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Category Archives: NRO Research Bloggers
Allan Glaisyer Minns: The First Black Mayor of a British Town
October is Black History month: how many people know that the first ever black mayor of any British town was in Norfolk? Allan Glaisyer Minns was one of ten children of John and Ophelia Minns (nee Bunch) of Inagua in … Continue reading
The Unusual Burial Request of Stephen Kendall, singleman of Hempstead cum Eccles, Norfolk
Introduction The wills of 16th and 17th century testators can provide researchers with some remarkable insights into the lives of ordinary people by telling us their actual thoughts and beliefs, albeit in a stylised form, as opposed to what written … Continue reading
Posted in All Posts, NRO Research Bloggers
Tagged burial at sea, hempstead, Hempstead cum Eccles, jacobean, norfolk, norfolk mariner, probate, protestant
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Defending the Nation, Looking after the Poor and Preventing Coastal Erosion: the Varied Expenses found within Churchwardens Accounts
The churchwardens accounts give more than just details of how the parish ran its own affairs. They can be invaluable in understanding what was happening in surrounding parishes, other counties and nationwide. Looking into the accounts for Loddon has drawn … Continue reading
Posted in All Posts, NRO Research Bloggers
Tagged churchwardens, churchwardens accounts, coastal erosion, great yarmouth, Loddon, norfolk, parish records, soldiers
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Religion in Norfolk at the Time of the Mayflower
This month marks the 400th anniversary of the Mayflower setting sail on a voyage that led to the foundation of Plymouth, Massachusetts. Of the 102 passengers on board we know that at least seven came from Norfolk. So what was … Continue reading
Posted in All Posts, NRO Research Bloggers, Snapshots from the Archive
Tagged 17th century, America, Massachusetts, Mayflower, Pilgrams, Plymouth, religion, settlement, voyage
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Moved for Repairs or Used for a Rockery: The real story behind why the font of St. Mary’s Burnham Deepdale spent 40 years in a garden miles away
This is an attempt to tell the true story of the font and its stay in the garden of the Rectory at Fincham from 1807 to 1842. As recently as 2015 a search online brought up the following story: ‘The … Continue reading
Posted in All Posts, NRO Research Bloggers
Tagged Burnham Deepdale, church, church font, Fincham
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King’s Lynn’s trading links with Europe: King’s Lynn and the Hansa
(Or, in a travesty of the old saying, Hansa is as Hansa does) Over time, King’s Lynn’s trading links with Europe have developed and evolved and continue to do so today. Records held in the King’s Lynn Borough Archives can … Continue reading
Posted in All Posts, NRO Research Bloggers, Snapshots from the Archive
Tagged agreements, Disputes, Freemen, hall books, Hanse, king's lynn borough archives, Kings Lynn, letters, merchants, trade
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Distributing the wealth of the super rich in Elizabethan Norfolk
Introduction Oliver Haylotte [Haylett] left a very long and complex will and testament running into some eighteen pages dated 10 February 1580/81 and proved at Norwich on 4 March 1580/81 (The will is dated in the Old Style calendar where … Continue reading
A Luxury London Retreat: The Journal of Margaret Howes
Margaret Howes was approaching eleven years when she recounted her vibrant experience in London during the September of 1855 (NRO, MC 340/7, 710×9). After travelling from Norwich through Cambridgeshire, and sightseeing in the cities of Ely and Cambridge, Margaret, accompanied … Continue reading
Posted in All Posts, NRO Research Bloggers, Snapshots from the Archive
Tagged Crystal Palace, journal, London, sightseeing, travel, zoo
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