HERITAGE
What you see is the remains of the base of a beacon, one of a pair erected in 1550 (on the orders of the Marquis of Northampton), to warn of attack from the sea.
Added: 22 September, 2023This building, which stands in Arnold Street, is in need of some restorative tlc and is an important remnant of Lowestoft’s military past.
Added: 22 September, 2023Kirkley Cemetery is a burial ground in the Kirkley area of Lowestoft in Suffolk. Located on London Road South, the cemetery is maintained by Waveney District Council and is open for traditional and Green Burials.
Added: 22 September, 2023The period of consultation was only 16 days. Get your comments in. See link below.
East Suffolk Council have announced their plans for the Battery Green car park and surrounding area.
The design team are Norwich-based architects Chaplin Farrant and Hemingway Design.
On Wednesday 4th October they presented a small exhibition showcasing the plans for us, the potential users, to examine.
It's not hard to think this is a Good Idea.
Added: 20 October, 2023
It's not all that often that we can congratulate local councils.
Lowestoft Town Council has – it seems – listened to people and made some sensible decisions.
They had proposed bringing down the Triangle sails. Contentious, but not outrageous. This has been done.
But they also proposed removing three of the four trees gracing the Triangle. There weren't many in the area who understood this idea. And they complained and objected.
Added: 12 October, 2023
To begin we need to go back to 1905 when a fishing smack called the G & E was launched. The G & E had registration LT 649 and was a normal trawler until 1915 when it was taken over by the Admiralty for a short time, before being released back to civilian service. In January 1916 the Admiralty again requisitioned the G & E. This time they fitted it with a 3 pounder gun (some sources say 13 pounder), as it was to be used as a decoy ship.
Added: 23 March, 2026
Lowestoft Houses – 16th-18th Century
The most commonly mentioned items of interior decoration during the later part of the 16th century, in the houses of the merchants and the better-off tradespeople and craftsmen, are stained or painted canvas cloths. These served to decorate the walls on which they hung and they probably also served as draught-inhibitors. They were present in bedchambers, as well as in halls and parlours, but no indication is given as to whether they had scenes depicted upon them or whether they were simply covered in patterns.
Added: 5 October, 2025
Malting and brewing
Much of the barley grown in Lowestoft would have been used to make malt, the light soils in the parish producing the thin-skinned, mealy type of grain best suited for the malting process. Altogether, there were at least three or four separate malt-houses in different parts of town, which were in operation at one time or another during the Early Modern period and a similar number attached to the town’s breweries.
Added: 8 September, 2025
