Online Encyclopedia

BRANDON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 428 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BRANDON  , a

market
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town in the
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Stowmarket
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parliamentary division of Suffolk, England, on the Little
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Ouse or Brandon
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river, 861 m . N.N.E. from
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London by the Ely-Norwich
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line of the
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Great Eastern railway . Pop . (Igor) 2327 . The church of St Peter is Early
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English with earlier portions; there is a freegrammar school founded in 1646; and the town has some carrying trade by the Little Ouse in corn,
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coal and
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timber .
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Rabbit skins of
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fine texture are dressed and exported . Extensive deposits of flint are worked in the neighbourhood, and the
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work of the " flint-knappers " has had its counterpart here from the earliest eras.of man . Close to Brandon, but in Norfolk across the river, at the
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village of Weeting, are the so-called Grimes' Graves, which, long supposed to show the
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foundations of a
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British village, and probably so occupied, were proved by excavation to have been actually neolithic flint workings . The pits, though almost completely filled up (probably as they became exhausted), were sunk through the overlying
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chalk to the
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depth of 20 to 6o ft., and numbered 254 in all . Passages branched out from them, and among other remains picks of deer-horn were discovered, one actually bearing in the chalk which coated it the
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print of the workman's hand .

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