Suffolk Market Events Lavenham Farmers Market 2016
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Suffolk Market Events - Lavenham Farmers Market
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Suffolk Market Events Lavenham Farmers Market 2016
suffolkmarketevents.co.uk
Suffolk Market Events Lavenham
suffolkmarketevents.co.uk
Justine Paul-Suffolk Market Events
Come and meet Justine Paul @Lavenhams Farmers Market.
WortMediaProductions
Special thanks to :
Justine Paul and Staff
To everyone who participated in making this short video.
and Bubbamusic
Lavenham Farmers Market, officially the best market in Suffolk, is held on the fourth Sunday of every month in Lavenham Village Hall.
The market boasts over 35 of the highest quality artisan producers in Suffolk & is well worth a monthly visit.
Church Street Lavenham, Sudbury CO10 9QT
Winner of the 2015 Best Food Market in Suffolk: BBC Radio 4 Food & Farming Awards
Best Market in Suffolk: EADT 2012 Food & Drink
Awards.
Surbiton Farmers' Market
Our award-winning market is all about fantastic food, a great atmosphere and a true sense of community. Every month some 26 stalls offer the very finest fare, brought to you directly by farmers and artisans who are truly passionate about what they do — and all against the village-y backdrop of leafy Maple Road with its chic eateries and shops. And because Surbiton Farmers' Market is a community initiative, you can also see how we're doing raising money for local good causes.
Here film-makers Poppy Illsley and Jade Hoffman talk to shoppers and stallholders about what makes it so special.
Lavenham Issue Title Look Out! (1944)
Lavenham. Part of issue LOOK OUT!
Soundtrack is currently missing for this whole issue.
Lavenham, Suffolk.
Several shots of a very picturesque village with a large village square and numerous timbered / Tudor buildings. The place looks rather empty and deserted. We see a fine church or cathedral.
FILM ID:2787.16
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Fakenham Farmers Market
Held on the fourth Saturday of each month, the Farmers' Market in Fakenham, Norfolk is a great place for locally sourced produce.
Dover Market
Dover Market - Dover Market Square
Held every Saturday in Dover's Market Square with many traditional stalls,
with crafts and food from the UK and abroad. Sweets,Fruit and Veg,Meats and more.
Stall enquiries welcome on 01304 229111
Dover District Chamber of Commerce
Contact: Sylvia Fagg
Tel: 01304 824955
E-mail: mail@doverchamber.co.uk
Website: doverchamber.co.uk
Islington Farmers Market 2016
Londons first farmers market on Chapel street every Sunday
Aylsham Farmers Market June 2010
Warm day in Aylsham Market Place
Through East Anglia - 1948
Lowestoft: There are shots of the harbour entrance from the sea, showing the fishing fleets and a warship in port. Most of the shots show the vessels under repair.
Yarmouth: The boating lake with pedal and paddle boats. There are shots of the town walls and the towers. In the port timber is unloaded from a visiting coaster. There is also a shot of the Royal Hotel and the memorial tablet to Charles Dickens, who used Yarmouth as the basis for David Copperfield.
Blundeston: There are scenes of the rectory and St. Mary's Church. We also see Caister Castle and Moat and the Roman remains at Burgh Castle. The latter had walls that were 14 feet high and 9 feet thick.
The Broads: There are many scenes of sailing on the broads including busy river scenes at Horning. Most shots are of or around the Cathedral. The old Bishop's Palace can also be seen.
Cambridge: There is a shot of Kings College Chapel and of street scenes in Cambridge. There are some shots of the backs showing Clare Bridge.
Kings Lynn: Shots of the wash, showing the dykes and some rather rickety bridges, precede film of Kings Lynn. In Kings Lynn itself, we see the Customs House, the Dukes Head Hotel, The Guildhall and the Chapel of Our Lady of the Mount. Legend had it that there was a subterranean passage running from the Chapel to Castle Rising. The film shows the Castle and the moat along with Bede House. This was founded by Henry Howard, Earl of Northampton as an alms house for women of the parish. These women can bee seen wearing the traditional costume of cloaks and high, conical hats.
