Wymondham (/ˈwɪndəm/WIN-dəm) is a market town and civil parish in the South Norfolk district of Norfolk, England. It lies on the River Tiffey, 12 miles (19 km) south-west of Norwich and just off the A11 road to London.[2] The parish, one of Norfolk's largest, includes rural areas to the north and south, with hamlets of Suton, Silfield, Spooner Row and Wattlefield.[3] It had a population of 14,405 in 2011,[4] of whom 13,587 lived in the town itself.[5]
Development
The community developed during the Anglo-Saxon period and expanded with the establishment of a priory in 1107 and a market in 1204. Industrially, Wymondham became known as a centre of woodturning and brush-making, retaining its brush factories until the late 20th century.[6] New housing to the north and east of the town centre brought rapid expansion.[7] Dual carriageways for the A11[8] and the development of rapid rail links to Norwich and Cambridge means Wymondham is now a commuter town.[9] Major local employers include the headquarters of Norfolk Constabulary and the Lotus Cars factory at nearby Hethel.[10]
The ancient centre, much damaged in a fire of 1615, contains landmarks and listed buildings that include the twin-towered Wymondham Abbey. Modern Wymondham continues to grow. The current local-authority action plan envisages building 2,200 new homes by 2026, while promoting it as "a forward-looking market town which embraces sustainable growth to enhance its unique identity and sense of community."[7]
History
Origin of the name
The uncertain, Anglo-Saxon origins of the name probably consist of a personal name such as Wigmund or Wimund, with hām meaning village or settlement, or hamm meaning a river meadow.[10][11] The place has been referred to as Windham on occasions.
Iron Age artefacts were investigated systematically while the A11 bypass was being built in the early 1990s. There are postholes, quarries and evidence of iron smelting and bone working.[12] Objects from the period include coins, jewellery and pottery.[3]
Roman remains include an aisled structure[13] and a copper-alloy metal-working site. A Roman road from Venta Icenorum to Watton and beyond is visible as cropmarks. Large numbers of coins and pottery sherds have been found, as have personal items such as brooches, cosmetic tools and a duck figurine.[14][3]
Few Saxon buildings survive, although excavations showed a sunken-featured building with Early and Middle Saxon pottery. Remains of a possible Late Saxon church were discovered during excavations at Wymondham Abbey in 2002.[3][15]
Middle Ages
By 1086, Wymondham had 376 households (giving an estimated total population of 1,880), which put it among the top 20 per cent of settlements recorded in Domesday. The land was held by two feudal Lords: William the Conqueror and William de Warenne.[16]
The Saxon church made way for a new Norman priory in 1107, its church shared between the monks and the townspeople. This evolved over the centuries into the Wymondham Abbey seen today.[15][17]
The first market charter came from King John in 1204, although an earlier market was probably held. The charter was renewed by Henry VI in 1440 and a weekly market is still held on Fridays.[10]
Early modern period
Wymondham Abbey was dissolved in 1538 and the domestic buildings and monastic half of the church were gradually demolished. Loye Ferrers, the last Abbot, became Vicar when the post fell vacant, and the remaining church buildings continued in use as the parish church.
Robert Kett led a rebellion in 1549 of peasants and small farmers against enclosure of common land. His force of scarcely armed men held the city of Norwich for six weeks until defeated by the King's forces. He was hanged at Norwich Castle[20] and his brother William was hanged from the church west tower. Kett's Oak, ostensibly the rallying point of the rebellion, can be seen on the B1172 road between Wymondham and Hethersett, part of an earlier main road to London.[21]
The town suffered a major fire beginning on Sunday, 11 June 1615. Losses included the Market Cross, the vicarage, the old town hall and the schoolhouse. Buildings that survived include the Green Dragon inn. Thereafter, 327 inhabitants – some 55 per cent of residents at the time – made claims for lost goods and houses.[22] The register of St Andrew's Church in Norwich records that John Flodder and others were executed for arson on 2 December 1615.[23] Rebuilding varied in pace. A new Market Cross was completed in 1617, but in 1621 there were still some 15 properties to be rebuilt.[24]
In 1695, the Attleborough road was the second British turnpike built, pre-dated only by the Great North Road.[25]
Later Wymondham
In 1785, a prison was built in line with the ideas of the prison reformer John Howard.[26] The first in England to have separate cells for prisoners, it was widely copied there and in the United States.[10][27] It now serves as Wymondham Heritage Museum.
