Sutton St Edmund

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Sutton St Edmund
Lincolnshire

St Edmund's church, Sutton St Edmund
Location
Grid reference: TF368131
Location: 52°41’55"N, -0°1’25"E
Data
Population: 684  (2011, with Throckenholt)
Post town: Spalding
Postcode: PE12
Local Government
Council: South Holland
Parliamentary
constituency:
South Holland
and The Deepings

Sutton St Edmunds is a village in Holland, the south-eastern part of Lincolnshire, about 14 miles south-east of the town of Spalding.

Sutton St Edmunds was a chapelry to the parish of Long Sutton until 1866. The parish includes the hamlet of Throckenholt.

The parish church, St Edmund’s, is a red-brick Grade II listed building. It was completely rebuilt in 1795, and has 19th-century alterations and extensions. It was extended again in 1987. It is a Grade II listed building.[1]

The village has a village hall.

Guarnock House is a red-brick Grade II listed building. It was built in 1699 and has a 20th-century roof.[2]

Throckenholt Priory was sited here. It was a hermitage and chapel in existence from at least 1107-1540. It was granted to Thorney Abbey by Nigel, Bishop of Ely.[3]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Sutton St Edmund)

References

  1. National Heritage List 1064538: St Edmunds Church (Grade II listing)
  2. National Heritage List 1204812: Guarnock House (Grade II listing)
  3. National Monuments Record: No. 353387 – Throckenholt Priory