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Paycocke’s House: a witness to history


The small town of Coggeshall flows between River Blackwater and the A120. It is almost unbelievably picturesque. Approaching from the west, along the A120, when fog fills the Blackwater valley, there is something of an air of Brigadoon about the place, as ancient building after ancient building emerges from the mist, timbers and pargeting proliferating.

It is a village of rare distinction, which can also boast not only one, but two architecturally significant National Trust properties. Grange Barn looks over the town from the hill above the River. It was built as the tithe barn for the nearby Coggeshall Abbey – the cathedral like scale of the Barn is a very physical demonstration of the fabulous wealth of the Cistercian foundation, with its connections across Europe. The abbots were the main seat of power in Coggeshall; they also owned the market place and the chapel there. One of the massive timbers which support the roof, with its 75000 tiles, is some 1000 years old. The structure of the building dates it to around 1140 although it underwent a major rebuilding just before the Peasants’ Revolt, around 1380. The use of the building seems to have evolved; from acting as the storage for the Great Tithes to a more active role in the processing of wheat. The whole building was shortened and the central door in the southern side was replaced by two very large doors with porches. These large doors gave enough space for carts laden with the produce from the fertile fields around Coggeshall. Two corresponding smaller doors in the northern side not only allowed the empty carts to leave, but created the through-draught needed to thresh the corn.

The Great Barn has weathered changes in religion, changes in society and changes in agricultural practice, until they changed beyond all recognition for the original medieval monks who laboured there. By the late 1970s, the Barn was a near ruin and a dedicated team of shipwrights and carpenters set about the Herculean task of restoring it to its former glory.

Grange Barn was already 400 years old when, in 1509, Thomas Paycocke added a new, richly carved and luxurious front wing to the house he inherited from his father. Thomas Paycocke is most easily described as a wool merchant, although the fine details are a lot more complex. He was at the very forefront of a revolution in the production of goods – a very, very early harbinger of the industrial revolution to come. Before Paycocke and his near contemporary Thomas Spring of Lavenham, wool made the journey from the back of a sheep to the back of a man (labourer or king) in a very linear process, with each stage being carried out by separate individuals working in their own premises.

The revolution of the late 15th and early 16th centuries was for one individual to bring all these processes together and to provide both materials and wages for all the myriad stages. This was a dramatic change from the self-supporting artisan to a wage earning employee, and it made Thomas Paycocke incredibly wealthy. The merchant was exploiting the economic conditions of the time. Raw wool and grain prices had fallen in the 1490s, and remained low until they began to rise together from about 1512. At the same time there was a boom in cloth exports. Just a year before Thomas Paycocke built the new front of Paycocke’s House, some 93,000 clothes were exported; the highest number then recorded.

Thomas Paycocke was far from a self-made man. His father John Paycocke had left him, the younger son, “my house lying and bielded in the Weststrete of Coggeshall abovesaid afore the vicarage ther” on his death in 1506. The house was just one of many properties owned by John Paycocke who was described as a “butcher;” surely a term that from his land and property holding must connote more than the mere slaughtering and selling of meat. John Paycocke’s father, another Thomas, and another “butcher,” was the local collector of lay subsidies in the

mid-15th Century and also owned some land in Earls Colne. It seems that both of these older Paycockes were involved in wholesale meat production, taking advantage of cheap land prices to act as graziers and distributors. A necessary by-product of the meat industry would have been wool and it seems only natural that the family business migrated to take advantage of the economic climate.

Despite his land holdings, John Paycocke’s will was relatively modest in comparison with that of his son Thomas a mere 12 years later. The elder Paycocke’s largest cash bequest was 10 marks to his unmarried daughter Alice. Thomas Paycocke, on the other hand, left 500 marks to his widow, 500 marks for his unborn child and 500 marks to the local church. This is not including a whole host of much smaller bequests to family, friends and employees. Paycocke’s will is a testament to the relationships with his employees even if the number of people he is employing is shrouded. For example John Beycham “my weyver” was left a gown and doublet as well as £5. Gifts of cloth in wills were a sign of high favour. Another named beneficiary, Robert Taylor (who was in fact a fuller), received 3s 4d, while Thomas “forgives all that is betwixt us.” A mark was worth two- thirds of a pound, and a very rough totalling of all the bequests (with a certain amount of estimating) brings the total to around

£1500 in cash bequests, not including goods or property. This is equivalent to roughly £570,000 in today’s money.

