East Anglia and Norfolk Broads Guide to TOWNS and VILLAGES in SUFFOLK -
East of England UK.
The Norfolk Broads web site is theTowns, Villages and local Community
guide for East Anglia UK, the East of England and the Broads National
Park. Content ranges from Suffolk Councils, Towns and Villages, broads
boating and sailing to attractions, leisure centres, hotels and accommodation.
Clare
A web site dedicated to the historic town of Clare in Suffolk. The site contains lots of information about Clare including a listing of local events, news, history, and a photo library showing the many places of interest.
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Framlingham
An Historic Town Over Nine Centuries Old. - Framlingham has been in existence since Anglo Saxon times. It has all the ingredients of a market town is often described as the finest example in East Suffolk. It has a central square in the form of Market Hill, the fine 14th to 16th century church of St. Michael's and one of the most important castles in England.
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Geldeston
Off the beaten track, on the back roads between Beccles and Bungay is Geldeston. Geldeston is one of the few villages to stillhave two pubs. The Wherry Inn in the main street is just next to the village sign and the village green. Geldeston is a pretty little village, one of those places you drive through but you don't appreciate until you walk through.
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Haverhill
Although fire almost razed the town to the ground in 1665, it still has much to offer the architectural enthusiast. Anne of Cleves' House, which once formed part of the dowry of the Queen's Consort of England, still stands and has been completely renovated. The town is of interest for its Victorian architecture, local history collection and Town Hall. The 13th century church was severely damaged in the fire of 1665 but was restored in the19th century.
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Long Melford
Welcome to our village. Long Melford is located in the county of Suffolk in the United Kingdom, and is a village with much history. True to its name, LONG Melford, three miles north of the old market town of Sudbury on the A134, has possibly the longest main street in the country. It's three miles long in total, dotted with timber-framed houses. At its northern end, the street opens up into a wide sloping green beyond which stands a collection of sixteenth-century almshouses presided over by the village's mighty stone and flint Holy Trinity church.
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Lowestoft
Welcome to Lowestoft Online - your online meeting place, source of up-to-date information and guide to Lowestoft, the United Kingdom's most easterly town.
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St. Edmundsbury
St Edmundsbury is, in essence, a mediaeval town which grew up around the gates of the great Benedictine monastery founded in 1020 AD. Bury was a prosperous market town with a thriving clothmaking industry. St Mary's Church was built in the 15th century and it is here that Mary Tudor, sister of Henry VIII, is buried. Many mediaeval buildings such as the Guildhall still survive, but most are hidden behind elegant 17th and 18th century facades. Daniel Defoe described Bury St Edmunds as "a town famed for its pleasant situation and wholesome air, the Montpelier of Suffolk and perhaps of England".
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