The collapse of the woollen industry in the mid-19th century led to poverty. In 1836 there were still 600 hand looms, but by 1845 only 60. The town became a backwater in Victorian times, untouched by development elsewhere.[28]
For much of the 20th century, there were two brush factories together employing up to 1,000 people. They both closed in the 1980s and the land was turned over to housing.[30]
Governance
Wymondham has a town council responsible for local matters laid down by law, including a role in urban planning.[31] It has 14 members elected every four years. Wymondham divides into four wards: North,[32] East,[33] Central[34] and South.[35]Spooner Row, though within the parish of Wymondham, elects its own community council.[36][37]
Wymondham civil parish falls in the district of South Norfolk, returning six district councillors. In elections in May 2023, Wymondham elected three Liberal Democrat District councillors, two Conservatives and one Labour. In Town Council elections fourteen councillors are returned. After May 2023 local elections, the Town Council consisted of seven Liberal Democrats, four Labour, two Green and a solitary Conservative councillor. In 2023 the Town Council elected two women for the roles of mayor and deputy mayor, the first time this had occurred in Wymondham's history.
After a by-election for Central Wymondham held the same day as the General Election on 4 July 2024, another Liberal Democrat was elected bringing the total to eight on the Council.
In County Council elections, the north part, with the Town Centre, returns one councillor to Norfolk County Council as Wymondham electoral division.[38] The southern part elects a county councillor as part of Forehoe electoral division.[39]
For much of the 20th century, Wymondham belonged to the South Norfolk parliamentary constituency. After a boundary review, Wymondham was moved to the Mid Norfolk constituency. However, Wymondham will revert to South Norfolk again after another boundary review, a long drawn out process which was only formalised in late 2023.
Wymondham's topography is marked by its river meadow and flat, low-lying agricultural landscape, much like the rest of East Anglia. The parish has an area of 17.11 square miles (44.31 km2).[4] The geology is based on chalk, with a layer of boulder clay laid down in the last ice age.[42] The River Tiffey, flowing north, forms a boundary between the built-up town centre and the rural southern part of the parish.
The built environment of Wymondham's town centre is marked by early-modern town houses and a number of buildings that survived the 1615 fire, including Wymondham Abbey. Much of the centre forms a conservation area with numerous listed buildings.[3][15] Beyond the centre lie 20th and 21st-century housing estates of mainly detached and semi-detached properties. There are trading and industrial estates along the route of the A11, which passes north-east through the south of the parish. The heavy railBreckland line crosses the parish in the same direction. The rest of the parish is largely arable farmland.
The parish has one of the largest areas in Norfolk. It includes swaths to the north and south of the town, including the hamlets of Suton, Silfield, Spooner Row and Wattlefield.[3]
The United Kingdom Census 2001 gave Wymondham a total resident population of 12,539 and a population density of 733 per square mile (283/km2). By 2011, the population had risen to 14,405, with a density of 840 per square mile (320/km2). Wymondham has an average age of 41.8.[4]
In 2011, 94.5 per cent of the population were White British, 1.1 per cent Asian, 0.5 per cent White Irish and 0.3 per cent Black.[4]
Christianity accounts for 60.3 per cent of the population, while 29.9 declare no religious affiliation. There are small populations of Muslims (0.5%), Buddhists (0.3%) and Hindus (0.2%).[4]
The 2011 census showed 72.6 per cent of the adult population economically active, 2.9 per cent unemployed and 16.8 per cent retired. The population is well-educated: 27 per cent have post-18 qualifications.[4]
The following table outlines the population change in the town since 1801, with slow growth, then decline in the 19th century, followed by recovery and rapid growth by the end of the 20th century.[44][45]
Year
1801
1811
1821
1831
1841
1851
1881
1891
1901
1911
1921
1931
1939
1951
1961
1971
1981
1991
2001
2011
Population
3,567
3,923
4,708
5,485
5,179
5,177
4,566
4,764
4,733
4,794
4,814
5,017
5,957
5,665
5,904
8,513
9,759
10,869
12,539
14,405
Sources: A Vision of Britain through Time: Civil Parish[46] A Vision of Britain through Time: Urban District[47] Wymondham - A Century Remembered[48]
Economy
Wymondham is a commuter town mainly for Norwich, Cambridge and London. The 2011 census reported as the commonest employment sectors the wholesale and retail trade (15.4%), health and social work (13.6%) and education (11.3%).