Like so many similar documents of the time, Paycocke’s last will and testament is the only glimpse that we get into the man’s motivations, emotional links and dependencies, even his confidence in himself and his social position.

As a nation we retain a fascination for the Tudor era; it is the very earliest days of the modern era, with a geopolitical world that we can recognise but with the added glamour of intermingling brocade and squalor; lived experiences that were both more handmade and more luxurious than our own. Looking backwards, the Tudor age seems newly minted, a time of revolution, progress and revulsion. It appeals to the grotesque and the Utopian.

Paycocke’s House dates from the early years of the Tudors, those slightly less exciting times before Shakespeare, before Thomas Cromwell, and when there was only one wife. The front wing of the house was built in 1509, the same year as Henry VIII ascended the throne, and the same year that he married Catherine of Aragon, his late elder brother’s widow. One of the most interesting, and indicative of Thomas Paycocke’s bequests, is the 500 marks for a chantry in St Catherine’s Chapel of St Peter ad Vincula in Coggeshall. The bequest was to pay for prayers for himself, his wife, his father and mother, his late father-in-law and for all his friends’ souls. It also paid for six poor men to say masses six times a week and a priest to sing before St Catherine’s altar, in the same chapel where Thomas himself, his father and grandfather were buried. The masses were to ease all these souls through purgatory and onto heaven.

It is a bequest deeply rooted in the high medieval Catholic tradition that dominated every aspect of daily life in a way that we moderns can only dimly comprehend. Was Thomas Paycocke aware of the seismic doctrinal shift happening in Germany as he was writing his will? Only a year before the monk Martin Luther had posted his Ninety-Five Theses on 31st October 1517, condemning the practice of indulgences – the selling of certificates, frequently by travelling salesmen, loosely described as preachers, which guaranteed fast progression through purgatory. It was the medieval, ecclesiastical equivalent of the Monopoly get out of jail card – although it was far from free. Indulgence sellers roamed England as well as Germany and may indeed have passed past the front door of Paycockes. The money raised went on a long journey back to Rome where whatever the devotional origins of the money, it was being used to completely rebuild and decorate the Vatican. As Thomas Paycocke inspected the carving of the bressumer on the new front of his house, Pope Julius II was inspecting Michelangelo’s work on the Sistine Chapel, a year in to the four year project. Martin Luther’s Theses were just the most visible expression of the rumbling tide of discontent that would become the Reformation.

Poorly taught and poorly understood in the UK, this Europe-wide rage-filled calls to end rampant church corruption, money- making and flagrant abuses of power through a return to the relatively unembellished teaching of the Gospels; available to all, translated and printed in the vernacular, had only the most tenuous links to Henry VIII’s love life. The doctrine of purgatory and the practice of singing masses for the dead were just some of the many established practices that would be overturned by the Protestant reformers. If Thomas Paycocke has made his will a mere 15 years later, his bequests would have been strikingly different.

The house has watched over religious and social change and remained remarkably unaffected. Economic and technological change however has reshaped its roofline, moved doorways and staircases, raised and razed entire wings.

Like much of East Anglia, and southern England more broadly, Paycockes and Coggeshall were built on wool. Throughout the 13th and 14th centuries, the country’s major and most profitable export had been raw wool. When the continent caught up and exceeded English production, exports turned to woollen cloth. Major towns and areas of production were controlled by the powerful Guilds, stifling competition and innovation. Smaller centres away from Guild dominance sprang up and thrived. Coggeshall is just one of many examples in Essex and Suffolk. Easy access to London and the continent as well as overland trade routes supplying raw wool created opportunities and wealth.

Then the world got larger and smaller – ships sailed across the world, houses changed, and fashion was cut from a different cloth. After Thomas’s death (and in accordance with his will), the house and business by-passed his then unborn daughter and was inherited by his nephew. By the end of the sixteenth century the Paycocke’s line had died out in Coggeshall with the house passing by marriage to the Buxton family, who were also Essex clothiers.

By the Victorian period it had fallen on hard times. There was a brewery in what is now the back garden and the house was divided into three tenements. In 1891 it was saved from destruction by Charles Pudney, a haulier, who repaired it, using it as a store house and business premises. He sold it in 1904 for

£500 to Noel Buxton who later became one of the first Labour peers. He was also a descendant of the Buxton family who had owned the house in previous centuries. Working with a local carpenter, Ernest Beckworth, who had walked past the house all his life, and fallen in love with it, he embarked on an aggressive restoration of the house to show how he thought it might have looked in the past. The house we see today is very much the results of this vision, with the house that Thomas Paycocke might have known peeping through around the edges.

