a branch from Cawston to Cley and Blakeney was put forward by the East Norfolk Railway, but this was also not built.[9]

Tourism

Blakeney is a popular tourist resort during the summer months. The village has two large hotels, one in a historic building, and one with a modern main part but with also with a late 17th-century and 18th-century barn annexe, The Blakeney Hotel as well as having the alternative at the end of the Quay Road of the caravan site.

Blakeney offers a large range of activities including crabbing, fishing, canoeing and birdwatching. In the area of marshland around Blakeney Point, owned by the National Trust, up to a hundred species of birds can be found throughout the year. Several pubs in the area serve food and real ale.

Wells-next-the-Sea has a miniature and heritage railway to the west.

The North Norfolk Coastal Path travels along its quayside and varies between a path through salt marshes, raised promenades, sandy beaches and compact villages in this section.

Demography

The population of Blakeney, according to the census of 1801, was 618. This number increased, lagging just behind national population growth in the forty years to 1851, to 1,108 however a gradual decline in population took place until 1931, particularly during the early years of this decline which coincided with the arrival of the railway at Holt to the south and national urban industrialisation – population fell from 1,108 to 641 in 1931. Population growth resumed and saw a growth between 1961 and 2011, to 801 people. Data for 1801–1961 is available at Britain Through Time.[10] The 2001 and 2011 Censuses give detailed information about the village. The settlement's population in 2011 were living in 407 households.[1]

Transport

The village's centre is off the northern side of the A149 coast road from King's Lynn to Cromer, with a further part of Blakeney community directly adjoining in the residential estates south of this and also several outlying farms.[11] The nearest railway station is at Sheringham, two villages to the east for the Bittern line to Norwich.

The nearest airport is Norwich Airport.

War memorial

Blakeney's war memorial is a brick and pebble arch with two granite plaques, one commemorating the First World War and another for the Second World War. The First World War memorial lists the following 31 names:[12]

!Rank!Name!Unit!Date of Death!Other Commemoration / Burial
CSVincent K. BullenHMS Vanguard9 July 1917Chatham Naval Memorial
Lt.Basil C. Ash2nd Battalion, Sherwood Foresters20 September 1914Communal Cemetery, Chauny
2Lt.Cyril C. G. Roe1st (Drake) Battalion, Royal Naval Division28 April 1917Arras Memorial
MIDChristopher A. G. CookeHMS Vanguard9 July 1917Chatham Naval Memorial
Sgt.R. M. DanielNorthumberland Hussars23 March 1918Communal Cemetery, Chauny
A/Sgt.Alfred E. Turner7th Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment13 October 1915Loos Memorial
ABRobert BaldingHMS Aboukir22 September 1914Chatham Naval Memorial
Cpl.Clement B. Mitchell8th Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment11 August 1917Menin Gate
Cpl.Ernest H. Starling2/9th (Queen Victoria's Rifles) Battalion, London Regiment27 September 1917Tyne Cot
Gnr.George A. KingHMS Crusader21 January 1917Portsmouth Naval Memorial
Gnr.William E. KingHMS Bulwark26 November 1914Portsmouth Naval Memorial
Gnr.George P. Hudson301st (Siege) Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery12 September 1918Military Cemetery, Quaëdypre
Pvt.Percy H. Allen10th Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force22 May 1915Vimy Memorial
Pvt.Jack Long MM2nd Battalion, Coldstream Guards30 November 1917British Cemetery,Gouzeaucourt
Pvt.William E. Seales1/6th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry23 November 1916St. Sever Cemetery, Rouen
Pvt.John Newland8th Battalion, East Yorkshire Regiment3 May 1917Faubourg Cemetery, Arras
Pvt.James Moore1st Battalion, Essex Regiment2 January 1916Lancashire Landing Cemetery
Pvt.William S. Pyke9th Battalion, Essex Rgt.19 September 1918Communal Cemetery, Doingt
Pvt.Thomas H. Palmer11th Battalion, Royal Fusiliers10 August 1917Menin Gate
Pvt.Thomas R. D. Lane1/7th Battalion, King's Regiment20 September 1917Tyne Cot
Pvt.Edward A. Adcock2/8th Battalion, Lancashire Fusiliers21 March 1918Heath Cemetery
Pvt.Reginald C. Cooper1st Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment5 July 1916St. Nicholas' Churchyard, Blakeney
Pvt.Clarence A. Haines1st Bn., Royal Norfolks27 July 1916Thiepval Memorial
Pvt.Herbert J. Long1/5th Battalion, Royal Norfolks28 August 1915Helles Memorial
Rfn.Frederick W. Pyke17th (Poplar and Stepney Rifles) Battalion, London Regiment23 December 1917Ramleh War Cemetery
And, C. Claxton, J. H. Long, G. A. J. Moore, C. Nicholls, J. W. Smith and H. Wright. As well as the following eight men for the Second World War:
!Rank!Name!Unit!Date of Death!Other Commemoration / Burial
AC1John T. BaldingRoyal Air Force Volunteer Reserve30 October 1940Norwich Cemetery, Norwich
Cpl.Jack Cobon1st Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment6 June 1944La Délivrande War Cemetery
LACRaymond H. HarcourtRoyal Air Force Volunteer Reserve8 November 1944Kranji War Memorial
Mne.J. Albert BaldingRoyal Marines att. HMS Glorious9 June 1940Plymouth Naval Memorial
Pvt.Harold Milner1st Battalion, Leicestershire Regiment21 October 1944War Cemetery, Geel
Pvt.Frederick W. Grimes5th Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment21 September 1944Kranji War Memorial

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2011 Census . 16 July 2013 . 11 February 2003 . https://web.archive.org/web/20030211201309/http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/ . dead .
  2. OS Explorer Map 24 – Norfolk Coast Central.
  3. Ordnance Survey (2002). OS Explorer Map 251 – Norfolk Coast Central. .
  4. Office for National Statistics & Norfolk County Council (2001). Census population and household counts for unparished urban areas and all parishes. Retrieved 2 December 2005.
  5. The Domesday Book, Englands Heritage, Then and Now, Editor: Thomas Hinde, Norfolk page 182/183, Blakeney,
  6. Book: Pevsner, Nikolaus . Wilson, Bill . The Buildings of England Norfolk I: Norwich and North-East Norfolk . 2002 . New Haven and London . Yale University Press . 0-300-09607-0 . 394–397.
  7. Wright . John . 2002 . The origins of Blakeney Church . Glaven Historian . 5 . 26–34.
  8. http://www.carmelite.org/chronology/Norwich.pdf The Medieval Carmelite Priory at Norwich: A Chronology
  9. The East Norfolk Railway, R.S. Joby p. 33
  10. Web site: Blakeney through time : Population Statistics : Total Population . 13 July 2013 . A Vision of Britain through Time.
  11. County A to Z Atlas, Street & Road maps Norfolk,
  12. Web site: Roll of Honour - Norfolk - Blakeney . 2024-11-08 . www.roll-of-honour.com.
  13. Web site: Nick Godfrey . Arthur Budgett:The only man to have trained and bred two Derby winners in the 20th century . The Independent . 17 September 2019 . 22 July 2011.