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Celebrating Heritage, Promoting Our Future

David Butcher

Though of Bungay origins, my whole working-life - as a teacher of English - was spent in Lowestoft, at the Harris Secondary School for Girls (1965-9) and at Alderman Woodrow/Kirkley High School (1969-2002). My BA degree from Durham University was in English, Modern History & Latin (1964) and I also hold an MPhil in History, from the University of East Anglia (1989), for a study of Lowestoft’s social and economic development 1560-1730. I taught that university’s Certificate Course in English Local History for its Continuing Studies Dept., at Lowestoft College of Further Education, from 1990-2004 - this being via a two-year, weekly, evening class for adults. My interest in the town’s history, specifically, began when my wife and I moved to Corton in August 1971 -  beginning with its maritime activity connected to fishing, before moving on to other aspects of its fascinating past. 

My main focus in the study of Local History generally (beginning, perhaps, in boyhood with an interest in the countryside around me) has always been rooted in what a particular environment enables its inhabitants to make of it. For me, starting with surface geology and major topographical features is the basic building-block (including a maritime setting, in the case of Lowestoft) on which to base study of a community. Added to this, wherever possible, is full family reconstitution of parish registers, in cases where the documentation allows this to be done, with manorial and probate records acting as valuable supplementary back-up. Other contemporary sources - such as parish tithe records, account rolls and land rentals, poor law accounts, settlement certificates, legal  indictments and decisions, and old maps - can all help to create some sense of the past which goes beyond the merely superficial and creates an idea of “life at the time”, in so far as we are able to represent it.

In specialising mainly on the Early Modern period of English history (loosely, that stretching from the early 16th century to the end of the 18th), one of my main concerns has always been to show Lowestoft within the context of its own local area - as well as within a national one also, wherever possible. Too much “Local History” begins and ends with the first word: local. Events referred to are often merely a statement of what happened, without any attempt at either analysis or placing them within a wider framework. Context is everything, in the study of history, and every effort must be made to reflect this - something which is made easier today by the amount of national government documentation (e.g. Calendar of Patent Rolls, Calendar of State Papers Domestic etc., etc.) and other material which is now available online via the process of digitisation.

The pioneering work of W.G. Hoskins, during the 1950s and 60s, in establishing English Local History as a legitimate field of academic study, was a most important development within the world of university teaching and learning. It is to be regretted that it hasn’t managed to find its way as yet, in some form or other, into secondary-level education in England at either GCE Ordinary or Advanced levels.   

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North Denes Liver Trench  North Denes, published by Rock & Co. of London in 1872 A large, filled-in trench is visible on the North Denes, a little to the east of the net-drying spars. / 20 August, 2024
Lowestoft Listed Buildings (Historic England) church The Historic England schedule of Listed buildings for Lowestoft (inc. Kirkley, Pakefield. Oulton Broad, Oulton Village & Gunton) All Grade II unless otherwise indicated / 7 August, 2024
The Great Plague of Lowestoft (1603) Death’s Dart - part of the grave memorial of Thomas Annot in St. Margaret’s Church, drawn and engraved by John Sell Cotman. , Thomas Annot’s grave-slab depicted, as seen, by John Sell Cotman during the second decade of the 19th century. Many readers will know know something of London’s so-called “Great Plague”, which began in May 1665 and stretched into January 1666, and in which an estimated 100,000 people may have died out of a / 26 July, 2024
An Inventory of the Worldly Goods of James Wilde 80 (14 March 1684) An Inventory Indented of all and singular the goods and Chattels of James Wilde late of Lowestoft in the County of Suff[olk], merchant, valued and appraise / 26 June, 2024
An Inventory of the Worldly Goods and Assets of Roger Hill 31  32 High Street Roger Hill was a Lowestoft merchant of the second half of the sixteenth century, whose burial was recorded in the parish registers on 13 September 1588. / 11 June, 2024
Lowestoft Occupations 1561-1750 trades One of the many interesting features to emerge from the study of Lowestoft’s history over the years, and the attempts to reconstruct aspects of its past arising from the evidence discovered, is the / 1 June, 2024
Recorded Immigration Into Lowestoft  1436-1544 nationalarchives.gov.uk Much is heard today regarding illegal immigration into the UK from across the English Channel and occasionally the North Sea - most of it driven by difficult and dangerous conditions in the particu / 30 May, 2024
Lothingland Invasion Scare (1584) pic A constant matter of concern during the reign of Henry VIII (1509-47) was that of foreign invasion - particularly by France with the aid of its ally, Scotland. / 26 May, 2024
Lowestoft Timeline - 1535 to 1974 history May 1535 - Muster Roll of Lothingland Half-hundred, dated 23rd of the month, listed and named 292 able-bodied men for its defence. / 28 April, 2024
Battle of Lowestoft Medallion (1665) Medal , Medal On Tuesday 23 April, 2024, a silver medallion commemorating the naval victory of the English fleet over that of the United Provinces of the Netherlands during the Second Dutch War (1665-67) was off / 28 April, 2024
The Missing Brasses of St. Margaret’s Church brass During the period of the two English Civil Wars (1642-46 and 1648) - and both earlier and later on - parish churches up and down the length of the land were visited by authorised (and, in some case / 27 April, 2024
Lowestoft Population Statistics 1561-1750 An ink-and-wash study created by Richard Powles in 1785, which is present in the Isaac Gillingwater collection of illustrations (c. 1800) held by Suffolk Archives (acc. ref. no. 193/2/1). TOP TIP: best viewed in LANDSCAPE / 21 April, 2024
Pre-Medieval & Medieval Timeline lithub.com 700,000 years ago - Early humans (hominids) present, using flint tools in what is now Pakefield. These anthropoids long pre-dated Homo neanderthalensis and Homo sapien / 21 April, 2024
The Lothingland-Lowestoft-Great Yarmouth Disputes (Part 2) Corton-Gunton beach area, to the north of Lopham Score (now,Tramp’s Alley) - half a mile or so wider during the 1660s than it is now. Location of the post which marked the limit of Yarmouth's trading jurisdiction, established in 1663 “All Because of the Herring”The first part of this extended article (Suffolk Review, Spring 2020) dealt primarily with the commercial and civic contention between Great Yarmouth a / 15 April, 2024
Founding of Lowestoft as Hluda’s toft history Mid-late 6th century? - Founding of Lowestoft as Hluda’s toft, meaning “the homestead of Hluda” - with Hluda itself translatable as “the loud one”. / 15 April, 2024