Stoke, Suffolk
Stoke | |
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Saint Mary at Stoke from the front entrance | |
Location within Suffolk | |
District | |
Shire county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Stoke is a suburb in the Ipswich district, in the county of Suffolk, England. Stoke is associated with the coming of the railway, and consequent industrialisation [1]. For election purposes, the part of Stoke nearest Ipswich town centre is referred to as Bridge Ward [2]. The southern part is Stoke Park Ward [3].
Amenities
"Over Stoke" there is Hillside Primary School[4], Stoke High School, a library [5] and a Co-op supermarket with Post Office [6]. Places of worship include Grade I listed Anglican church Saint Mary at Stoke and Stoke Green Baptist church [7].
Farther south, "Stoke Park" has a superstore, Bourne Park, and Anglican church St Peter Stoke Park.
Geography
Where the River Orwell swells out over mud to form a lagoon, a western ridge runs parallel for over a mile. It is 164 feet above sea level at its highest point, the highest point in Ipswich. Where the ridge meets the river, close to the town centre, it drops steeply and the river narrows to ordinary dimensions and is renamed as the River Gipping. The town end of the ridge is popularly known as "Over Stoke".
The view of the town which can be obtained from Stoke Hills is extremely interesting and delightful, one well calculated to call up many thoughts of the past, and to hazard many conjectures of the future (William J. Monk).
Archaeology
Fossils were found when the railway tunnel was dug [8]. The Stoke Tunnel Cutting, Ipswich site is preserved.
Excavations on Stoke Quay [9] revealed evidence of Saxon occupation, including the remains of St Augustine's church and burials [10] of people of many nations [11].
History
Stoke is derived from the Saxon, meaning "the stoke" or stockade; a fortified place. Stoke[12] was placed in the hundred of Ipswich in 1086 in the Domesday Book as one of 470 places under the control of the Abbey of Ely St Etheldreda. A wooden bridge crossed from Stoke to the town, probably from pre-medieval times.
In 1477, it was ordered that carts should not cross the bridge. There was once a ford, probably between Whip Street and St. Peter's dock. The residents of Stoke were sometimes (e.g. 1776) troubled by livestock, driven through from the Samford Hundred on their way to town, which were allowed into their fields to feed. At the southern end of the ridge, where Belstead Brook enters the Orwell, stands Bourne Bridge, first built in 1352. The Bailiffs of Ipswich used to patrol from the Bull Stake on Corn Hill to the middle arch of Bourne Bridge (which had 7 arches in all). That bridge survived until the end of the 18th Century, when it was deemed too narrow. Stoke Bridge too was replaced by the Victorians.
Stoke was a small agricultural community, with estate land bordering the Orwell used for shooting. Stoke used to be known for its mills. One is mentioned in the Domesday Book. The last was removed late in the 19th century. John Constable painted A Windmill at Stoke in 1814. In 1695, the population of the parish was 357 of which 2/3 were male (232 males and 125 females), when the total population of Ipswich was 12,371. Then, the parish included an area on the other bank of the Orwell/Gipping, covering Russell Road and Portmans Walk. In 1801 the population was still only 385, while the total for Ipswich had dropped to 10,043, but climbed steadily, to 992 in 1841. In 1831 there were 127 houses, occupied by 158 families. There were now more females (421) than males (368).
In 1846 the Eastern Union Railway company joined Ipswich to Colchester with a 5ft gauge line. Three years later the link to Norwich was finished. The original Ipswich station was at Croft Street, Stoke, until 1st July 1860, when the tunnel was opened. The line was taken over by the Great Eastern Railway. Terraces of houses were built in Stoke for the people who ran the railway. The population doubled in ten years, to 2055 in 1851, and continued to increase, rising to 4096 in 1891. The Ipswich Union [13] recorded the parish as 1446 acres in 1883, and 1819 acres in 1891. Ransomes and Rapier had a big engineering works by the Orwell, making railway plant.
The Ordnance Survey map of 1885 shows Belstead Road, Stone Lodge Lane and Birkfield Lane. Along Belstead Road there were several substantial houses; Highland House, Fern Villas, High View, Oakhill, Broadwater House, Orwell Lodge, Stoke House, Mansards. Towards the west, there were Goldrood and Birkfield Lodge, to the south, Maiden Hall and Stoke Park. Alongside the Orwell was Nova Scotia, once a shipyard, the residence of the naval Gower family. Stoke Hall was built next to the church in the 18th Century by a famous wine merchant, Thomas Cartwright, and had extensive vaults able to hold 1,500 pipes of wine. It had its own gate to the church, which lay behind the parish workhouse. The parish workhouse became a school, about 1861, despite the misgivings of those who questioned whether it should be turned over to secular use.
