Stanhoe Pit

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PC minutes

Minutes of the 8 March Parish Council meeting.

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May film

The Help is screening in Stanhoe on 23 May.

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Battle of the mugs

Stanhoe residents will be able to toast the Queen from two different Jubilee mugs.

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Wind decision this month

28 May is the new forecast date for the wind farms planning appeal decision.

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A worthy resolution

WI members support Britain’s midwives.

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2011 in review

News from the Parish Council Annual Meeting.

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Gardens gear up

Less than three weeks to Stanhoe’s Gardens Open Day on 19 May.

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Stanhoe for visitors

Stanhoe village sign

Stanhoe’s village sign shows our 
agricultural heritage, All Saints’
church and Sir Hervey de Stanhoe

Stanhoe is a small village in the English county of north-west Norfolk. We are around 100 miles (160 km) north of London, and 6 miles (10 km) from the North Sea. Fakenham and King’s Lynn are the nearest towns. Stanhoe’s population is around 200.

In the middle of the village is a large duck pond, and nearby is our pub (the Duck Inn). Many of the houses are built from traditional Norfolk materials: flint, chalk, and brick, roofed with curved red tiles. There are several fine large houses, including Stanhoe Hall, and some attractive old farm buildings.

Stanhoe has been a farming community since the Romans were here nearly two thousand years ago. The Saxons gave us the name Stanhoe (“stony hill”), and by the thirteenth century the village was prosperous enough to build the church of All Saints. Sir Hervey de Stanhoe, who appears on our village sign, was High Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk in 1260. Check out our local history section for more information.

In the fields today you will see wheat, oilseed rape (canola), sugar beet, and East Anglia’s famous malting barley. Don’t be surprised to find tractors and mud on the road at harvest time.

Norfolk is still an unspoiled county with abundant wildlife, especially birds. Stanhoe has no street lights, and on a clear night the sky is full of stars.

Less tranquil are the military aircraft that pass overhead from the bases at RAF Marham and RAF Lakenheath. Not everyone appreciates them, but the Royal Air Force has been part of Norfolk’s history for around 90 years.

From the middle of the last century the population of Stanhoe fell as workers moved away from the land. In the last couple of decades more people have come into the village, so that we now have around 190 permanent residents, plus many visitors at weekends and in the summer.

For such a small village we are proud of our community spirit and the number of activities that go on here. If you don’t already know Stanhoe, we hope to see you here one day.

Links

Our Wikipedia entry needs updating!

Stanhoe photos on Flickr