During the restoration, Buxton’s cousin, Conrad Noel, lived in the building with his wife Miriam, better known perhaps as the “Red Vicar of Thaxted,” In 1911, around the time that he was living at Paycocke’s, he became a founding member of the British Socialist Party and both left-wing cousins were clearly followers of fellow Socialist William Morris’s Arts & Crafts movement, evidenced not just in the house, but also in the charming garden put together by Miriam Noel. There is a certain irony in the fact that the house, built by one of the country’s first true capitalists, was saved by such passionate socialists.

The house was described by architectural historian Nicholas Pevsner as “one of the most attractive half-timbered houses in England”, and it had long been on the acquisitions list for the growing National Trust. In 1924 Noel gave it to the Trust, and for long decades it was let out to a series of more and less devoted tenants who agreed to open the house occasionally throughout the year for the visitors who came on pilgrimage to see this architectural glory. The last tenant left a mere 8 years ago, with more and more rooms being open to visit every year. It’s relative “newness” as a National Trust property gives it a freshness and a freedom that belies the great age of the house. The great gulfs in what we know of its history, the shadowy years and the great sweep of British and European history that runs in the background, make it endlessly fascinating; a place that can be rediscovered and reinterpreted by every visitor. Opening and displaying a house as historic Paycockes is an ongoing process and a labour of love. Today, over 70 volunteers play vital roles in opening the House and the Barn, restoring and maintaining the gardens and ensuring that the thousands of visitors have the warmest of welcomes. Everyone who crosses the threshold is not only discovering history, they are shaping it, as their experiences and thoughts become part of the story of this fascinating place.


Lizzie Dunford

House Manager, Coggeshall Properties National Trust

Paycocke’s House will be open 7 days a week from Saturday 18th March until Sunday 29th October, 11.00am to 5.00pm (last entry 4.30pm)

Grange Barn will be open Wednesday to Sunday from Saturday 18th March until Sunday 29th October, 11.00am to 4.00pm There are voluntary opportunities in a range of roles at both properties. Please contact paycockes@nationaltrust.org.uk for more details.

Lizzie Dunford graduated from the University of Lincoln with a MA in Conservation of Historic Objects and has worked for the National Trust since 2010. She has previously worked as Senior Visitor Experience Officer at Dunstable Downs, and was House Steward at Shaw’s Corner for five years, where she researched and published on the collection and its connections with the life and work of playwright George Bernard Shaw. Lizzie came to Coggeshall as House Manager in September 2016, joining an established and dedicated team of volunteers.

2025 - Read about the wonderful new gallery being built in Sudbury for Gainsborough's masterpieces; follow the trail of a tireless local environmental campaigner; get ready for the second EA cultural festival, the Bures music festival and Opera at Layer Marney; discover the beautiful garden of Holm House with its wildflower meadow and lake; travel through the Colne valley along the Gainsborough line; find out where you can get local financial advice; enjoy an illustrated walk in the Stour Valley; and read our Chairman's update on proposed housing developments, solar farms, and the National Grid's Bramford to Twinstead electricity grid reinforcement project. 

2022 - Read about the wonderful new gallery being built in Sudbury for Gainsborough's masterpieces; follow the trail of a tireless local environmental campaigner; get ready for the second EA cultural festival, the Bures music festival and Opera at Layer Marney; discover the beautiful garden of Holm House with its wildflower meadow and lake; travel through the Colne valley along the Gainsborough line; find out where you can get local financial advice; enjoy an illustrated walk in the Stour Valley; and read our Chairman's update on proposed housing developments, solar farms, and the National Grid's Bramford to Twinstead electricity grid reinforcement project. 

