Ingoldisthorpe


Ingoldisthorpe is a village and civil parish in the English county of Norfolk.
Ingoldisthorpe is located approximately north-east of King's Lynn and north-west of Norwich.

History

Ingoldisthorpe's name is of Viking origin and derives from the Old Norse for Ingjaldr's farmstead.
In the Domesday Book, Ingoldisthorpe is recorded as a settlement of 36 households in the hundred of Smethdon. In 1086, the village was divided between the East Anglian estates of Peter de Valognes and Roger, son of Rainard.
Ingoldisthorpe Hall was built in 1757 in the Corinthian and Rococo architectural styles.
Between 1959 and 1991, a Royal Observer Corps post was located in the parish to detect incoming Soviet nuclear attacks.
In both 1961 and 2013, a reported haunting has been sited in Ingoldisthorpe of a floating lamp. This is the supposedly the lamp of a Victorian Rector of St. Michael's Church who suspected his wife of infidelity.

Geography

According to the 2021 census, Ingoldisthorpe has a population of 841 people which shows a decrease from the 849 people listed in the 2011 census.

St. Michael's Church

Ingoldisthorpe's parish church is dedicated to Saint Michael and dates from the Fourteenth Century. St. Michael's is located on Manor Close and has been Grade II listed since 1953. The church holds Sunday service once a month.
St. Michael's holds a font dating from the Twelfth Century and some brass memorials from the Seventeenth Century to Thomas and Agnes Bigge. The church also holds several stained-glass windows designed by the workshop of Michael O'Connor as well as a depiction of the works of mercy by Heaton, Butler and Bayne. The majority of this glass was installed during the Victorian restoration of the church by George Pritchett.

Governance

Ingoldisthorpe is part of the electoral ward of Dersingham for local elections and is part of the district of King's Lynn and West Norfolk.
The village's national constituency is North West Norfolk which has been represented by the Conservative's James Wild MP since 2019.

Notable residents

Ingoldisthorpe's war memorial is a marble plaque inside St. Michael's Church which lists the following names for the First World War:
RankNameUnitDate of deathBurial/Commemoration
LSgt.William E. Cross10th Bn., West Yorkshire Regiment23 Apr. 1917Arras Memorial
Pte.Albert J. MarringtonVII Bn., Army Cyclist Corps23 Mar. 1918Arras Memorial
Pte.Horace B. Emmerson6th Bn., Bedfordshire Regiment16 Nov. 1916Thiepval Memorial
Pte.George Fenn4th Bn., The Buffs5 Nov. 1918St. Michael's Churchyard
Pte.Walter Cross8th Bn., East Yorkshire Regiment17 Nov. 1916Thiepval Memorial
Pte.George Athow8th Bn., Norfolk Regiment8 Aug. 1916Ploegsteert Memorial
Pte.Thomas Martins9th Bn., Norfolk Regt.28 Mar. 1918Étaples Military Cemetery