Unlike its neighbour Wingfield, Syleham cannot count major
aristocratic families in its history and it does not boast an
heraldic symbol, although there were at one time three small manors
including one which belonged to the Priors of Thetford.
Research into the past has been carried out by a local historian
and, amongst other things, provides some answers why the village
seems to have developed as two settlements, one along the Waveney
Valley and the other up on the hill. Extracts from these
findings will be added to this site as time permits, so watch the
space.
Certainly the upper village, around what was the Great Green,
appears to have been a working village; there are several farms
still in operation and a ruined windmill as a ghost from the
past.
Monks Hall provides a reminder of the link with Thetford Priory
and was the monks' hunting lodge ………….. The road on which Monks
Hall stands used to be known as Thetford Way. It has also
been known as Kings Way as Henry II is believed to accepted
submission from Hugh Bigot, Earl of Norfolk, at Syleham Cross in
July 1174; the Millennium was marked by reinstating the cross
on its original site.
The site of the water mill, in the valley by the toll bridge to
Brockdish, is clearly evident and, within memory, there was a
thriving garment factory alongside – a source of employment for the
village and a reminder of the flax growing industry. The mill is
now converted into dwellings and the factory site accommodates four
houses built at the turn of the 21st century.
Personal contributions to this page of the website, however
small, would be warmly welcomed. For example, the Parish Clerk’s
home is called “Little Hemplands” after its description on the 1836
tithe map; the neighbouring plot was “Great Hemplands” and,
together, these suggest that the parish made its statutory
contribution to the production of hemp as required by the
Tudors.
Page to be extended when time
allows!