2022 Magazine
Year: 2022
Chairman’s Letter
Year: 2022
Rebel with a cause
Year: 2022
A National Centre for Thomas Gainsborough’s Masterpieces
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EA Festival at Hedingham Castle
Category: Culture
Year: 2022
The Gainsborough Line
Category: Adventure. Travel, Explore Colne Stour
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Music, Mischief and Mayhem – Opera at Layer Marney
Year: 2022
Bures Music Festival
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Holm House Gardens in Suffolk
Year: 2022

2020 - Welcome to our 2020 lockdown edition - only published ONLINE. Read about the wonderful Alfred Munnings Exhibition "Behind the Lines"; find out how the beavers have been getting on at the Spains Hall Estate in Finchingfield, introduced back into Essex after an absence of 400 years; explore the link between Ferriers in Bures and the Voyage of the Mayflower, the Salem Witch trials and Wampum belts; read a fascinating interview with Carl Shillingford, talented Michelin chef and keen local forager; and enjoy a celebratory update from Ken Forrester on South African wines and his support for a wonderful local school.  

2020 Magazine
Year: 2020
Chairman’s Letter
Year: 2020
Behind the Lines: Alfred Munnings, War Artist
Category: Art, Culture
Year: 2020
The Foragers Retreat – Michelin chef in Pebmarsh.
Category: Food, Nature
Year: 2020
Dam Good Job – Beavers back in Essex after 400 years.
Category: Explore Colne Stour, Nature
Year: 2020
Ferriers – a Bures house and its connection to the Mayflower.
Category: Adventure. Travel, Architectural Interest, Culture, History
Year: 2020
Three special milestones for Ken Forrester Wines  
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2020

2019 - Read about Tudor living on a grand scale at Alston Court, how Samuel Courtauld & Co. shaped our towns and villages, hear inspiring stories of local vineyards Tuffon Hall and West Street, get an update on the Dedham Vale AONB extension, and take a tour round Polstead Mill, one of East Anglia's beautiful secret gardens. 

Chairman’s Letter
Year: 2019
Dedham Vale AONB extension
Year: 2019
The Tuffon Hall Transformation
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2019
A Hong Kong racehorse in an Essex field
Category: Nature
Year: 2019
Andy Gentle – A chainsaw love affair
Category: Business
Year: 2019
A vivid insight into Tudor living on the grand scale.
Category: Architectural Interest, History
Year: 2019
Underground Moats & Zinc Cathedrals
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2019
Secret Gardens of East Anglia – Polstead Mill
Category: Gardens
Year: 2019
Repairing the damage of a supermarket delivery van
Year: 2019
How Samuel Courtauld and Co. shaped our towns and villages
Category: Architectural Interest, Culture, History
Year: 2019
Ken Forrester
Year: 2019
CSCA Photography Competition
Year: 2019
Garden Visits
Category: Gardens
Year: 2019
Treasurer’s Report
Year: 2019

2018 - Read about Hedingham Castle, a new National Centre for Gainsborough in Sudbury, award-winning new Gins from Adnams, aspects of our Industrial Heritage, the Theatre Royal in Bury St Edmunds, the Dedham Vale AONB and Stour Valley Project, and take a look at the proposed new Constitution for CSCA.. 

Chairmans Letter April 2018
Category: Annual, News, Planning Issues
Year: 2018
History of the Theatre Royal, Bury St Edmunds
Category: Architectural Interest, Art, Culture, History
Year: 2018
Another Suffolk Success Story – Time for a G & T?
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2018
Some more aspects of our Industrial Heritage
Category: Agricultural, Brewing, distilling and wine, History
Year: 2018
An Earl’s Tower
Category: Architectural Interest, History
Year: 2018
A Castle Reborn
Category: Architectural Interest, History
Year: 2018
Dedham Vale AONB and Stour Valley Project
Category: Explore Colne Stour, Nature, Planning Issues
Year: 2018
A National Centre for Gainsborough set within the town where he was born and the landscape that inspired him
Category: Architectural Interest, Art, History
Year: 2018
Garden Visits
Category: Gardens, History
Year: 2018
Treasurer’s Report
Category: Treasurer’s Report
Year: 2018
New Constitution
Year: 2018
Editor’s Notes
Category: Editors notes
Year: 2018

2017 - Read about our local industrial heritage, Paycocke's House history, why heritage matters, the art of Alfred Munnings, a haunted house in Lamarsh, celebrating Gainsborough, the beauty of recreating Cedric Morris's Iris collection and a small wine snippet from Ken Forrester. 

