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Norfolk: Egmere
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William White's History, Gazetteer, and Directory of Norfolk 1883
EGMERE parish, 3 miles W. of Walsingham, is in Walsingham union, Fakenham county court district, Norwich bankruptcy district, North Greenhoe petty sessional division and hundred, Wells polling district of North Norfolk, Walsingham rural deanery, and Norwich archdeaconry. It had 97 inhabitants in 1881, living on 1150 acres, and has a rateable value of £1466.
Nearly all the parish is occupied by Mr. Tingey, and belonging to the Earl of Leicester, the lord of the manor and patron of the rectory, valued in the King's Book at £8, and is now worth £218 a year, with that of Waterden annexed, in the incumbency of the Rev. A. Napier, vicar of Holkham.
Egmere CHURCH (St. Edmund) has been long in ruins, and was first desecrated by Sir Nicholas Bacon, who turned it into a barn. The tower only remains, and is in a tolerably perfect state.
POST via Walsingham, which is the nearest Money Order Office.
Tingey George farmer, Egmere house
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See also the Egmere parish page.
Copyright © Pat Newby.
September 2001