A major employer is Norfolk Constabulary. There is a retail area centred on the market square, with national-chain branches and independent shops and businesses. Traditionally, Wymondham was a centre of woodturning and brush-making; a spigot and spoon feature on the town sign to mark this.[49][50] Major brush factories appeared, with railway sidings, saw mills and engineering workshops. These closed in late 20th century and were developed as housing.[6][51][52][30]
Landmarks
War memorial
Wymondham war memorial is a 7.5 metres (8 yd) stone obelisk above an octagonal three-stepped base, at the junction of Vicar Street, Town Green and Middleton Street. Unveiled on 24 July 1921, and updated after World War II, it recalls 189 military and civilian deaths in the two World Wars.[53] It is a Grade II listed feature.[54]
Wymondham Abbey
Wymondham Abbey, founded in 1107, is a Grade I listed building.[55] Originally a Benedictine priory, it became an independent abbey in 1449. During this period the two-tower design evolved. The east tower was built first to an octagonal design (1409) and the west tower completed in 1498.[56]
The abbey was dissolved in 1538, after which many of its buildings were demolished. Their remains, including the surviving arch of the chapter house, are scattered around the church.[57] The open land to the south of the church, above further remains of the medieval abbey, is a scheduled monument.[58] The east end of the church was demolished at the dissolution. The surviving 70 metres (77 yd)-long building is about half the original length.
Cavick House, a Grade I listed building, dates from the early 18th century.[60][61] It is a red-brick building with painted quoins and some original interior decoration. It had fallen into disrepair by 1999, but has since been restored.[62] The nearby Cavick House Farmhouse, built in the early 18th century, is a Grade II listed building.[63][64]
Beckett's Chapel
Beckett's Chapel is thought to have been founded in the late 12th century by the son of William d'Aubigny and founder of Wymondham Abbey. The current chapel dates largely to about 1400, when it was rebuilt. In the post-Reformation period it was turned into a school and also used for a time as a lock-up for remand prisoners. Restoration in 1873 was followed by use as a public hall, a school and Wymondham's library. In 1999, a plaque was attached to mark the 450th anniversary of Kett's Rebellion.[65] In 2008, it became Wymondham Arts Centre. Original elements of the chapel, including an arch-braced hammerbeam roof, are still visible inside. It is a Grade I listed building.[66] In 2018, it was placed on Historic England's Heritage at Risk register, as it suffers from damp and is slowly decaying.[67][68]
The Market Cross
The Market Cross was built in 1617–1618 after the original was destroyed in the fire of 1615. It is a timber-framed octagonal building with an upper floor raised above an open undercroft. It served as the centre of administration of the town's weekly market. In the late 19th century it was converted into a subscription reading room.[69] After restoration in 1989, it reopened as the town's Tourist Information Centre. It is a Grade I listed building.[70]
Grade II* listed buildings
The six Grade II* listed buildings in Wymondham are The Green Dragon pub,[71] Kimberley Hall,[72] Priory House,[73][74] Stanfield Hall,[75] The Chestnuts[76] and 3 Market Street.[77]
Other landmarks
The former jail, known as Wymondham Bridewell, was built in 1787. It houses the Wymondham Heritage Museum. having once been a police station and a law court.[78] It is a Grade II listed building.[79]
Wymondham railway station, built in 1844, retains much of its atmosphere, including a timber signal box for semaphore signalling from 1877, in use until 2012.[80][81][82] Almost derelict by 1988, the site was transformed by the local businessman and railway enthusiast David Turner, who restored the buildings and ran a Brief Encounter-themed restaurant on Platform 1 before retiring in 2011. The station was voted Best Small Station in the 2006 National Rail Awards.[83] Both station and signal box are Grade II listed buildings.[80][84]
Toll's Meadow is a nature reserve and wildlife site with footpaths along the River Tiffey. Wildlife there includes kingfishers, herons, roe deer and water voles.[85][86] The Lizard is a conservation area and wildlife site managed locally as a "piece of informal, natural countryside for the general benefit and enjoyment of the people of Wymondham".[87] The Tiffey Trails offer accessible walks, interpretation boards, wood-carvings, benches and waymarkers.[88] In Spring 2022, a new Ketts County trail was added, forming a 16-mile walk starting at Becketswell near the Abbey. This is part of the wider 500 mile plus Norfolk Trails network.