Chairmans Letter April 2017
Category: Annual, News, Planning Issues
Year: 2017
Heritage Matters
Category: Architectural Interest, History
Year: 2017
Some aspects of our Industrial Heritage
Category: History
Year: 2017
Paycocke’s House: a witness to history
Category: Explore Colne Stour, History
Year: 2017
The House of his Dreams: Reimagining The Munnings Art Museum
Category: Art, Explore Colne Stour, History
Year: 2017
‘The Haunted House’ of Lamarsh – Some Early Reflections
Category: History
Year: 2017
Gainsborough’s House: Celebrating the Past and Looking to the Future
Category: Art, Explore Colne Stour, History
Year: 2017
Another, highly unusual, Suffolk Success Story
Category: Gardens, Nature
Year: 2017
Garden Visits 2017
Category: Gardens, Nature
Year: 2017
Dirty Little Secret
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2017
Website
Category: News
Year: 2017
Editor’s Notes
Category: Editors notes
Year: 2017
Treasurer’s Report
Category: Treasurer’s Report
Year: 2017

2016 - Interesting articles on medieval graffiti, farming in the Stour Valley, exploring our AONB, early settlers from the Stour Valley to America, the archaeology of a local farm, a wonderful catalogue of British birds, celebrating a Suffolk joinery business, the weather from a South African winery. 

Chairmans Letter
Category: Annual
Year: 2016
Medieval Graffiti: the hidden histories…
Category: History
Year: 2016
Stour Valley Farming
Category: Business
Year: 2016
The Godly Kingdom of the Stour Valley
Category: History
Year: 2016
Keeping It Special in the Dedham Vale Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) and Stour Valley Project
Category: Nature
Year: 2016
Lodge Farm, Rectory Road, Wyverstone Street, Suffolk
Category: Architectural Interest, History
Year: 2016
A Miscellany of Information about British Birds
Category: Nature
Year: 2016
Another Suffolk Success Story
Category: Business
Year: 2016
Garden Visits
Category: Gardens
Year: 2016
Harvest, Fires and Fynbos
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2016
LOOKING FORWARDS, BEFORE I GET LEFT BEHIND….
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2016
EDITOR’S NOTES
Category: Editors notes
Year: 2016
Annual General Meeting and Summer Party
Category: A.G.M.
Year: 2016
TREASURER’S REPORT
Category: Treasurer’s Report
Year: 2016

2015 - The life and times of a flint knapper. A continuation about the history of the ancient farm at Henny and a visit to the inside of Alston Court, Nayland as well as an insight into The Antiques Roadshow.  

Chairman’s Letter – February 2015
Category: Annual
Year: 2015
Caught Knapping
Category: History
Year: 2015
ALSTON COURT
Category: Architectural Interest, History
Year: 2015
ORGANIC MUTTERINGS
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2015
THE STORY OF SPARROW’S FARM, GREAT HENNY – PART 2
Category: History
Year: 2015
ON AND OFF THE ANTIQUES ROADSHOW
Category: Business
Year: 2015
UNLOCKING THE ARTIST WITHIN: FINE ART LANDSCAPE PHOTOGRAPHY
Category: Art, Explore Colne Stour
Year: 2015
BADGERS – LOVE’EM, OR HATE’EM?
Category: Nature
Year: 2015
GARDEN VISITS
Category: Gardens
Year: 2015
FORRESTER VINEYARDS, SOUTH AFRICA
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2015
EDITOR’S NOTES
Category: Editors notes
Year: 2015
TREASURER’S REPORT
Category: Treasurer’s Report
Year: 2015

2014 - A hair-raising flight from UK to South Africa and an insight into the Wineries of Stellenbosch. An exceptional old mill just outside Bures and a most unusual chapel on the hill behind, as well as a time warp farm at Henny. 

Chairman’s Letter – February 2014
Category: Annual
Year: 2014
ST. STEPHEN’S CHAPEL, BURES
Category: History
Year: 2014
THE STELLENBOSCH WINE ROUTE – THE PEOPLE AND THE DOGS!
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2014
THE UPS AND DOWNS OF A FLIGHT TO STELLENBOSCH AND BACK
Category: Adventure. Travel
Year: 2014
A SUFFOLK SUCCESS STORY – JIM LAWRENCE LTD
Category: Business
Year: 2014
HOLD FARM, BURES ST MARY; A RARE TUDOR WATERMILL
Category: Architectural Interest
Year: 2014
THE STORY OF SPARROW’S FARM, GREAT HENNY
Category: History
Year: 2014
YOUR COUNTRYSIDE – FIGHT FOR IT NOW! your Britain fight for it now
Category: Planning Issues
Year: 2014
TUNBRIDGEWARE
Category: History
Year: 2014
EXTENDING THE DEDHAM VALE AREA OF OUTSTANDING NATURAL BEAUTY (AONB) – UPDATE
Category: News, Planning Issues
Year: 2014
GARDEN VISITS
Category: Annual, Gardens
Year: 2014
EDITOR’S NOTES
Category: Editors notes
Year: 2014
TREASURER’S REPORT
Category: Treasurer’s Report
Year: 2014

2013 - Watermills on the Stour. How Constable and Gainsborough would have seen many of the buildings in our area. Let’s protect the Stour Valley by extending the AONB from where we take over from The Dedham Vale at Wormingford towards Sudbury. 

