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Stowmarket town council guide
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          Welcome To Stowmarket
          Brief History of Stowmarket
          Around and About Stowmarket
          Leisure and Events
          Getting Married in Stowmarket
          Stowmarket Town Council
          Stomarket's Armorial Bearngs
          The History of Milton House
          The Twinning of Stowmarket
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 Stowmarket Town Council

Stowmarket Town Council
Milton House,
Milton Road South,
Stowmarket,
Suffolk.
IP14 1EZ

Tel Enquiries: 01449 612060
Fax Enquiries: 01449 775103

Email Stowmarket Council
www.stowmarket.orgmouse
Stowmarket Crest

Around and About Stowmarket

St Peter and St Mary's ChurchSt Peter & St Mary’s Church The medieval heart of Stowmarket lay around the parish church of St. Peter and St. Mary and in the area leading down to the riverbank. The town has many buildings listed by the Department of National Heritage as buildings of special architectural or historic interest and one, the parish church, is classified as being of “exceptional interest”.

The dedication is unusual and results from there having originally been two church buildings in the churchyard. The church of St Mary’s was demolished in 1544 and its dedication appended to the then St Peter’s. The surviving church is mainly fourteenth century, in the Decorated style. The great size of the church is a demonstration of the wealth generated in Stowmarket during the medieval era, largely through the wool and cloth trade. Unlike the famous south Suffolk wool towns Stowmarket did not become a major centre for the manufacture of the finest quality cloth and the church is perhaps as a consequence not so ostentatious. Although its decline probably started in the late medieval period the wool trade struggled on in Stowmarket in various forms before completely dying out in the nineteenth century.

Most uncommonly for Suffolk the church had a spire in the medieval period; this was rebuilt in 1674, blown down in the great gale of 1703, rebuilt in 1712, taken down in 1975, and rebuilt in 1993 as a replica of the 1712 spire. The spire is timber framed clad in copper and is very rare in having a gallery within its height.

Museum of East Anglian Life This is one of the Town’s great assets and one of the country’s leading open air museums, occupying a site of 70 acres, within a stones throw from the market place, and containing much to interest any visitor to the region. A number of historic buildings have been moved here from elsewhere in East Anglia, there are extensive exhibition galleries, rare breeds of animals, picnic sites, gift shop, Bistro / Restaurant and a lively riverside walk.

The Museum also boasts the Abbots Hall within its grounds, which dates from around 1709 and stands on the site of the grange of the Abbots of St Osyth. It is in effect Stowmarket’s manor house and in the past much of the town and surrounding countryside was owned by the occupants of Abbots Hall.

Town Clock The former post office (closed 1938) within the Market Place (now Corals) houses the town clock. This clock was erected as the result of public subscription in the late nineteenth century when the clock on the church tower was proving to be most unreliable. After many years of not working the Town Council organised the refurbishment of the clock at the end of 2004.

Stowmarket Station was completed in 1849 to a design by the architect Frederick Barnes and is recognized as one of this country’s finest examples of Victorian country station architecture. The design is a reinterpretation of the Jacobean style, and uses local red and white bricks to advantage, in a way that has been imitated in many other buildings around the town.


Railway station

 


Whilst every care has been taken in compiling this publication and the statements contained herein are believed to be correct, the publishers and promoters cannot accept responsibility for any inaccuracies. Reproduction of any part of this publication in any format, without permission, is strictly forbidden. The photographs in this booklet were taken by Stowmarket Town Council and Russell Gant.