Many other links - See the icons at the top of the page. Search for more references to this parish - See
Contents & Search above. Modern and Historical Maps of this Parish.
Terrington St Clement is about 4 miles west of King's Lynn.
See also Terrington St John.
The Parish of Terrington St Clement Church Registers,
1900-1924.
[Seagull, 1984]
Methodist Publishing
Baptisms Solemnized in the Wesleyan Methodist Chapel,
Terrington St Clement, in the County of Norfolk, 1916-1958.
[Methodist Publishing, 1958]
Civil Registration
For the civil registration of births, marriages and deaths between 1837
and 1930 (and for the censuses from 1851 to 1901), Terrington St Clement
was in
Wisbech Registration District.
Centenary of Terrington St Clement Parish council, 1994:
Extracts from the minutes.
[Terrington St Clement History Group, 1994
Terrington St Clement History Group
Terrington St Clement: A Marshland Village in Photographs.
[ISBN: 0952169517, Terrington St Clement History Group, 1993]
Terrington St Clement History Group
Terrington St Clement: A Marshland Village: A richly illustrated
account of the recent history of this Norfolk Village.
[ISBN: 0952169509, Terrington St Clement History Group, 1993]
Terrington St Clement History Group
The Changing Face of Terrington St Clement.
[ISBN: 0952169525, Terrington St Clement History Group, 2001]
Ward, H.
Terrington St Clement through the ages.
[Terrington St Clement, 1974]
Terrington Saint Clement and Terrington Saint John Inclosure
Act, 1790.
An act for embanking the common salt marsh within the parishes
of Terrington Saint Clement's and Terrington Saint John's in
the county of Norfolk, and for dividing and enclosing the
same, and other commons within the said parishes.
[1790]
Great Britain: Statute
Terrington Inclosure Act, 1847.
An act for dividing, allotting, and inclosing certain open
marshes and waste lands in the township of Terrington in the
county of Norfolk: 21st June 1847.
[London, George Edward Eyre and William Spottiswoode, 1847]
After 1834 Terrington St Clement became part of the
Wisbech Union,
and the workhouse was at
Wisbech in Cambridgeshire.
These pages are for personal use only. They may not be copied, and
the links within them may not be harvested for use on your own web
pages. Please see the
Copyright Notice.