Aldeburgh: There are seashore shots and also shots of the Martello Tower and the Moot Hall. Now standing almost on the beach, the viewer is reminded in the commentary that this was built to stand in the centre of the town.
Norwich: There is a shot of the Castle and an aerial shot of the Cathedral. Back on ground level, the film shows Pulls Ferry, the Norwich School, the Cloisters and shots of the Close. In town there are shots of the Bell Hotel, including interior scenes, the City Hall, the Guildhall, Tombland Alley and Augustine Steward's House, Elm Hill and Strangers' Hall. There are also scenes from the market and the cattle market.
Lavenham et. al. Into Suffolk and the film shows many half-timbered Suffolk villages. Starting with Lavenham, we see The Church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul and the Guildhall. In Kersey, there is a scene of a thatcher at work putting the finishing touches to the apex of a roof. In Long Melford we see the Church of Holy Trinity, the Green, the Bull Hotel and Kentwell Hall. Street scenes and timbered houses feature from all three. In Long Melford the film highlights the carvings on many of these houses. A scene from the Bull Hotel illustrates the layout of an old coaching inn. The commentary explains that this was once a weaver's house and shows the large, high windows in the buildings in the courtyard.
Walsingham: The film shows East Barsham Manor House, visited by Henry VIII. There are shots of the Slipper Chapel and of the Chapel of our Lady of Walsingham. In addition there are street scenes from the village centre at Walsingham.
Grimes Graves: This sequence shows the ladder leading down the flint mine and then goes underground to show the caverns cut away by the miners - all using a deer's antler. A flint knapper is seen at work.
Through East Anglian Constable Country, the film shows Flatford Mill, birthplace of Constable's father and Willie Lott's Cottage. There are also scenes of the Stour Valley. There are some farming scenes at Bradfield in Essex. These show both tractor drawn and horse-drawn equipment. Men are seen building a haystack. There are scenes of an unidentified windmill and a farmer knocking sugar beet. Ipswich: The White Horse Inn is featured and its connections with Mr. Pickwick highlighted. There are scenes from the streets and from the docks, including the working of a flour mill. The film also shows a sailing barge on the River Orwell. Colchester: There are scenes from the old part of Colchester Town, including the Red Lion Hotel, the Castle St. Botolph's Priory and the Old Siege House. These two buildings are both reminders of Colchester's strategic importance during the Civil War. St. Botolph's was destroyed and the Siege House changed hands many times. Harwich. Scenes of embarkation at Parkeston Quay. A car is lifted onto the boat. In a speeded up scene passengers join the boat and cargo is loaded. The film ends with coastal scenes.
The Shirley Country Market
The Shirley Country Market runs every Sunday through the summer… Except Shirley Day which I think is August 20th… and is a wonderful collection of vendors! There is a little bit of this and that and things that you didn’t even know you wanted! I highly recommend attending if you can… if for nothing else… for a pleasant way to spend a few hours!
Untold Tales from the Suffolk Sandlings
(Subtitles have been provided in English)
Life in the sandlings area of Suffolk on the east cost of England.
Valerie Fenwick and Vic Harrup discuss the compilation of their local history book which has uncovered much new information about this little known peninsula in east Suffolk between the River Deben and the River Alde.
The Prior's Tale
Good priors and scandalous ones ran Butley Priory for 367 years.
Continuity and Change
The last Prior and the Priory staff. What happened to the Priory silverware?
The Forths, Winthrops and America
A clothier buys the ex-Priory and its lands. His son builds a mansion there.
The Fateful Marriage
Disaster follows the secret love of a Protestant boy and Catholic girl.
Excess of Wives and Daughters
The Forth family ruined by wardship and the cost of providing for widows and daughters.
The Wily Lawyer
The last Forth marries Walter Devereux. Their eldest daughter elopes and is disinherited.
Sport for the Master
A Rendlesham heiress marries a duke. The Priory Gatehouse becomes a shooting lodge.
The Surveyor's Tale
Men who recorded the transformation of a landscape. Great havoc in Staverton Park.
