Tag: Acle

  • Acle – St. Edmund’s Church (Robert Aldous Faulke)

    Acle – St. Edmund’s Church (Robert Aldous Faulke)

    This grave stands out in the churchyard because of its design, but it was the content that was the saddest, the death of a five-month old boy. Robert Aldous Faulke was baptised in the church on 13 September 1860 and he was the son of Robert Cooper Faulke and Anna Maria Faulke. Robert Cooper Faulke worked as a miller and farmer, employing three men and one boy, looking after 98 acres. There must have been some wealth, as the cost of such a headstone would have been relatively substantial.

    Robert died on 20 February 1861 and was buried on 25 February 1861 and the bottom of his beautiful gravestone reads “he died for Adam sinned, he lives for Jesus died”. It must have made for a painful census for the family, as the 1861 national register was taken on 7 April, just a few weeks after the death of Robert. One notable thing is that the census lists 7-month old Fanny Elizabeth as the only child, which made me realise that Robert was a twin (I had otherwise missed that his sister was baptised on the same day).

  • Acle – St. Edmund’s Church

    Acle – St. Edmund’s Church

    The round tower of St. Edmund’s Church in Acle is from the twelfth century, although most of the rest of the structure is from the fourteenth century. The look of the church from this southern side shows the exterior of where the rood stairs were located, as well as the different heights of the nave and chancel.

    The building was restored internally in the 1860s, with Richard Phipson (perhaps best noted for his work on St Mary-le-Tower in Ipswich) working on the nave and Ewan Christian (perhaps best known for designing the National Portrait Gallery and restoring Southwell Minster and Carlisle Cathedral) working on the chancel.

    There was another major restoration that was completed in 1904, which primarily dealt with the roof, with the work being overseen by Herbert Green, the Diocesan surveyor. It was noted that before this restoration that the underside of the roof was plastered, but this was removed and replaced by oak boarding. Some work was also done to fix the floor of the nave, which had become dangerously uneven by this point. I’m not actually sure what happened to Richard Phipson’s 1866 plans, as he had planned to remove the plastered ceiling to show the oak cradle roof.

    The thatching is in need of some repair on the north side (and the church is mid-way through a fund-raising campaign to sort this out, as well as to see what damage lies below), but I hope it’s rethatched rather than covered in something looking much more modern, as happened at Potter Heigham.

    The north porch, which is now the main entrance to the church.

    The south porch, which like its northern counterpart, also has a room above it.

    The twelfth-century round tower, although that top section is later, probably from the thirteenth century. The tower is listed as being older by some sources, perhaps as early as the ninth century. Whatever its age, it is likely that there was a church here in around the ninth or tenth century.

    Unfortunately, as with many churches at the moment, the interior wasn’t open to visit, so that’s yet another building that I’ll have to return to when some form of normality returns.


    The church in 1955.

  • Acle – Town Sign

    Acle – Town Sign

    The town sign in Acle was unveiled in August 1974 at what appears to have been a surprisingly well-attended event. On one side there’s a wherry, Acle bridge, the church tower, a windmill and a tree, whilst on the other side there’s a horse and cart going over Acle bridge, with the church making another appearance. I can’t suggest it’s worth a special trip from another country to see it, but it’s one of the better signs I’ve seen.

  • Acle – Jubilee Memorial

    Acle – Jubilee Memorial

    Located on Monument Green, which is named after this stone (the monument bit, not the green bit), is the Jubilee Memorial. This was placed here in 1887 to mark the Queen’s Golden Jubilee and it supports a cast iron lamp-post, an element which does today perhaps look just a little out of place.

    The face of Queen Victoria is visible in the stonework, along with noting that Acle was equidistant between Great Yarmouth and Norwich, something I’m sure Alan Partridge would have been pleased to note.

    The depiction in the stonework is of a camera, which would have been something of an innovation when it was being sculpted.

    In addition to the sign about the Acle Bypass, there’s also a depiction of a train on the stonework.

    Unfortunately, the stonework has been eroded, likely because of the pollution from what was a busy road next to it for over a century. There’s also a sign noting the victory in the Best Kept Village from over 20 years ago, making me suspect something has gone awry in the town for the last two decades if they haven’t won anything.


    The memorial is visible in this photo from 1955, where the green wasn’t in such a good state and it was a considerably less peaceful area with the main Norwich to Great Yarmouth road storming through the middle of the town.

  • Acle – Acle Bypass

    Acle – Acle Bypass

    This plaque, marking the opening of the 3-mile long £7.1 million Acle Bypass, is on the town’s Jubilee Memorial. I’m not sure many towns put a sign up about the road which bypassed them, but I can imagine what a problem it was having large numbers of vehicles ploughing through the middle of Acle en route between Norwich and Great Yarmouth. As the sign suggests, the bypass was opened on 14 March 1989 and there was a well-attended street party, carnival and fete in June 1989.

  • Acle – Name Origin

    Acle – Name Origin

    After my expedition to Acle today (OK, it’s not exactly the remote hinterlands of Europe, but everything is relative at the moment), this is what The Concise Oxford Dictionary Of English Placenames have to say about the name origin of the town.

    Acle, Norfolk. Acle in Domesday Book, Achelai in 1159, Acleda in 1186, Aclee in 1197. From Old English Acleah meaning oak wood.

    This sounds an easy one for the dictionary, which is clear that Acle, and other settlements which are spelled Oakley, come from the old English word for an ‘oak wood’. Others define it as oak-lea, ie, a cleared settlement or meadow by the oak trees. Either way, Acle’s history is based around oak….

    Incidentally, the Woodland Trust have a tree register at http://woodlandtrust.org.uk/, with two ancient oaks listed nearby to Acle. There are some oak trees in the UK which are older than 1,000 years old, it would have been quite appealing to have had one of that age near Acle still standing. But there isn’t, but there we go, can’t have everything…..

  • Acle – War Memorial

    Acle – War Memorial

    The town’s war memorial is located in the churchyard of St. Edmund’s Church in Acle.

    The war memorial was unveiled on 18 December 1921 by the sons of Edward Cushion and Owen Waters, two of the men who died during the First World War.

    There are 28 names from the First World War on the memorial, which is made from granite and overlooks the Norwich Road.

    An additional five names were added following the end of the Second World War. In 1995, there was a renewal of the area to mark 50 years since the end of the conflict, with steps being added to the war memorial.


    As it looked in the 1950s before the building of the steps.