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Norfolk Hundreds

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White's History, Gazetteer, and Directory of Norfolk 1845

HOLT HUNDRED

Is a highly diversified district, presenting some of the boldest scenery in Norfolk; though next the ocean it has a flat shore and a broad tract of low salt marshes. It is about nine miles in length and breadth, except at its southern extremity, where it is only six miles broad: being bounded, on the north by the sea; on the east, by North and South Erpingham; on the south, by Eynesford; and on the west, by North Greenhoe.

The town of Holt stands on a broad and flat eminence, extending eastward, between Kelling and Hunworth, to Upper Sherringham and Aylmerton, and formerly presenting a wide waste of brown heath, over which the north and north-east winds, unchecked in their course from the ocean, blew with chilling violence; but this bleakness has been much ameliorated, since the Holt and other enclosures, by the extensive plantations of H. and R. H. Gurney, Esqrs., and those of W. H. C. Hardy, Esq., and several other landowners.

Many handsome residences have been built, during the present century, in various parts of the Hundred, which is intersected by the whole length of the small river Glaven, which passes, by a very circuituous course of more than thirteen miles, to the ocean, near Cley, after watering a picturesque and well-wooded valley, and supplying four water-mills and two fine lakes, one of which, (a little below the river's source, near Bodham,) is used as a decoy for wild ducks, which, with geese and other aquatic birds, frequent this coast in considerable numbers.

This Hundred, except Swanton-Novers, forms the Deanery of Holt, together with Field-Dalling and Cockthorpe, in North Greenhoe.

It contains 28 parishes of which the following is an enumeration, shewing their population in 1841, the annual value of their lands and buildings, as assessed to the County Rate in 1843, and their territorial extent, in assessable acres.

Petty Sessions are held at the Feathers Inn, Holt, every Saturday; and Mr. J. Ransom is clerk to the magistrates.

PARISHES. Pop. Annl.
Value
£.
Acres.
* Bale + 229 2440 997
* Blakeney @ 1021 2026 988
Bodham 292 1786 1506
* Briningham 243 1956 1138
Brinton 193 1068 615
Briston 963 3460 2410
Cley-next-the-Sea 828 3500 2167
Edgefield 638 2596 2304
Glandford-with }
Bayfield }
81 }
21 }
1308 1035
* Gunthorpe 334 1910 1060
Hempstead 296 1760 1737
Holt 1604 5614 2160
Hunworth 234 898 804
Kelling 223 1516 1772
* Langham 383 2196 1589
Letheringsett 273 1746 844
Melton Constable with }
Burgh Parva }
75 1664 1284
* Morston 173 1398 1578
Salthouse 266 1156 832
* Saxlingham 147 1446 1467
* Sharrington 229 1312 831
Stody 187 1196 1278
* Swanton Novers 293 1778 1320
Thornage 325 2088 1215
Weybourne 311 1698 1459
* Wiveton 240 1404 904



Total + 10,102 50,920 35,294

[There is more information about individual parishes]

* The ten parishes marked thus * are in WALSINGHAM UNION, (see p. 669;[this is North Greenhoe Hundred section]) Melton Constable and Brinton support their poor under a local act; and the other 14 parishes are in ERPINGHAM UNION, which see. They are all in Briningham Police Division.

+ The decrease in the population of Bale, Melton Constable, Swanton-Novers, and some other parishes in this Hundred, is attributed to a number of families, (chiefly paupers,) having emigrated to America, in 1835 and '6. The population of Holt Hundred, in 1831, was 10,416; and its annual value, as assessed to the property tax, was £32,459, in 1815, and £55,893, in 1842.

@ 60 seamen and boys were absent from Blakeney when the census was taken.


Notes

Some placenames in the transcription (of pages 733 to 734) above are given below together with their standard spelling :-
Hempstead/Hempstead by Holt


For more information see :-

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Copyright © Mike Bristow.
April 2006