Country: | England |
Official Name: | Hawkedon |
Static Image: | Hawkedon, Suffolk, 3 May 2010.jpg |
Static Image Width: | 240px |
Static Image Caption: | St Mary's Church, Hawkedon |
Coordinates: | 52.145°N 0.627°W |
Population: | 120 |
Population Ref: | (2005)[1] 134 (2011)[2] |
Shire District: | West Suffolk |
Shire County: | Suffolk |
Region: | East of England |
Post Town: | Bury St Edmunds |
Postcode District: | IP29 |
Postcode Area: | IP |
Hawkedon is a village and civil parish in the West Suffolk district of Suffolk in eastern England. Located around 7miles south-south-west of Bury St Edmunds, the parish also contains the hamlet of Thurston End, and in 2005 had a population of 120.[1] The majority of the village is classed as a conservation area.
The name means 'hill of the hawks', derived from the Old English hafoc meaning hawk (in the genitive plural), and the Old English dūn meaning hill.
The village is recorded in the Domesday book with a population of 24 households in 1086; 10 freemen, 7 smallholders, 5 slaves, & 2 villagers.[3]
In 1870–72, John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales described the village as:
HAWKEDON, a parish in Sudbury district, Suffolk; 5½ miles NNE of Clare r. station, and 10 NW by N of Sudbury. Post town, Stansfield, under Sudbury. Acres, 1,461. Real property, £2,049. Population, 321. Houses, 67. Hawkedon Hall belongs to J. E. Hale, Esq.; and Thurston Hall, to H. J. Oakes, Esq. The living is a rectory in the diocese of Ely. Value, £400. Patron, H. J. Oakes, Esq. The church is ancient, with a tower; and contains an ancient font, and several brasses and monuments. There is a national school.
In 1887, John Bartholomew also wrote an entry on Hawkedon in the Gazetteer of the British Isles with a much shorter description:
Hawkedon, parish, W. Suffolk, 5½ miles NE. of Clare, 1461 acres, population 278; P.O.[4]
There are many other medieval and listed properties in the parish, notably the Grade I Swan Hall and Thurston End Hall (both fine timber-framed 16th-century houses). The village also has a 1935 listed K6 telephone box to the west of the pub. There's a total of 19 listed buildings in the parish.[5]
Although there are now no shops, there is a 15th-century pub called The Queen's Head (formerly known as the Queen Inn).[6]
The 15th-century church, St Mary's is very unusual in that it is placed on the green. It is reputed to be the only church in Suffolk located in this way.[7] It is a Grade I listed building, and includes a painted panel depicting St Dorothy and a square font with carved panels thought to date from the 12th-century.[8]
Lady Pauline Trevelyan (1816-1866); painter & socialite.