Nayland

Coordinates: 51°58′16″N 0°52′26″E / 51.97117°N 0.87384°E / 51.97117; 0.87384
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Nayland
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townColchester
Postcode districtCO6
Dialling code01206
PoliceSuffolk
FireSuffolk
AmbulanceEast of England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Suffolk
51°58′16″N 0°52′26″E / 51.97117°N 0.87384°E / 51.97117; 0.87384

Nayland is a village and former civil parish, now in the parish of Nayland-with-Wissington, in the Babergh district, in the county of Suffolk, England. It is in the Stour Valley on the Suffolk side of the border between Suffolk and Essex. In 2011 the built-up area had a population of 938.[1]

History

St James' Church

From an article by Rosemary Knox, Wissington[2]

Nayland village and the adjoining rural hamlet of Wissington (these days usually called 'Wiston'), were originally two separate parishes; on 25 March 1884 they were united into one

ecclesiastical parishes remain separate. In 1881 the civil parish had a population of 901.[4]

Nayland and Wiston lie on the northern bank of the River Stour, which divides Essex and Suffolk. Originally they were two different parishes with different histories. The name Nayland means an island, and the village developed on the higher ground amidst the lower river flood plain. It provided a good place for both a safe crossing of the river and an early manorial centre, probably a wooden castle. These advantages brought a market by 1227 and, by the late Middle Ages, it was a successful small town. The owners of the manor moved away and the little town was ruled by its cloth merchants, many of whom were very well off by the standards of the day. They were surpassed in wealth only by the merchants of Lavenham and Long Melford. They built fine Tudor houses and a fine church and the prosperity continued into the beginning of the seventeenth century. From then on the cloth trade began to move away, and although other trades like leather and soap manufacture developed, Nayland came to rely mainly on being a centre of commerce for the surrounding countryside. During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries the village drifted gently on, a relative backwater. The navigation on the river opened up but it did not bring a large increase in trade and the Navigation Company struggled to survive. The good result of this period of partial stagnation was that relative poverty prevented the beautiful old houses being knocked down to provide smart new homes and thus Nayland still possesses its Tudor and Stuart streets.

Nayland did have a small agricultural area but most of it lay out in the middle of the parish of Wiston and is nowadays considered to be part of Wiston. Although the official name for Wiston is Wissington, early documents suggest that Wiston is the original name, and it is certainly the one the local people always use. It had been a part of the manor of Nayland in 1066 but by 1087 had been given to a separate Norman family who lived across the river in Essex at

freehold
farms.

The village and the surrounding area, like much of

Great Migration.[5]

In 1883 the new West Suffolk county council decided that the two strangely divided civil parishes should be joined as Nayland with Wissington, a process which Wiston resented but could not prevent. The needs of the two parts of parish, part semi urban, part agricultural, still make a slightly uneasy union. The Nayland with Wissington Parish Council was created in 1894 as a result of the Local Government Act of that year.

But Wiston had not disappeared. In 1896 Dr Jane Walker bought two farms (both technically in Nayland) and founded the East Anglian Sanatorium. This opened in 1901 for private patients and soon a lower block for free patients was added. A children's block was also built. The writer George Gissing found himself as a patient here for a couple of months in 1901 and the Canadian artist Emily Carr was a patient for over a year in 1903–1904.[6] The Sanatorium continued to treat TB until that disease was conquered in the 1950s, when it closed. The lower block was sold off for housing and the upper block became a hospital for the mentally handicapped. While they functioned, the Sanatorium and the hospital were the centre of Wiston, as they provided most of the local employment. In 1991 the hospital itself closed under 'Care in the Community'. The original 'arts and crafts' Sanatorium, designed by Smith and Brewer, became a listed building and was converted into eight houses, while the rest was knocked down and replaced by another eight houses. Wiston still has seven working farms, six being old Wiston farms and one an old Nayland holding, while the other small farms and smallholdings have been absorbed into the bigger ones, leaving it still predominantly agricultural. The mechanisation of farming has, however, cut the need for workers dramatically, so that most of the residents of Wiston now work either at home or elsewhere.

Nayland today

The parish of Nayland-with-Wissington is in the district of

A134 road which links Colchester, six miles south of Nayland, to Sudbury
, nine miles (14 km) to its north.

There are 15th-century buildings in the village, Alston Court being one of these (see image) which also contains a 13th-century section.

The village church of St James contains a famous painting, Christ Blessing the Bread and Wine, by John Constable.

Littlegarth School has been located at Horkesley Park, Nayland, since 1994.

There is also a small airfield with grass runways suitable for landing small planes. The runways, number of takeoffs and landings, and plane types are limited, however, by planning restrictions. [7]

Reference works

Source[8]

References

  1. Office for National Statistics
    . Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  2. ^ Welcome to the Nayland and Wiston Community Website – Suffolk, UK
  3. ^ "Sudbury Registration District". UKBMD. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  4. ^ "Population Statistics Nayland CP/Ch through time". Vision of Britain. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  5. ^ Thompson, Roger, Mobility & Migration, East Anglian Founders of New England, 1629–1640, Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1994, 212–213.
  6. ^ (Blanchard, 1987: 90-97)
  7. ^ https://www.naylandairfield.co.uk/visiting
  8. ^ Welcome to the History References Page

External links