Norton, Suffolk

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

Norton is a village and civil parish in the Mid Suffolk district of the English county of Suffolk. The name Norton means northern town or farm.[1] Located close to the A14, its nearest railway station is at Elmswell, just over Template:Convert away. The closest towns are Stowmarket Template:Convert away and Bury St Edmunds, around Template:Convert away.

History

The village once formed part of Blackbourn Hundred, which appears in the Domesday Book.[2] Its agricultural past is reflected in the number of listed buildings in the village today that are former barns, stables and cartlodges.[3] An 1870s gazetteer of Britain describes the parish as comprising 2,449 acres and having a population of 948. It also mentions it as a meet for the Suffolk fox hounds.[4]

File:The Dog, Norton - geograph.org.uk - 222467.jpg
View to Norton pub

The village today

Today the village has a population of around 800.[5] Community facilities include a Greene King pub called "The Norton Dog" and a village shop located in the Total service station on Woolpit Road.[6] A mobile Post Office is located next to the village hall every weekday afternoon.

Norton has a pre-school next to the village hall and a Church of England voluntary primary school, with children generally moving on to middle school in the nearby communities of Ixworth and Beyton. Secondary education is provided at Thurston Community College.[7][8]

The community is served by three churches, with a Baptist church and Salvation Army citadel on Woolpit Road. The Medieval Church of St Andrew at Norton, located some way from the centre of the village, contains a collection of eight 14th-century misericords and is believed to stand on the site of a Saxon church.[9][10]

Norton is served with a bus service to Bury St Edmunds and Stowmarket which operates on a daily basis.

Little Haugh Hall

Near the village is Little Haugh Hall, a Grade II* listed building. In the 18th century it was the home of the antiquarian Cox Macro.[11][12]

References

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External links

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  1. Norton Village website. Retrieved 2013-01-31.
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  3. Norton, Suffolk, British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 2013-01-31.
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  6. Norton Dog, The Suffolk Real Ale Guide, CAMRA. Retrieved 2013-02-01./
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