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Barton Mills

 
Signpost in Barton Mills

Coordinates: 52°20′06″N 0°31′12″E / 52.335°N 0.52°E / 52.335; 0.52

Barton Mills
Barton Mills is located in Suffolk
Barton Mills

 Barton Mills shown within Suffolk
Population 867 (2001 census)
District Forest Heath
Shire county Suffolk
Region East
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
EU Parliament East of England
List of places: UK • England • Suffolk

Barton Mills is a village and civil parish in the Forest Heath district of Suffolk, England. The village is on the south bank of the River Lark. According to Eilert Ekwall the meaning of the village name is Corn farm by the mill. The village was originally called Barton Parva (Little Barton).[1][2] The name changed in the eighteenth century and it has been postualted that over time the travellers from London to Norwich used Little Barton as a half way house and began using the name Barton Mills. Hence the modern name we know now.

The Domesday Book records the population of Barton Mills in 1086 to be 24.

The village is near the Fiveways Roundabout, at which the A11 trunk road becomes single carriageway.

The village was once the holiday retreat for Alexander Fleming, and there is a plaque on the wall outside his country home in the main street.

Barton Mills also enjoys celebration of the biannual Scarecrow Festival, held in July. The main road through the village is closed to traffic (except to residents) and a two day-long festival which includes musical bands, food, dancing, car boot sales at the local playing fields, and of course, the viewing of scarecrows created by any resident who wished to do so. This festival has also been featured in Guinness Book of World Records, boasting the most scarecrows ever built at any one time.

References

  1. ^ Barbara Vesey, The Hidden Places of East Anglia: Including Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk and Cambridgeshire, p135, (Travel Publishing Ltd), 3 Apr 2003
  2. ^ George Kearsley, Kearsley's traveller's entertaining guide through Great Britain; or, A description of the principal cross-roads, p14, 1801

External links


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Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Barton Mills Read more