Bigelow History: post-1630
from the official website of
Wrentham, John Biglo's Birthplace
Wrentham is a village of
approximately 1000 persons nestled around a junction on the A12
London/Ipswich/Lowestoft/Gt. Yarmouth trunk road. The junction has roads to
Southwold, Beccles and Covehithe.
Wrentham is steeped in
history stretching back to Saxon times and is mentioned in the Doomsday book.
It is a mixture of old and new with some small new housing estates
strategically placed so as not to detract from the overall impression of a very
attractive village.
Wrentham has some very
pleasant buildings
and has won the ‘Best Kept Village’ competition several times in the past.
In 2004 Wrentham won the competition for the 10th time and a tree was planted to commemorate this. In 2008
the Village won the Waveney District Area Section again and received a cheque
for £200 from Waveney District Council which has been spent on providing a new
Notice Board at the Village Hall.
With a core of old
Wrentham families plus many new residents it still has a real sense of
community.
Wrentham,
Suffolk enjoys connections with Wrentham Massachusetts.
Wrentham
is well sited for holiday makers wishing to visit the surrounding area, which
includes Southwold (www.southwold.info): a quaint old Suffolk seaside resort untouched by time, Beccles (www.beccles.info)
a pretty market town, which has excellent boating facilities on the River
Waveney, Lowestoft: England’s most Easterly point, Covehithe and Oulton Broad,
which is also good for boating. Oulton Broad is the most Southerly of the
‘Norfolk’ Broads, being in Suffolk! It connects to the other Broads and holiday
cruisers can be seen here and at Beccles. There is also power boat racing
here on Thursday evenings in the summer.
Covehithe is a hamlet 2 - 3 miles from Wrentham and boasts a magnificent church, a good
proportion of which is a ruin.
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