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Hempton lies about twelve miles north of Dereham and about a mile to the south-west of Fakenham. The parish of Pudding Norton borders the river Wensum just south of Fakenham in north Norfolk. Testerton extends south from the Wensum along the eastern border of Pudding Norton.

THE VILLAGES

Hempton Village

Hempton lies about twelve miles north of Dereham and about a mile to the south-west of Fakenham. It consists of a collection of Victorian and pre-Victorian cottages and post-war housing. Its main feature now is its enormous green, a favourite dog-walking place; it is the home of many rabbits and skylarks, one or two pheasants when the season is over, and a barn-owl beating its way over in the twilight.

It is hard for the passer-by to believe that this large empty space was once the site of one of the most populous and popular sheep fairs in England. In the l3th century King John granted to the canons of Hempton Priory three fairs to be held annually. The sheep fair was on the first Wednesday in September, and it is recorded that in 1848 between 5,000 and 6,000 sheep were penned. The last sheep fair was held in September 1969, when 1,026 sheep were offered for sale. The cattle fairs were held on Whit Tuesday and in November. The cattle were enclosed on what is now known as the Bullock Hills – an emerging oak wood. Here were sold steers walked from Scotland, known on their journey as ‘Hemps’ because of their destination. Local farmers would buy them, feed them up, and send them on with drovers to the London markets. At the November fair, horses were sold.

Behind a row of cottages on the eastern side of the village lies the site of Abbey Farm and before that of Hempton Priory. In the reign of Henry I a hospital was built for travellers which soon developed into an Augustinian priory dedicated to St Stephen. Because it stood at the head of a causeway across marshy ground beside the river Wensum, all goods coming from the south had to pass the priory and could be confiscated from time to time. The prior became a very powerful man and was lord of the manor at the time of the dissolution.

Before the coming of the Normans a church dedicated to St Andrew, thought to be Saxon, stood in what is now known as Church Meadow. It is mentioned in Domesday as having an acre of land, but by 1623 it was in ruins. WI members and their families collected flints from the site, which were then built into the base of the village sign which they presented in 1974.

 

The Domesday Book records that there were four freemen farming about 60 acres between them. The lord of the manor at that time was William, Earl of Warren, who had married William I’s step-daughter Gundreda. The present lord of the manor is the Marquess of Townshend, whose Victorian forbear gave the land upon which Holy Trinity Church and its vicarage were built. The foundation stone for the Church was laid 31st August 1855. The Church opening ceremony took place on 6th October 1856. In 1858 the Marquess of Townsend bequeathed a further piece of land for the Parsonage. The Reverend Charles St Denys Moxon, the first incumbent of Hempton took up residence in 1860. Moxon was a keen advocate for the education and support of the poor. He extended the Parsonage to include a temporary school room. The Parish Rooms were built in 1874 as a permanent school room and vestry. The village children were taught at The National School until 1890/1891.

In living memory Hempton has had a pork butcher, a village shop and post office, a busy blacksmith, a brickyard, a windmill, a watermill, an inn and two pubs. Of these just the Bell remains. There was also the village laundress who dried her linen on the green and bleached it on the whin bushes.

 

Footnote of source information

Information about the Church and Vicarage is taken from Norfolk Chronicle 1855, Whites Directory (1864), Kelly’s Directory (1892) and the handwritten recollections of Charles St Denys Moxon (1820-1881) written up by his sister-in-law in 1893

NB The village information above is taken from The Norfolk Village Book, written by members of the Norfolk Federation of Women’s Institutes and published by Countryside Books.

Pudding Norton

The parish of Pudding Norton borders the river Wensum just south of Fakenham in north Norfolk. Pudding Norton comprises some 1,400 acres of predominantly arable farmland and includes Fakenham Racecourse. The parish is first mentioned in Domesday Book (1086) as “Nortuna” (“the north settlement”), entered as land held by the King, with eight heads of households, so the total population was probably about 50 people. By 1329 there were fifteen heads of households. The derivation of the name “Pudding Norton” has always given rise to speculation –– according to the History and Antiquities of Norfolk, published in 1762, “It is supposed to take its adjunct name of Pudding from its dirty scite [site], by a stream of water”.

To the south of Pudding Norton Hall, on a gentle slope extending towards a small stream which flows northwards to join the Wensum, undulations in the meadows are all that remain of the medieval village of Pudding Norton, one of the best preserved abandoned village sites in Norfolk. All that survives above ground is the ruined tower of St Margaret’s Church, a landmark visible from the Fakenham to Dereham road.

As early as 1600 the church was described as “wholly ruinated and decaied long since, unknown by whome it was pulled down”. The cause of the depopulation and ruin of the church was not the Black Death, as is often suggested, but the change over from arable to sheep farming around Fakenham in the middle years of the sixteenth century.

 

This was largely due to the Fermour family of East Barsham Hall just north of Fakenham, who had acquired land belonging to nearby Hempton Priory after its dissolution by Henry VIII in the 1530s. The Fermours were periodically brought to court accused of destroying houses, stopping up common ways, establishing new fold courses for sheep at the expense of tenants and generally behaving in a tyrannical manner. In his will in 1557 Sir William Fermour left 20 shillings to repair Pudding Norton Church, and 11 pence to each household, but there were probably few inhabitants left by then. By 1570 Sir William’s dissolute nephew Thomas had sold Pudding Norton to pay his debts.​

Testerton

In 1935 Pudding Norton parish was united with the small parish of Testerton which extends south from the Wensum along the eastern border of Pudding Norton. Testerton also has the remains of a medieval church. Click the picture on the right to learn more about Testerton Church. Near its ruins is Testerton Hall, built at the end of the eighteenth century by Philip Mallet Case.

In 1821 Testerton hosted an epic “pugilistic match” between Barlee, the Bergh Apton groom, and Gales, the Norwich butcher, which lasted for 78 rounds before a crowd of some 5,000 spectators.

In the twentieth century, Testerton Hall was the childhood home of Dick Joice who went on to fame as the popular presenter of Anglia Television’s programme “Bygones”.

Pudding Norton Hall

 

The Hall has a mid 17th century core, with 18th and 19th century rebuildings. Built for the Paris family, who dwelt here between 1576 and 1698, it has declined into a farmhouse.

For more information, see the Norfolk Heritage Explorer Website.

Pudding Norton Hall Black and White
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