Nathaniel Turner died 15th June 1791 at Stoke Hall, which can be seen top right of a painting of Stoke Bridge by Isaac Sheppard. Stoke Hall was then indentured to P.R.Burrell. In 1864, Burrell gave a 99 year lease of land abutting Willoughby Road to Henry Taylor of Ipswich, builder. The Burrells lived at Stoke Park, which had shooting over 1200 acres, ornamental timber and three lodges.The first Lord Gwydyr received his baronetcy in 1766. He was Governor of the Bank of England and MP for Marlow and later Grampound. The title passed to the Hon. Willoughby Burrell, and from him to John Percy Burrell.
One very old house which still stands today is Gippeswyk Hall. It was once known as "New Place" (New Palace). By tradition, the wife of King Edward (Confessor) lived here when she could be spared from Court. She received a grant of 2/3 of the revenues due to the king because Ipswich was a royal burgh. The Domesday Book records that the Queen had a grange here. The house was restored by Lord Gwydyr, when they found an inscription on a very ancient wall; He that sitteth down to meat and letteth grace pass, sitteth down like an ox and riseth like an ass. It was hired by an apothecary in 1766, who used it as a residential clinic for inoculation against smallpox.
In 1885, between Luther Road and Belstead Road there was a brick works and kiln, and an old windmill. The Ordnance Survey map of 1905 shows not only the parish church of St Mary, overlooking the town, but also Stoke Green Chapel (Particular Baptist) opposite Station Street, and a Mission Church opposite Cowell Street. Life near the docks may have been a bit smelly, as there was a manure works on Griffin Wharf, as well as the sewage pumping station on the north bank of the river.There were saw pits in Bath Street, and an Ipswich Union Workhouse in Felaw Street. The Waterside Works had their own tramway in 1885. Robert Charles Ransome was leader of the town's Liberals. Farther south along the river bank, stood Halifax Works (corn and coprolite) and a Tar Works. Up to the 1950s a ferry ran from New Cut East to Bath Street [14].
In 1924, there were allotments by the railway which are still used today. Between 1928 and 1938, the Holywells estate was built opposite Stoke. On the map of 1938, Hillside School and Belstead Avenue are visible. In 1958, the house of Maiden Hall had gone, to be replaced by the council estate (Glamorgan, Cardiff, Swansea, Tenby, Montgomery Road, Conway and Flint Close, and Maidenhall Approach), and the area by the railway become Halifax sports pavilion and sports ground. There was a house called Broomhayes close to Home Farm. By 1973, Birkfield Lodge had become a college and chapel [15]. The first stage of the Stoke Park housing estates had been built, including Halifax Primary School [16], Prince of Wales Drive and Lanercost Way. Stoke Park Drive petered out well short of the Fishpond Covert next to Bourne Park.
In the early 1980's the "hayes" estate was built on the grounds of what had been Orwell Lodge, in the steep area between "Over Stoke" and Stoke Park. Hayes is an old word for meadows. The landscape and urban Suffolk inspired Frederick Forsyth to write his spy thriller The Fourth Protocol, ending with a gang of terrorists holed up in a house in the mythical Cherryhayes. The film of the book features helicopters chasing between the pillars of the Orwell Bridge. The Orwell Bridge dominates the view of the river from South West Ipswich.
Location grid
See also
- Stoke Bridge
- Stoke Park, Suffolk
- Bourne Park Reed Beds
- Bridge Ward, Ipswich
- Stoke Park Ward, Ipswich
References
- ^ Days Gone By - Remember when the outside lavatory was a luxury in Ipswich? by David Kindred, East Anglian Daily Times
- ^ "Bridge (Ipswich) ward map". SWC Maps.
- ^ "Stoke Park ID 7381". Map IT UK.
- ^ "Hillside Primary School".
- ^ "Stoke Library". Suffolk Libraries.
- ^ "Co-op Food Store on Austin Street". East of England Co-op.
- ^ "Stoke Green Baptist Church".
- ^ "Stoke Tunnel SSSI" (PDF). GeoSuffolk.
- ^ "Ipswich's medieval population investigated". Current Archaeology.
- ^ "Ancient Ipswich burial ground of 1,400 bodies featured in Channel 4 show". East Anglian Daily Times.
- ^ "Bone Detectives: Britain's Buried Secrets Series 2 Episode 1". Channel 4.
- ^ Going Over Stoke by Linda Walker, BBC Local History
- ^ "Ipswich workhouse". Workhouses.
- ^ Girling, Barry. IPSWICH Memories of a SPECIAL TOWN. Tuddenham Press. ISBN 978-1-5272-1883-3.
- ^ "First look at Ipswich college's 'majestic' chapel after £750k revamp". East Anglian Daily Times.
- ^ "Halifax Primary School".
- Philip's Street Atlas Suffolk (page 139)