Wymondham Town United Football Club, based at Kett's Park, is one Norfolk's largest youth teams, with over 600 players across 22 teams.[99]
Wymondham Rugby Club was founded in 1972 at the Foster Harrison Memorial Ground on Tuttles Lane.[100] A new ground, Barnard Fields, opened in 2018.[101] The senior men's team plays in the London 2 North East league, winning the Norfolk Plate in 2015–16.[102] The senior women's team, Wymondham Wasps, plays in the Championship 2 Midlands League.[103]
Wymondham Dell Bowls Club was a founder member of Norfolk Bowls Association in 1936. It has won the Bales Cup and the County League more often than any other club in Norfolk: twelve and fifteen times respectively.[104] The members include the 2002 Commonwealth Games gold medallist, John Ottaway.[105]
Wymondham Grammar School was founded in 1567 by the Norwich-born Archbishop of Canterbury, Matthew Parker. It was originally housed in Beckett's Chapel, then moved to Priory House,[73][74] and closed in 1903.[42][109] Silfield School opened in 1876 and closed in 1993. It is now a private dwelling.[110]
The four state primary schools are Ashleigh Primary School and Nursery,[113][114] Browick Road Primary and Nursery School,[115][116] Robert Kett Primary School[117][118] and Spooner Row Primary School.[119][120]
Wymondham Heritage Museum, in the former prison, has permanent displays on Robert Kett, brush-making and the museum building.[128] Occasional displays are renewed every season.[129] Wymondham Arts Centre, in Beckett's Chapel, runs a summer programme of free exhibitions by local and regional artists.[130] Regular arts and theatre events take place in Wymondham Central Hall.[131]
The Town's historic pubs include The Green Dragon, one of England's oldest, open since about 1371.[132] The Cross Keys Inn in the Market Place occupies an early 17th-century Grade II listed building.[133]
In the past, town events have been staged by a group of volunteers known as Wymondham Town Team They organised community events such as Wynterfest, Community Picnics, carnivals and Vintage Days.
There are many community groups and charities offering a wide range of activities and volunteering opportunities for locals.
Wymondham Music Festival, begun in 1996,[134] ran mostly free summer events at several venues[135] with a Midsummer Jazz Picnic at Becketswell every June.[136] Occasional events in the past included a carnival[137] and a winter Dickensian Evening.
Wymondham currently has no twin town. Links were developed in the 1990s with Votice and local dignitaries from the Czech Republic visited Wymondham. A plaque on the former Wymondham Town Hall in Middleton Street commemorates the links between the two. (The new Town Hall building is located at nearby Ketts Park).[138]
Community facilities
The many parks and playgrounds,[139] include Toll's Meadow – an area of rare UK lowland meadow- Kett's Park which boasts an artificial 3G pitch, part-funded by South Norfolk Council and the Premier League, opened in 2019 by Norwich City player Grant Holt.[140] Browick Road Recreational Park features a skatepark and cycle pump track, facilities which are due for a revamp for the whole park. One section of Browick is being developed as a community orchard by volunteers. The public library moved from Beckett's Chapel to purpose-built premises in 2008.[141] It hosts events to encourage learning and reading, such as weekly Bounce and Rhyme sessions.[142]
A Primitive Methodist chapel built in Silfield Street in 1867 is now a private residence.[149] A Wesleyan Methodist chapel built in Damgate Street in 1879[150] is now used by Freemasons.[151] Wymondham Methodist Church was built in 1870.[152][153] Wymondham Baptist Church has been at its current Queen Street site since 1910.[154] It holds regular Sunday services and a successful twice weekly community café called Roots.[155][156]
The Roman Catholic Church of Our Lady and St Thomas of Canterbury, built in 1952, contains a memorial to World War II prisoners and internees of the Japanese who did not survive their imprisonment. An annual memorial service is held every May. A digital and print archive of 61,000 names of those who died is maintained by the church.[157]
Robert Kett (c. 1492–1549), leader of Kett's Rebellion, was a yeoman farmer from Wymondham. He and his brother William have roads named after them in north Wymondham.[166][167]
Ethel Gooch (1887–1953), wife of Edwin Gooch, was the town's first woman councillor and the first woman to chair Wymondham Urban District Council.[178] Roads in the town are named after her and her husband.[179][180]
W. G. Sebald (1944–2001), German-born writer and academic, lived in the town.[181]
^Wilson, John, 1936 October 20 (November 2013). A fier devised of the divell: the great fire of Wymondham 1615. Wymondham Heritage Society. Wymondham, Norfolk. p. 15. ISBN978-1-901553-10-9. OCLC938789222.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Wilson, John, 1936 October 20 (November 2013). A fier devised of the divell: the great fire of Wymondham 1615. Wymondham Heritage Society. Wymondham, Norfolk. pp. 4–5. ISBN978-1-901553-10-9. OCLC938789222.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Wilson, John, 1936 October 20 (November 2013). A fier devised of the divell: the great fire of Wymondham 1615. Wymondham Heritage Society. Wymondham, Norfolk. pp. 25–26. ISBN978-1-901553-10-9. OCLC938789222.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Part 3, Filed under Exercises; Part 3 (16 March 2018). "Exercise 3.5: Local History". Bob Coe's OCA Landscape Learning Log. Retrieved 17 October 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^"Wymondham". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 14 October 2019.