Chairman’s Letter – February 2013
Category: Annual
Year: 2013
THE WATERMILLS OF THE RIVER STOUR
Category: Architectural Interest, History
Year: 2013
MANAGING A MASTERPIECE: THE STOUR VALLEY LANDSCAPE PARTNERSHIP
Category: Art, History
Year: 2013
EXTENDING THE DEDHAM VALE AREA OF OUTSTANDING NATURAL BEAUTY (AONB)
Category: Planning Issues
Year: 2013
BUILDINGS IN THE EAST ANGLIAN LANDSCAPE – AS SEEN BY JOHN CONSTABLE
Category: Art, History
Year: 2013
THE ROUND CHURCH AT MAPLESTEAD
Category: Architectural Interest, History
Year: 2013
THE FINE WINES OF ENGLAND
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2013
PROGRESS AGAINST PYLONS: A ROUNDUP OF RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE PYLONS SAGA
Category: Planning Issues
Year: 2013
TEA AND THE TEA CADDY A BRIEF STUDY OF THE EARLY HISTORY OF TEA AND ITS CONTAINERS
Category: History
Year: 2013
GARDEN VISITS
Category: Annual, Gardens
Year: 2013
EDITOR’S NOTES
Category: Editors notes
Year: 2013
TREASURER’S REPORT
Category: Treasurer’s Report
Year: 2013

2012 - A walk through many of the churches along the River Stour and how the Romans once lived right here in our midst, and how your pint is brewed. Also the ongoing fight to rid the Stour of the blight of Pylons. 

CHAIRMAN’S LETTER – FEBRUARY 2012
Category: Annual
Year: 2012
TREES R US – AN AMATEUR ARBORETUM
Category: Nature
Year: 2012
GLIMPSES INTO SOME STOUR VALLEY CHURCHES
Category: Explore Colne Stour, History
Year: 2012
THE ART OF BREWING
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2012
PLANNING REFORM
Category: Planning Issues
Year: 2012
‘ELF ‘N SAFETY . . . AND ALL THAT
Category: Explore Colne Stour
Year: 2012
BRINGING OUR PAST TO LIFE: GESTINGTHORPE ROMAN VILLA
Category: History
Year: 2012
MINIATURE OR APPRENTICE PIECE?
Category: History
Year: 2012
GAINSBOROUGH’S VIEW
Category: Art, Explore Colne Stour
Year: 2012
NEW STOUR VALLEY ENVIRONMENT FUND
Category: News
Year: 2012
TREASURER’S REPORT
Category: Treasurer’s Report
Year: 2012
EDITOR’S NOTES
Category: Editors notes
Year: 2012
THE COLNE STOUR COUNTRYSIDE ASSOCIATION. MINUTES OF THE 46TH ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING HELD AT FERRIERS BARN, BURES ON THURSDAY 12TH MAY 2011
Category: A.G.M.
Year: 2012

2011 - The brewers of East Anglia. The gardens of Marks Hall as well as the paintings of Alfred Munnings on display in Sudbury. How a small church became the Cathedral in Bury St Edmunds and all you need to know about antique birdcages. 

