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Origins
Blythburgh is a small village in northeast Suffolk, just under 100
miles from London and four miles from the North Sea at Southwold.
It is set in a landscape of outstanding natural beauty with tidal
river, marsh, heath, small woods, pasture and arable fields. Its
magnificent medieval church commands the valley of the river Blyth
and acts as a beacon for travellers on the A12 trunk road that links
London and Yarmouth. The 300 or so inhabitants are either clustered
close to the main road and church, or live in scattered cottages
and farmhouses in the fields. Visitors keen to enjoy the cultural
and recreational possibilities of the area swell the residents'
numbers: artists, birdwatchers, music lovers, and others come seeking
relaxation in a rural environment. Yet Blythburgh's modest state
today belies its past importance.
The surrounding
landscape is rich in archaeological sites dating from Neolithic
to Roman times. Blythburgh itself is an Anglo-Saxon foundation.
Christianity came to Suffolk early in the seventh century and Blythburgh
was one of its most important centres. Indeed, it may have been
the location of the Anglian Episcopal seat generally assumed to
be at Dunwich. By 654 Blythburgh had a church to which, according
to tradition, the bodies of the Anglian King Anna and his son Jurmin
were brought after they fell at Bulcamp in battle with the Mercian
Penda. The church could have been one of King Ælfwald's Minsters
(he died in 749). The finding of an eighth-century writing tablet
in Blythburgh suggests a literate Christian presence at that time.
Certainly Blythburgh was for centuries the local centre of authority.
Major criminals were punished there and, for all the commercial
importance of Dunwich, its merchants had to go to Blythburgh to
change money.
At the time
of the Norman Conquest in 1066 Blythburgh was part of the royal
estate. It was one of Suffolk's twelve market towns, and its church
was especially rich, worth ten times the average for Suffolk, one
of the richest counties in England. There were two unendowed daughter
churches. Blythburgh must have had considerable wealth and influence.
Around 1120
Henry I granted Blythburgh church to the Augustinian canons of St
Osyth's Priory in Essex. This was presumably the rich Minster church
and not one of its unendowed dependents. The present parish church
probably descended from one of these. There were canons at Blythburgh
by 1147. The priory was never very large but by the end of the thirteenth
century it owned land or rents in about 40 Suffolk parishes. In
1407, when the priory was in decline, there were seven resident
brothers, including the prior. Before 1350 the number could have
been in double figures.
The
start of decline
Blythburgh, located within a rich agricultural area and on an important
road at the lowest crossing on the river Blyth, no doubt continued
to prosper through the twelfth and thirteenth centuries into the
beginning of the fourteenth. Whether Blythburgh was ever a significant
port is doubtful. It is easy to confuse such activity at nearby
Walberswick (in the same manor and closer to the sea) with Blythburgh
itself. Even Walberswick had to reach agreement with its powerful
neighbour Dunwich, in its heyday in command of the mouth of the
river, before it could fish and trade with its own ships. In any
case sea-going vessels of any size would probably have been unsuited
to the narrow twisting channel leading upstream to Blythburgh.
Nevertheless,
in 1327 the community was the 21st richest in Suffolk, ranked below
Beccles and Dunwich locally, but above Lowestoft, Southwold, and
Halesworth. The Black Death, which reached East Anglia in 1349,
was a turning point. The impact of the loss of population and the
social and economic disruption that followed can be seen in the
tax returns of 1449. Blythburgh, like many other Suffolk communities
(but not Walberswick) was granted tax relief because it was less
populous and prosperous than it had been more than one hundred years
earlier. Perhaps Blythburgh suffered more than its neighbour because
it was a thoroughfare town enjoying an income from passing travellers.
Decay is also evident from the accounts of the Lord of the Manor,
John Hopton, who succeeded in 1430 and died in 1478. Living at what
is now Westwood Lodge, he had a flock of 700 sheep, took 1000 rabbits
annually from his warren, and fattened bullocks. But of his annual
income of about £300, only £40 came from his Suffolk
estate and his tolls from the local market had dwindled to almost
nothing. By 1490 there was only one stall.
Paradoxically,
in this period of apparently straightened circumstances, Blythburgh
church was rebuilt. The prior obtained a licence to rebuild in 1412
and by 1480 the project was complete. The great new church, which
retained an existing fourteenth-century tower, does not reflect
either a large or especially rich community. It is not a 'wool'
church - John Hopton's flock was not particularly large and east
Suffolk played only a minor role in cloth production - if anything,
apart from fishing, it was butter and cheese country. Clearly, there
was money around, although the slow pace of building meant that
spending could be spread over many years. We don't know how much
John Hopton contributed but his was Yorkshire rather than Suffolk
money. The church's size, its extensive stained glass (now almost
all gone) and its furnishings, reflected less the wealth of the
community as a whole than the deliberately conspicuous expenditure
of individuals who wished to be remembered after their deaths. They
relied upon the prayers of the living to speed their souls through
purgatory to salvation: their spending was, as one writer has put
it, a form of post-mortem fire insurance.