Tales from the Courtroom
Old records reveal village greens. The 'lost' Domesday manor of Carleton is identified.
Orford's Turbulent Bailiff
Violence erupts over fishing and shackage; fish stocks decline; effect of sea-level rises.
Two Widows Wronged
Richard Wingfield dispossesses one widow and cheats another of her grandson's inheritance.
The Great Oyster, the Ferrywoman and the Landlady's Tale
The origins of Butley's oysters and the history of its inn. Murder in Thicks Cottage?
Trade and Extraction: the Coprolite Rush
Export of rare white clay and other minerals. Village craftsmen and traders.
Farmers of the Manor
Farmers of Priory land after 1538. The role of the heavy horse. Catlin and Crisp's success.
Mrs Youngman and other tenant farmers
Tudor farmers and decline of sheep-farming. Conditions imposed on farming leases.
Pastimes for the Men
'Camping' and steel quoits. Tug o' War and tennis for the women. Singing in pub and school.
The Harvest... a Quarter less than Needed
Vulnerability of the poor. 'A notorious bastard-getter'. Unrest in 1381 and Lock-out in 1874.
Baptism in the Pond, Marriage in the Porch, Burial in the Orchard
Butley church and parsons. Tunstall Quakers persecuted. Sudbourne Baptists and the Larges.
Story from the Gravestone
A pressed Boyton man witnessed the horrors of battle. His youthful escape from drowning.
Smuggling and the Wrong Side of the Law
Smugglers from Sandlings villages. Excisemen. New evidence supports the Catchpole story.
The Butley Research Group produces books and pamphlets on local history and archaeology. For more information see the websites below.
butley-research-group.org.uk
butleypriory.org.uk
Kersey Village, Suffolk
Mike & Roxy check out the delights of the lovely village of Kersey, Suffolk on the 30th January 2016
Life in Sudbury, 1970s - Film 9615
Sudbury in Suffolk 1970's
Opening sequences - panning shot down Market Hill located in the centre of Sudbury. Shop fronts including Freeman Hardy and Willis, Boots the Chemist. Market Hill with a wide range of produce including fruit and vegetables, clothes. People mill about the stall. A woman puts carrots into a plastic bag. Women look through clothes on display. An older woman (40's) wears a bright red mackintosh coat and looks through a rail of clothes. More soberly dressed farmers wearing checked jackets and bunnets (cloth caps). A man in a rather unflattering vest top serves a young girl, giving her a bag of sweets. Pigs walk down a raised platform and enter a pen. The livestock market where cattle, also in pens, are brought for sale. Close up shots of cows. Auction of animals. Panning shot of pig pens with farmers bidding for pigs. Voice-over states 'In the past this livestock market was very important but today it plays only a very small part in the life of the town.' A man prods a pig with his stick. Furniture auction. General bric-a-brac on sale is laid out on a large table. An elderly woman bids. The auctioneer concludes a sale by slamming his pen on a table. Long shot and panning shot of 400 year old building. Traditional half timber houses. Various shots of narrow streets in town centre, including Weavers Lane, formerly Curds Lane. Borough of Sudbury. Shoppers car park. The business and commercial car park is off Station Road. Car park full of very 1970's cars and vans, including Minis, Cortinas and, in the distance, a Volkswagen van. Fine Fare supermarket, F W Woolworth and Co., Eastern Electricity showroom. Two women, one wearing an Afghan coat, pass Freeman Hardy and Willis shoe shop with display of shoes on street pavement. Brief shot of Sudbury Church located in city centre. Close up of Borehamgate shopping precinct. Panning shot of mini shopping precinct, with 1970's layout. Houses are located above the precinct. Bus stop with good juxtaposition of an old 1950's bus and a newer 1970's bus registration number BCF814L. Illustrated map showing the location of Sudbury in relation to the other five towns within 25 miles of Sudbury. People living in Sudbury service the inhabitants of the remaining 30 small villages who gain access to Sudbury through the main roads to the town. Aerial shots of town with River Stour surrounded by green meadows. Panning shot of river 1 kilometre from busy market with cattle paddling. Panning shot of water meadows with people sunbathing on the banks. Road bridge at narrowest point of river, reputedly 700 years old. Diagram of river and bridge used to show the position of the bridge, the water meadows on each side of the river. The