Elmsett, (population circa 800) is set in the heart
of rolling farmland, 8 miles NW of Ipswich and 4 miles NE of
Hadleigh with C12 St Peter’s Church on a hill looking down over the
valley, a scene which has changed little since Thomas Gainsborough
painted it in 1750.
Elmsett was first recorded in 995 as Ylmesaeton (Ylme - Elm,
Saeten - dwellers). Sadly very few elms now exist, due to Dutch Elm
Disease which in the late 1960s and 1970s destroyed all but a very
few ‘treated’ trees. One ancient wood still remains in the village,
namely the 22 acre Park Wood, a SSSI (site of special scientific
interest).
At one time there were about 16 farms in the village, which,
together with the Elmsett Mill, owned by the Ladbrook family since
1848, employed most of the village, and in the first part of the
20th Century Elmsett was fairly self-supporting.
Today there are few, but larger farms and the Mill has gone,
replaced by a development of houses, and the majority of village
inhabitants commute to Hadleigh, Ipswich, Colchester or London.
Opposite St Peter’s Church is the Tithe memorial, a rare and
defiant memorial
commemorating the
seizure of goods at Elmsett Hall in May 1932 when Mr Charles
Westren who farmed at Elmsett Hall refused to pay his tithe
(or tax) to the Church and household goods and corn-stacks
were impounded, making national news.
Elmsett boasts an attractive village green with a village sign
and a large chestnut tree where once the village smithy had his
forge.
More information on the history and people of Elmsett may be
found by reading the Book of Elmsett from Sickle to Satellite
written by the Elmsett Local History Group and published in
November 2006 by
Halsgrove Price
£19.95
Copies of the book may also be available from the
Elmsett Post Office and Village Stores 01473
658210