Gipping, Suffolk
Gipping photos
Displaying 1 of 2 old photos of Gipping. View all Gipping photos
Gipping maps
Historic maps of Gipping and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Gipping maps
Gipping books
Displaying 2 of 6 books about Gipping and the local area. View all Gipping books
1 Gipping photos appear in 1 Frith book titles. You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Gipping
Displaying a selection of personal
memories of Gipping
.
Add your memory of Gipping
or of a photo of Gipping.
We visited Gipping in 2003 to try to get a sense of the place our ancestors left in 1859 to start a new life in New Zealand. The flatness of the area was a significant contrast to the rugged coastal lands they farmed on their arrival in Little Akaloa, Canterbury. William Henry Elliss and his wife Sophia Rebecca Davey were resident in Gipping in 1858 when they married at the Primitive Methodist Chapel in Stowmarket. Their parents were Frederick and Caroline Elliss (nee Bass) and William and Eliza Davey (nee Fox), husbandmen, whose families had been in Gipping and Mendlesham for some generations. When William and Sophia left for NZ on the Mary Ann, bound for Canterbury, April 1859 they had been living in Haughley, William was a dealer, and they had a 7 month old son who died on the voyage out. Their parents stayed and died in Gipping, and Old Newton, and indeed Frederick and Caroline have a headstone erected in their memory in St Mary's Old Newton by William Elliss. This still stands and was easily readable when we visited. We would very much like to learn more about what life was like for their families and neighbours in the 1850-70s, and what happened to any other family. There no longer appear to be Elliss or Davey family in the village, and indeed there do not appear to be cottages left where the census of the times suggests there would have been. Any descriptions, drawings, or other information that would fill in those memories for us would be greatly appreciated. Sophia Rebecca is rumoured to have died on board ship on a trip back to Britain in 1873, but no record of this has yet been found. They had two daughters and three sons in New Zealand most of whose descendants we have tracked down, and a reunion is to be held Easter 2010 at Little Akaloa to re-trace their early years in NZ. More information about when and why they came from Gipping, and what contact they may have sustained, and what life was like for the village at that time would be appreciated if such records exist with anyone reading this. Also the names of other families who may have left with or at the same time, as we do know for instance that a cousin of William's went to Canada from Gipping about 20years later and we have contact with that branch also - please email me, Barbara, at agbaallan@hotmail.com
Shared on 21 June 2009
Suffolk memories
family connection to the Shoulder of Mutton
My great great grandfather was Richard Thurston and I believe that his family lived at the pub about 1845.
They had several children Deborah,John Palmer,Mary Jane,Richard and William Mumford (thurston) His wife was Susannah.
John Palmer Thurston was my great grandfather.
My grandfather William John Thurston emigrated to Australia in 1910 with his wife Agnes Alice Thurston(nee Stillwell) from Sussex.
Shared on 11 January 2008
I remember Southgate's shop, although as a general store rather than as a greengrocer. My grandparents (and great-grandparents before them) lived next door (Fred and Carrie Bridges) in Mill Street, and we used to visit every school holiday from when I was about 5 years old. Harry was dead by then, but his widow (Ivy) and daughter (June) were still there. The village pump was just outside the gate, and Fisk's coal and grain merchants were on the other side of my grandparents' cottage. My grandmother died in 1976, and I have been back only a couple of times since - very special childhood memories.
Shared on 06 May 2009
I was wondering if anybody can remember the greengrocers in gislingham by the name of Harry Southgate who was apparently a master grocer.
Shared on 09 December 2007
Extracts From Gipping & Suffolk books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Gipping, inspired by Frith photos.
The chapel of St Nicholas was built in the 1480s adjacent to his manor house by Sir James Tyrell. The nave and chancel are covered with external flushwork decorations, monograms, the Tyrell knot, and inscriptions, including one asking prayers for Sir James and Dame Ann. The tower, now rendered, was added in the Victorian period, and rather spoils the view.
Read more and see photos from this book.
It is three years after the First World War, and a packet of ten Wills cigarettes can be bought in this tobacconists for 3d (three old pence). The newspapers are full of the news of the impending strike by the miners. Prime Minister Lloyd George had strikes by the miners, railwaymen and many others broken by troops and the use of emergency powers.
Read more and see photos from this book.
On the corner of Silent Street and St Nicholas’ Street we see this impressive group of Tudor buildings with a carved corner post. Cardinal Wolsey is reputed to have been born here.
Read more and see photos from this book.