Dramatic
change
The sixteenth century brought great changes. The early years may
have been ones of optimism. The White Hart inn was built (or perhaps
rebuilt). Its fine moulded ceiling survives in the bar although
much of the building's timber frame has gone, to be replaced at
one end by a red brick 'Dutch' gable (high fashion when it was added
in the seventeenth century), and by a nineteenth-century façade
facing the road. Blythburgh held its position in the table of Suffolk
communities' taxable wealth - listed at 19th in 1524, although the
possibility that those assessments lagged behind reality, as they
had done in the fifteenth century, must be remembered. But great
changes were imminent. The suppression of Blythburgh priory was
authorised by the Pope in 1528 to contribute to the foundation of
Cardinal College, Ipswich, by Cardinal Wolsey, although his disgrace
and death brought a reprieve until 1537. Then King Henry VIII suppressed
the priory. The prior received a small pension but the handful of
remaining priors got nothing. The priory was by then poor, worth
a little over £8 including £2 for five horses and an
old cart. Its properties had suffered after the Black Death and
some had been lost to the sea by coastal erosion. In real terms
the institution was less wealthy at its suppression than it had
been 250 years before.
There were also
dramatic changes to the parish church. With the Protestant ascendancy
and royal edict came, from the late 1540s, the removal of altars
and images, the whitening of walls, the smashing of glass (although
much stained glass is known to have survived in Blythburgh until
at least 1660), and the surrender to the King's commissioners of
the accumulation of generations of pious benefactions. A powerful
storm in 1577 added to the discomfiture of worshippers. During a
service the church was struck by lightning, killing two people and
damaging the spire.
At its suppression
the priory's properties were granted to Walter Wadelond of Needham
Market and in 1548 reverted to the Hopton family, being combined
with the Blythburgh manor they already owned. The Hoptons' time
in Blythburgh was however approaching its end. In 1592 they sold
the Blythburgh, Walberswick and Westleton manors to Alderman Robert
Brooke, a successful London grocer. He also bought the Hoptons'
Yoxford estate with Cockfield Hall. This became the seat of his
son, also Robert, from 1602. From that date Blythburgh's major landowner
lived outside the parish. Westwood Lodge park was immediately let
and the house followed in 1614. Later in the same century the estate
passed to the Blois family (they had been Ipswich mercers and chandlers
- like the Brookes founding a landed family on a sixteenth-century
trading fortune) through the marriages of Sir William Blois (1626-75).
His first wife was Martha Brooke, and his second Jane, widow and
heiress of his brother-in-law, John Brooke.
In the seventeenth
century Blythburgh's physical and economic decline gathered pace.
William Dowsing visited the church in April 1644 and with puritan
zeal smashed crosses and carvings, figures and glass. Blythburgh's
patron, Sir Robert Brooke, who also had puritan inclinations, no
doubt supported this action. The story that Cromwell's soldiers
tethered their horses in the church and peppered the angels in the
roof with shot from their muskets is however less credible. Studies
of the lead shot, of a type not known in Dowsing's time, and noting
payments by the churchwardens many years later for the shooting
of jackdaws in the church, provide a more likely explanation for
the damage. The Archdeacon's parochial visitation of 1663 found
a church falling into disrepair and disuse. There had been no communion
for the past twelve years. The scourge of windswept timber and thatch
towns - fire - also visited Blythburgh. That of 1676 was especially
damaging. Some inhabitants, unable to or thinking it not worth rebuilding
their properties, moved elsewhere. Few village buildings of before
that calamitous date now survive. In 1754 there were only 21 households
and a population of 124.
Decay
in an expanding world
Symbols of burgeoning economic development and prosperity in the
eighteenth century passed through Blythburgh rather than involved
it directly. The Blyth navigation between Southwold and Halesworth
was completed in 1761. The drainage of the adjacent marshes continued
apace and grazing cattle replaced wildfowl and wader. A new turnpike
road carved its way through the centre of the village in 1785, some
of the remaining fabric of the priory being used in its foundations.
The old main road that had meandered past the church was thus bypassed,
and became a quiet backwater. The site of the old market place between
the church and the new road was forgotten. A more forbidding symbol
of population increase, unemployment and grinding poverty, was the
opening in 1766 of Bulcamp House of Industry, designed to house
400 paupers from 46 parishes and one township in the Blything Hundred.
It became a feared workhouse in the nineteenth century, with over
550 inmates in the 1820s. Even in the twentieth century, after it
had become a hospital, some old people still dreaded the thought
of going there.