CHAIRMAN’S LETTER – APRIL 2011
Category: Annual
Year: 2011
Pylons
Category: Planning Issues
Year: 2011
THE PAINTED CHURCH BECOMES BURY’S CATHEDRAL
Category: History
Year: 2011
MARKS HALL AND THE PHILLIPS PRICE TRUST
Category: History
Year: 2011
BREWING IN EAST ANGLIA
Category: Brewing, distilling and wine
Year: 2011
BURES MILL OVER NINE CENTURIES
Category: Architectural Interest, History
Year: 2011
LANDSCAPES BY MUNNINGS EXHIBITION AT GAINSBOROUGH’S HOUSE
Category: Art
Year: 2011
BIRD-CAGES – A FASCINATION
Category: History
Year: 2011
DAWS HALL EVENTS 2011
Category: Annual
Year: 2011
EDITOR’S NOTES
Category: Editors notes
Year: 2011
GARDEN VISITS
Category: Annual, Gardens
Year: 2011
TREASURERS REPORT
Category: Treasurer’s Report
Year: 2011
THE COLNE STOUR COUNTRYSIDE ASSOCIATION. MINUTES OF THE 45TH ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING HELD AT FERRIERS BARN, BURES ON THURSDAY 6TH MAY 2010
Category: A.G.M.
Year: 2011
ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING 2010
Category: A.G.M.
Year: 2011

2010 - An artist who enjoyed his port and a canoe adventure along the Stour. Sudbury’s history and Coggeshall Abbey and a fight to get rid of Pylons from the Stour Valley. 

Chairmans Letter
Category: Annual
Year: 2010
A Pint of Port to Paint a Picture
Category: Art, History
Year: 2010
A Walk Round Coggeshall Abbey
Category: Explore Colne Stour
Year: 2010
By Canoe to Cattawade
Category: Adventure. Travel, Explore Colne Stour
Year: 2010
Nocturnal Visitors
Category: Nature
Year: 2010
Sudbury New Town – c.1330
Category: History
Year: 2010
A Stay in a Nomad’s Tent
Category: Business
Year: 2010
Freeing our countryside of the blight of pylons
Category: Planning Issues
Year: 2010
Hobbies on the Stour
Category: Nature
Year: 2010
Editor’s Notes
Category: Editors notes
Year: 2010
Website
Category: News
Year: 2010
Annual General Meeting 2009
Category: Annual
Year: 2010

2009 - Norwich School art and the Maplesteads. Ancient wallpapers, and is Long Melford the epitome of a Suffolk village? and don’t throw away a rug before checking what it is. 

Chairmans Letter
Category: Annual
Year: 2009
By Hook or by Crook
Category: Art, History
Year: 2009
Unwanted Wildlife – Some Handy Hints
Category: Gardens
Year: 2009
East Ruston Old Vicarage
Category: Gardens
Year: 2009
Squash a Squirrel – Save a Tree
Category: Nature
Year: 2009
Historic Wallpapers and Cole & Son
Category: Business
Year: 2009
Long Melford – ‘Suffolk in a day’
Category: Architectural Interest, Explore Colne Stour, History
Year: 2009
Don’t throw away a fortune!
Category: Business
Year: 2009
Garden Visits. Away Days
Category: Gardens
Year: 2009
Website
Category: Annual
Year: 2009
Editors Notes
Category: Editors notes
Year: 2009
Annual General Meeting 2008
Category: Annual
Year: 2009

2008 - The bell founders of Sudbury and all about a rogue from our area, Sir John Hawkwood, and a Sudbury secret – Gainsborough’s House. 

Member’s Letter
Category: Annual
Year: 2008
Cycling in Suffolk – An Environmental Holiday
Category: Explore Colne Stour
Year: 2008
The Sudbury Bell Founders
Category: History
Year: 2008
The CSCA Website
Category: News
Year: 2008
From Sible Hedingham to Florence. The Remarkable Life of Sir John Hawkwood
Category: History
Year: 2008
‘One of Suffolk’s Best Kept Secrets’- Gainsborough’s House, Sudbury
Category: Art, Explore Colne Stour
Year: 2008
Discovering Historic Wallpaper in East Anglian Houses
Category: History
Year: 2008
The not so humble Mole (Talpa Europaea) and how to catch him
Category: Nature
Year: 2008
Annual Report 2007.
Category: Annual
Year: 2008

2007 - Why a bell had to be chipped to get into the belfry at Lamarsh. Watermills on the Colne and Dragonflies. 

Water Mills on the Upper Colne
Category: Architectural Interest, History
Year: 2007
Dragonflies on the Stour
Category: Nature
Year: 2007
Lamarsh Bell Restoration
Category: Architectural Interest
Year: 2007
The CSCA Website
Category: News
Year: 2007
What is wrong with our Horse Chestnuts?
Category: Nature
Year: 2007

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WEBSITE EDITOR

Emma Stewart-Smith

MAGAZINE EDITOR

Christy Simson

CHAIRMAN

Alexander Robson

HON TREASURER

Michael Goodbody

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