Deopham History

1890 Directory

1890  White’s Directory

DEOPHAM, or Deepham, parish, 2½ miles S.E. of Hingham, includes the small village of Deopham Green, many scattered houses, and is Forehoe union, Wymondham county court district, Norwich bankruptcy district, Forehoe petty sessional division and hundred, Hingham rural deanery, and Norfolk archdeaconry. It has 424 inhabitants in 1881, living on 1,646 acres, and has a rateable value of about £2,760. The soil belongs to a number of proprietors, and lies in two manors, of which the Earl of Kimberley and the Ecclesiastical Commissioners are lords.

       The CHURCH (St. Andrew) is a finely proportioned and spacious structure, consisting of a lofty nave with aisles and clerestory, a chancel, a south porch, and a massive square tower. The latter, which is in the Perpendicular style, and contains five bells, rises to the height of 100 feet, and is surmounted at the angles by octagonal turrets, and ornamented with crosses. The nave is of the Early Decorated period, and has five lofty arches on each side, resting on triangular pillars on the north and octagonal ones on the south side; it has a fine open timber roof, the spandrils of which rest on carved corbels. The chancel is of later date, being in the Perpendicular style, and having a plain roof. It contains a large piscina, and sedilia for three priests, and there are piscinas and the remains of painted screens at the east ends of the aisles, where there were formerly chapels. The tower arch is lofty and very fine, but the west window is nearly bricked up. The chancel was re-roofed, new windows opened, its floor paved with Minton’s tiles1, and new communion rails erected, by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, in 1864 at a cost of £6002. The south aisle was restored, by private subscription, in 1867 at an expense of £270. The nave was re-roofed in 1882-3, and many other alterations, repairs, and additions made, at an outlay of £2,400, collected from all sources by the vicar. Some mural paintings, one over the chancel arch, have been found. It is proposed to restore the south porch tower, and west doorway, reseat the interior, and re-hang the bells. The register dates from 1560. The Ecclesiastical Commissioners are appropriators of the rectorial tithes, which have been commuted for £377 13s. 5d. a year. The Dean and Chapter of Canterbury are patrons of the vicarage, which was valued in K.B. at £5. 7s. 11d, and augmented from 1716-18, with £70, given by them, £130 given by the Rev. Henry Rix, and £200 of Q.A.B., all laid out in 23 acres of land at Shipdham; £35 per annum is added by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. The Rev. Hibbert Wanklyn is the incumbent, and has a brick residence near the church, erected in 1852, at a cost of £600, and a yearly tithe rent-charge of £190. 2s 9d. and is largely added by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners in 1878-9 at a cost of £700.
The NATIONAL SCHOOL, a brick building with residence attached, was built in 1851, and is attended by over 100 children.

The PRIMITIVE METHODISTS have two small chapels here.
In 1726, the Rev. Henry Rix left £60 for schooling poor children, &c., and it was laid out in the purchase of 4a. 1r. 32p. of land, now let for £11, out of which 32s. are paid for teaching four poor children, 10s. for a sermon, and 1s. to the clerk, and the rest is distributed in bread among the parishioners. The Charter Acre was exchanged at the enclosure for 1a. 38p., which constitutes the remuneration of the parish clerk. The Fuel Allotment, awarded at the enclosure in 1814, consists of 14a. 2r. 13p., let for about £7 a year, which is distributed in coal.
A large Lime-tree, 90 feet high, was cut down in the parish in 1705, the trunk of which was from 8½ to 16 yards in girth. 

POST OFFICE at Mr. Robert Phœnix’s. Letters via Wymondham, arrive at 8.30 a.m., and are dispatched at 6 p.m. Nearest Money Order and Telegraph Office at Hingham.

CARRIERS pass through to Norwich on Wednesday and Saturday

  • Allen William,   farmer and dealer, The Hall farm
  • Baldwin Frederick,   farmer
  • Bateson John,    blacksmith and vict. Half Moon
  • Bowman Walter,   farmer       
  • Bush John,   shopkeeper and dealer
  • Clarke James,   farmer and owner
  • Clarke Mrs. Hannah,   farmer
  • Clarke Thomas,    farmer
  • Clements James,    carpenter & wheelwright
  • Dack Robert,   farmer
  • Eagling Alfred,   beer retailer
  • Fielding Henry,   farmer
  • Gathergood William,   farmer & beerhouse
  • Harwood George Jabez,   farmer
  • Howling Robert,    farmer
  • Hurrell Charles,   farmer and parish clerk
  • Jude Charles,   farmer and drill owner
  • Lake George,   farmer and owner
  • Loyd Robert,   bricklayer 
  • Lyngcoln William,   farmer
  • Maudy Alfred,    miller
  • Minns Reuben,   farmer
  • Morter John,   farmer, Red Barn
  • Page William,   shopkeeper
  • Patrick William,   farmer and drill owner
  • Penlington Mrs George,   schoolmistress
  • Penlington Mr Thomas,   assistant overseer
  • Phœnix Robert,   threshing machine proprietor
  • Phœnix Robert,    postmaster and farmer
  • Phœnix-Stone Miss Mary A. farmer; h Kent
  • Pitts Mrs Jane,   farmer
  • Porter Rev Jacob,   curate
  • Reynolds Henry,   farm bailiff
  • Riches John,   farmer
  • Ringer Urban,   farmer; h Wramplingham
  • Rowing Archibald,   farmer; h Wicklewood
  • Rowing Miss Mary Ann
  • Shaw Henry,   farmer & owner, agt. for L’pool. Lond. & Globe Insur. Co
  • Smith John,   shoe maker
  • Stone George,    thatcher
  • Sutton Thomas William,   farmer, Church farm
  • Tooley William,   farmer
  • Turner William,   shopkeeper and coal dealer
  • Wanklyn Rev Hibbert,   vicar, The Vicarage
  • Watling Henry,   farmer

Footnotes

  1. According to the architect’s report of July 29th 1863, the Minton tiles had already been installed by that date. The 1864 work included the laying of quarry tiles in the chancel. ↩︎
  2. This figure of £600 is inaccurate. See full details of the 1864 restoration here. ↩︎
DateChange
19/12/23Notes on 1864 restoration
4/3/22Added links
2/9/22Published (copied from Phil Long’s previous website