Blythburgh's
population rose rapidly, peaking in 1851 at 1,118, including the
workhouse. Farming in Blythburgh had a high reputation. In 1813
Westwood Lodge was described by the agricultural commentator Arthur
Young as 'without exception the finest farm in the county'. For
the Suffolk farm labourers the picture was less rosy. Children worked
in the fields from the age of six and wages were very low in comparison
with other counties. In 1850 an adult's wage was only 73% of the
English county average. Educational opportunity arrived relatively
late in Blythburgh, even for Suffolk, whose clergy and landed gentry
were castigated by a contemporary writer for their indifference
and neglect. Blythburgh had had a Dame school but the village school
only opened in 1875, finally closing in 1964.
If Blythburgh's
population worshipped at all, the majority were to be found at the
Primitive Methodist Chapel in Dunwich Road, built in 1837. The neglected
parish church continued to moulder into decay, completing the destruction
of the medieval glass started by the sixteenth and seventeenth-century
iconoclasts; many of the church records were burnt in the church
stove. In 1881 the Bishop of Norwich deemed the fabric to be unsafe
and closed the church.
The decay of
Blythburgh church is not surprising. The raison d'être for
its great size and lavish display ended in the sixteenth century
with the Reformation and new attitudes to purgatory and the saving
of souls. The poor populations of the eighteenth and nineteenth
century could not afford to reverse the depredations of the iconoclasts
and years of neglect, even if they had wished to do so. The non-resident
patrons also had problems of their own. Cockfield Hall was in the
hands of trustees in the late eighteenth century while gambling
debts were settled, and in the nineteenth century the miserly eighth
baronet had twelve expensive children coupled with an agnostic attitude
towards religion.
Transformation
Although Blythburgh church came close to sharing the fates of Covehithe
and Walberswick whose equally imposing structures fell into ruin
and were drastically reduced to suit their small congregations,
poverty and indifference were ultimately the saviours of Blythburgh's
medieval fabric. Given leadership and money, the church would no
doubt have been heavily restored in the nineteenth century. It took
a national campaign in the 1880s to repair and reopen the church
but a controversy over the extent to which it should be restored
was long and heated. A scheme drawn up by the architect G. E. Street,
favoured by the local building committee, led by the determined
incumbent, Henry Sykes, appalled the Society for the Preservation
of Ancient Buildings, founded by William Morris. Morris had many
highly placed supporters, and the ear of the patron, and argued
for preservation not restoration. But he failed to impose his ideas
upon Blythburgh and the SPAB eventually walked away in disgust.
Nevertheless, by influencing potential benefactors against the local
plans, the SPAB may have made it more difficult to raise money and
so stayed the hands of over-zealous restorers.
The local building
committee included some prominent artists, reflecting the long established
attraction of the Blyth valley to painters. The Royal Academicians
Ernest Crofts and Sir John Seymour Lucas had homes in the village.
They considerably altered and extended modest buildings, probably
of the seventeenth-century, to create their picturesque houses 'The
Green' and 'The Priory'. Thus the invasion of the area by incomers,
seeking weekend or retirement homes, that became obvious in the
late twentieth century, had its origins almost one hundred years
earlier.
The Southwold
Railway, opened in 1879, gave Blythburgh a station and a hump-backed
bridge to carry the main road over its tracks. For fifty years the
railway provided access to the main line at Halesworth in one direction
and the sea at Southwold in the other. Blythburgh never had cause
to complain about its communications. But the national rail network
dealt a mortal blow to the river navigation. By the start of the
twentieth century commercial traffic had ceased. And the river flooded
back over the marshes downstream of Blythburgh to recreate a wildlife
habitat later designated as a National Nature Reserve.
As twentieth-century
society became more mobile, and the pattern of employment in agriculture
changed, local services declined. In the nineteen-twenties Blythburgh
still had, in addition to the White Hart, an off-licence, a post
office, a general store, a shoe maker, a shoe-repairer, a dairy,
and a carpenter/wheelwright/decorator who could also provide you
with a coffin and bury you. By the end of the century only the White
Hart remained, together with the post office, soon to be rehoused
in a rejuvenated village store. The Reading Room had also gone -
the coup de grâce administered, it has been said, by the first
transmissions of Independent TV. The abandoned Primitive Methodist
chapel was a forlorn sight. The village hall, however, once the
domain of the Women's Institute and now transferred to the community,
was to be restored to maintain and improve its attraction as a focal
point for Blythburgh's active societies. The onetime Bulcamp workhouse
was in the process of conversion into expensive private dwellings.
And the church still commanded the valley, as it and its predecessors
had done for over 1,300 years. However, it now looked upon a very
different village and landscape.
Further reading
The list of useful sources is quite long. They are given in 'Writing
about Blythburgh history. A select bibliography', no. 14 in the
Blythburgh Society's series of Blyth Valley History Notes.
Alan
Mackley
Blythburgh, September 2001.
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