Online Encyclopedia

HADLEIGH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 798 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HADLEIGH  , a

market
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town in the Sudbury
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parliamentary division of Suffolk, England; 70 M . N.E. from
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London, the
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terminus of a branch of the
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Great Eastern railway . Pop. of urban
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district (19o1), 3245 . It lies pleasantly in a well-wooded country on the small
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river Brett, a tributary of the
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Stour . The church of St Mary is of good Perpendicular
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work, with Early
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English tower and Decorated
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spire . The Rectory Tower, a turreted
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gate-house of brick,
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dates from c . 1495 . The gild-hall is a Tudor
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building, and there are other examples of this period . There are a town-hall and corn
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exchange, and an industry in the manufacture of
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matting and in malting . Hadleigh was one of the towns in which the woollen industry was started by Flemings, and survived until the 18th century . Among the rectors of Hadleigh several notable names appear, such as Rowland Taylor, the martyr, who was burned at the stake outside the town in 1555, and
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Hugh James Rose, during whose tenancy of the rectory an initiatory meeting of the leaders of the Oxford
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Movement took place here in 1833 . Hadleigh, called by the
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Saxons Heapde-leag, appears in Domesday
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Book as Hetlega .

About 885 IEthelflmd,

lady of the Mercians, with the consent of ./
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Ethelred her
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husband, gave HadIeigh to Christ Church, Canterbury . The dean and chapter of Canterbury have held possession of it ever since the Dissolution . In the 17th century Hadleigh was famous for the manufacture of
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cloth, and in 1618 was sufficiently important to receive incorporation . It was constituted a
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free borough under the title of the mayor, aldermen and burgesses of Hadleigh . In 1635, in a list of the corporate towns of Suffolk to be assessed for
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ship
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money, Hadleigh is named as third in importance . In 1636, owing to a serious visitation of the plague, zoo families were thrown out of work, and in 1687 so much had its importance declined that it was deprived of its charter . An unsuccessful attempt to recover it was made in 1701 . There is evidence of the existence of a market here as early as the 13th century . James I., in his charter of incorporation, granted fairs on Monday and Tuesday in Whitsun week, and confirmed an ancient
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fair at Michaelmas and a market on Monday .

End of Article: HADLEIGH
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