junction of the main roads became the place where markets were held and from here the town grew up. There has been a large increase in the population of Sudbury since 1960. Shown in the illustrated map. Aerial view of factories and warehouses built on the edge of Sudbury. Aerial views of farmland which has been turned into housing estates, built to re-house people from London, 100 kilometres away. Silk Mill factory with brightly coloured rolls of silk being wound on large rectangular bobbins. Machines weave the strands into cloth, most of which is exported abroad to be made into neckties. Other factory machines where cloth is knitted from manmade fibres. Sudbury's wealth in the middle ages was built on the weaving of wool and cloth. Engine parts are removed from a large kiln. Panning shot of female factory workers at machines. Typically 1970's computer control room with large imposed panels with banks of light placed in front of a man at a desk. He talks on the phone and punches in details on a panel in front of him. Medium shot of workers leaving an unidentified factory. Very distinctive 1970's clothes in evidence. Exterior of Corn Exchange exterior. Interior of Corn Exchange, now a library. A water mill close to the river, which has been converted into The Mill Hotel. A red sandstone warehouse which used to receive goods from passing water barges. Exterior of Sudbury Maltings where Barley is turned into malt for brewing. Barns and warehouses in side streets. Deserted buildings. Montage of brief shots including pigs in pens, main street, aerial view of Sudbury.
Sudbury Farmers Market
This fantastic monthly farmers' market is held on the last Friday of the month in St Peters Church, Sudbury and is run by Suffolk Market Events.
Chapel Market / Islington Farmers' Market - Sun 1st Apr '12 (2)
Isle of Olive at Chapel Market / Islington Farmers' Market in Angel. Super nice sunny day and great atmosphere.
For more information on Isle of Olive:
+44(0)751 613 0002
info@isleofolive.co.uk
Places to see in ( Hadleigh - UK )
Places to see in ( Hadleigh - UK )
Hadleigh is an ancient market town and civil parish in South Suffolk, East Anglia, situated, next to the River Brett, between the larger towns of Sudbury and Ipswich. The headquarters of Babergh District Council are located in the town, which at the 2011 census had a population of 8,253.
Guthrum, King of the Danes, is said to be buried in the grounds of St Mary's Church in the town. He was defeated by King Alfred at the battle of Edington in 878. Hadleigh received its market charter in 1252. In 1438 administration was passed from manorial control to trustees. The market was eventually sold to Babergh District Council in the late 20th century.
Hadleigh was one of the East Anglian towns that derived its prosperity from its wool and cloth industries. It has a 15th-century timber-framed Guildhall and many fine examples of timber and brick listed buildings, some with highly detailed 17th century plasterwork or pargeting. Most of these buildings can be found in the High Street, Angel Street, Benton Street and the immediately surrounding area.
The town has a total of 246 listed buildings. The Georgian East House, on George Street, has been designated a Grade II listed building since 26 April 1950. In March 2013 plans by Babergh District Council to redevelop the site and build houses on the land behind were withdrawn after strong local protest. The property was once used for a range of community events and activities. Opponents of the plan had argued that the adjacent land had been used as a village green for the last 20 years.
The annual Hadleigh Show, first held in 1840 and also known as 'the May Show', is one of the oldest one-day agricultural shows in East Anglia. Organised by the Hadleigh Farmers' Agricultural Association, the show enjoyed 12,500 visitors in 2013. Benton End House, a Grade II* listed building on Benton Street, was originally a large medieval farmhouse. From 1940 it was the home of Sir Cedric Morris, artist and plantsman, who formed the East Anglian School of Painting and Drawing there.
The Ansell Community Centre was set up in 2004 as a charity with the object of providing community facilities for the people of Hadleigh and surrounding area. Hadleigh has a Non-League football club Hadleigh United F.C. who play at Millfield.
( Hadleigh - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Hadleigh . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Hadleigh - UK
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