Genuki Logo Norfolk Welcome   Contents and Search

Norfolk: Weasenham All Saints

William White's History, Gazetteer, and Directory of Norfolk 1883

[Transcription copyright © Pat Newby]

WEASENHAM ALL SAINTS, or Upper Weasenham, is a small scattered village and parish, 3½ miles N.W. of Litcham, 3½ from Rudham Railway Station, and 8 miles S.W. by S. of Fakenham. It is in Mitford and Launditch union and petty sessional division, East Dereham county court district, Norwich bankruptcy district, Launditch hundred, Massingham polling district of West Norfolk, Brisley rural deanery, and Norwich archdeaconry.

It had 364 inhabitants in 1881, living on 1988 acres, and has a rateable value of £2669. It is nearly all the property of the Earl of Leicester, who is lord of the manor and lessee of the rectorial tithes.

The CHURCH is a small building, comprising only nave, north aisle, chancel, and south porch. The vicarage, valued in the King's Book at £15 10s., is consolidated with Weasenham St. Peter's.

Here is a neat school of brick, in the Elizabethan style, with house attached, erected in 1859 at a cost of £900, on land given by the Earl of Leicester. There are 125 names on the books. The children from Weasenham St. Peter's attend here.

The Wesleyans and the Primitive Methodists have small chapels in the parish.

Here is a fair for toys, &c., on January 25. The Fuel Allotment, awarded in 1809 to Weasenham All Saints and St. Peter, is 40 acres, on which the poor cut fuel. The poor of All Saints have 10s. a year, left by John Billing in 1630, and the interest of £10 left by John Bailey, invested in Post Office Savings Bank.

POST from Swaffham, viâ Weasenham St. Peter. Letters arrive at 7 a.m. Rougham is the nearest Money Order Office.

	Blyth      James               farmer
	Chapman    John                shopkeeper & carrier to Lynn and
	                                 Fakenham
	Calthrop   James Sykes         farmer, Upper hall
	Griffiths  Miss Ellen Vincent  National schoolmistress
	Groom      Horace Alfred       frmr. Weasenham hall
	Knox       William             shoemaker
	Mason      William             cottager
	Middleton  William Clarence    farmer
	Rayner     Henry               tailor and parish clerk
	Smith      William             vict. Ostrich Inn, and blacksmith
	Turner     John                grocer
CARRIER - John Chapman, to Plough, Lynn, and back, Tues., and to Bell, Fakenham, Thurs., through South and East Rainham


See also the Weasenham All Saints parish page.

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.

Copyright © Pat Newby.
July 2007