Kilverstone

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox UK place

Kilverstone is a village and civil parish in the English county of Norfolk.

Kilverstone is located Template:Convert north-east of Thetford and Template:Convert south-west of Norwich.

History

Kilverstone's name is of Viking origin and derives from the Old Norse for Kilvert's farmstead.[1]

In the Domesday Book, Kilverstone is listed as a settlement of 18 households in the hundred of Shropham. In 1086, the village was divided between the East Anglian estates of King William I and Robert Malet.[2]

During the 1840s, Kilverstone Heath was the scene of temporary wooden housing for navvies working on the railway.[3] During the Second World War, a Type 22 Pillbox was built at the level crossing to defend Kilverstone against a possible German invasion.[4]

Geography

Due to its small size, population statistics are not collected for Kilverstone.[5]

St. Andrew's Church

Kilverstone's parish church is dedicated to Saint Andrew and dates from the Twelfth Century, being one of Norfolk's 124 remaining round-tower churches. St. Andrew's is located on Kilverstone Road and has been Grade II listed since 1958.[6] The church remains open for Sunday service once a month.[7]

St. Andrew's features a stained-glass window designed by Leonard Walker and a set of royal arms from the reign of King George I.[8]

Kilverstone Hall

Template:Main article Kilverstone Hall was built in the Seventeenth Century in the Jacobean style for Thomas Wright. The house was subsequently bought by Josiah Vavasseur, an executive at Armstrong Whitworth, who sold the home to the family of Admiral John Fisher, 1st Baron Fisher.[9][10]

Notable Residents

War Memorial

Kilverstone's war memorial is a marble plaque inside St. Andrew's Church which lists the following names for the First World War:[11]

Rank Name Unit Date of Death Burial/Commemoration
Capt. Duncan C. Graham 7th Bn., Norfolk Regiment 28 Apr. 1917 Arras Memorial
LSjt. James Maund 12th Bn., Suffolk Regiment 8 Jan. 1918 Mory Abbey Military Cemetery
AS George Thirtle Drake Bn., Royal Naval Division 13 Nov. 1916 Thiepval Memorial
Dvr. Charles T. Goddard 127th Coy., Royal Engineers 1 Dec. 1918 Mikra British Cemetery
Pte. Alfred C. Vincent 3rd Bn., Coldstream Guards 15 Sep. 1916 Thiepval Memorial
Pte. William E. Goddard 6th Bn., Lancashire Fusiliers 5 Apr. 1918 Le Cateau British Cemetery
Pte. Arthur H. Hatton 4th Bn., Loyal Regiment 15 Jun. 1915 Le Touret Memorial
Pte. Percy A. Meadows 1st Bn., Norfolk Regiment 7 Sep. 1916 Thiepval Memorial
Pte. George Vincent 7th Bn., North Staffordshire Regt. 25 Jan. 1917 Amara War Cemetery

References

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External links

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Template:Civil Parishes of Breckland

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