Cretingham
Cretingham | |
St Peter's church |
|
Cretingham |
|
Population | 196 (2011)[1] |
---|---|
OS grid reference | TM2260 |
Civil parish | Cretingham |
District | Suffolk Coastal |
Shire county | Suffolk |
Region | East |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | WOODBRIDGE |
Postcode district | IP13 |
Dialling code | 01728 |
EU Parliament | East of England |
Coordinates: 52°11′46″N 1°15′32″E / 52.196°N 1.259°E
Cretingham is a village and a civil parish in the Suffolk Coastal District, in the English county of Suffolk. It is on the River Deben, 2 miles south off the A1120 road. It is four miles west from Framlingham and eight miles northwest from Woodbridge. It was described as "Gretingeham" or "Gretingaham" in the Domesday Book and is located in the old Hundred of Loes (hundred).
Description
It is based on a crossroads formed by The Street (north-south) and Framsden Road (west) and Brandeston Road (east) and has a church, a pub and a golf course (to the northeast of the village).
The church of St Peter is half the way up the north part of The Street. It dates from c.1300 and is a grade II* listed building .[2] The old Bell Inn is now a dwelling called Dial House. The new Cretingham Bell pub opened in 1967 located at the crossroads. It dates from 1620s and was formerly four cottages.
Several farms lie in the area:
- Bungalow Farm in the southwest
- Corner Farm in the southeast
- Duck's Farm to the west
- Rookery Farm and Manor Farm to the north
History
During renovation work on a hunting lodge near Aldeburgh in 1996, a carpenter uncovered a plank of wood revealing a chilling pencilled message: "A fearful murder was committed the first day of this month (October 1887) at Cretingham. A curate cut the vicar's throat at 12 o'clock at night." Sheila Hardy[3] wrote a book about it called The Cretingham Murder.[4]
Cretingham Primary School closed in the early 1960s (Miss Last being the last teacher).
References
- ↑ "Civil Parish population 2011". Retrieved 14 September 2015.
- ↑ "Name: CHURCH OF ST PETER List entry Number: 1030322". English Heritage. Retrieved 31 March 2014.
- ↑ Sheila Hardy
- ↑ The Cretingham Murder (ISBN 9780752448954)