Barnham, Suffolk

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Barnham
Suffolk
St Gregory Barnham - geograph.org.uk - 949816.jpg
The Church of St Gregory, Barnham
Location
Grid reference: TL869793
Location: 52°22’48"N, 0°44’49"E
Data
Population: 606  (2011)
Post town: Thetford
Postcode: IP24
Local Government
Council: West Suffolk
Parliamentary
constituency:
West Suffolk

Barnham is a village in Suffolk, in the north of the county, close to the border with Norfolk, marked here by the River Little Ouse which flows by the north edge of the village. Barnham is three miles south of Thetford and nine miles north of Bury St Edmunds, on the A134. A mile to the east is a similarly sized village, Euston.

The name of the village is believed to be from the Old English Beornes ham, meaning 'Beorn's homestead' or 'warrior's homestead'.[1]

Prehistory

East Farm, Barnham, is an important archaeological site dating back to the Hoxnian Stage of the Lower Palaeolithic (about 400,000 years ago).[2][3] Flint artefacts have also been found.[4]

History

The Domesday Book of 1086 records that Barnham housed 35 families, which meant it was a large village by the standards of the time. It was part of the holdings of Earl Hugh of Chester, having been held by Edward the Confessor in 1066.

The parish church, dedicated to St Gregory, was heavily restored in the 19th century.[5] The village used to be split into two parishes, divided between the Liberties of St Edmund and of Thetford until 1639.[5][6] Ruins of the other church, dedicated to St Martin, can still be seen.

From 1808 to 1814, Barnham had a station in the shutter telegraph chain, which connected the Admiralty in London to its naval ships in the port of Great Yarmouth.

Barnham railway station on the Thetford to Bury St Edmunds line closed in 1960.

Barnham Windmill was a three-storey tower mill built in the village in 1821. It has been converted into residential accommodation.

RAF Barnham

RAF Barnham was to the north of Barnham on Thetford Heath, along the A134 two miles south of Thetford. The base was opened in 1939 and used as a chemical weapons store during and after the Second World War. In the 1950s, a nuclear weapons store facility was built on part of the site to store the UK's free-fall nuclear bombs for the Blue Danube project. The site is known to have been operational as a nuclear store in September 1956, commanded from RAF Honington, six miles to the south, but it is believed to have stopped in 1963, after the development of the Blue Steel missile programme. The nuclear facility was closed in 1966 and became an industrial site. However, it is a scheduled monument and several buildings on it have listed building status.[7]

Barnham Camp remains a training site for the RAF Regiment as a satellite camp to RAF Honington.

Barnham Heath

Barnham Heath is a Site of Special Scientific Interest to the east of the village. Its 189 acres consist of Breckland heath with a range of grassland and scrub habitats.[8] It is an important bird habitat, including the protected stone curlew (B. oedicnemus).[8]

Land surrounding the village also forms part of the Breckland Farmland and Breckland Forest SSSIs as well as the Barnham Little Heath and Thetford Heaths SSSI.

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Outside links

References

  1. Ekwall, Eilert, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 4th edition, 1960. ISBN 0198691033
  2. Pettit, Paul: 'Review of Ashton, N. M. et al, Excavations at the Lower Palaeolithic Site as East Farm, Barnham, Suffolk, 1989–1994' (British Museum Press, 1998); 'Lithics' Volume 20, page 65 (Lithic Studies Society)
  3. Successful colonisers: Natural History Museum
  4. Nick Ashton: Early Humans, New Naturalist series (HarperCollins, 2017), pp. 128–132.
  5. 5.0 5.1 St Gregory, Barnham, Suffolk Churches
  6. St Martin, Barnham, Suffolk Churches
  7. National Heritage List 1020781: Atomic bomb store on Thetford Heath (Grade @ listing)
  8. 8.0 8.1 SSSI listing and designation for Barnham Heath