The Centre for East Anglian Studies (CEAS) works with partners to develop our understanding of local history

Our regional partners

We are currently forging (or reforging) links with organisations, societies, and institutions connected to regional museums, archaeological societies, record societies, church trusts and other regional studies. We welcome connections and involvement from interested parties across East Anglia (Norfolk, Suffolk, and the adjacent counties of Essex, Lincolnshire, and Cambridgeshire).

This will build on our historic links with various important partners, including the local branch of the Historical Association, the Norfolk Record Society, the Norfolk Archaeological & Historical Research Group (NAHRG), Walpole Old Chapel, and the Excelsior Trust. We have strong connections with other UEA centres and projects, including ‘Paston Footprints’, a research impact project, and the Eighteenth & Nineteenth Century Seminar Group. Planned events from linked networks and organisations will be advertised on the CEAS website.

Raphael Samuel argued that ‘History is or ought to be a collaborative enterprise, one in which the researcher, the archivist, the curator and the teacher, the ‘do-it-yourself’ enthusiast and the local historian, the family history societies and the individual archaeologist, should all be regarded as equally engaged.’ [History Workshop: A Collectanea, 1967-1991 (1991), p. iv]. CEAS is committed to the founding principle of engaging with active local people beyond the boundaries of the university.

Accordingly, we also aim reach out to more creative networks, including local early music groups and artists who use historical research in their work. This way CEAS will function as a hub for various local people and groups with an interest in the region.

 

Walpole Old Chapel

 

The Walpole Old Chapel Discovery Project is operated by a team of volunteers with the Friends of Walpole Old Chapel, and Halesworth and District Museum. The project has been assisted by the Suffolk Archives who have provided training and support as part of their lottery funded outreach programme and Halesworth and District U3A Genealogy Group have undertaken a significant piece of research transcribing and analysing the Chapel Baptism Records 1706-1837.

They have also established a working relationship with the Centre for East Anglian Studies and the History Department of the University of East Anglia with Dr. Joel Halcomb, an expert on religious practice, culture, and politics in Britain and Ireland during the British Civil Wars. He is a founding member of the Dissenting Experience project, promoting scholarship on the history, literature, and culture of early modern religious nonconformity.  Dr Halcomb suggested that we put forward the Chapel and Discovery Project as a possible placement for UEA Master’s students, one student researched the sad life of Methuselah Spalding.

The Walpole Old Chapel website.

Above: Walpole Old Chapel interior and exterior as it is today. (CEAS)

Above: Anne Hurle and Methuselah Spalding in the cart prior to being hanged outside Newgate prison, February 1804. Engraving from William Jackson, New and Complete Newgate Calendar, or Malefactor’s Universal Register, 1818. (Old Bailey Sessions Book, No. X.24).

Jurnet’s House

Jurnet’s House exists to safeguard and interpret the heritage and promote the study of the history and culture of the Jewish people. It represents Jewish Studies at UEA and aims to develop the oldest extant Jewish dwelling in England – the medieval house of Isaac Jurnet in Norwich’s King Street – into a centre for Jewish heritage, study, and culture.

The exceptional nature of the building, the profound roots and contributions of the city’s medieval Jewish community, the baleful legacy of the blood libel and expulsion, and the subsequent evolutions of Jewish life, art, and culture around the world that continue to shape this region in important ways make the story of Jurnet’s House one of equally local and international significance.

Jurnet’s House is a partnership between UEA, Norwich City Council, and the Jewish community.

The Excelsior Trust

Excelsior is one of the last surviving Lowestoft fishing smacks. Built in 1921 by John Chambers & Co of Lowestoft to trawl the southern North Sea. During the Depression of the 1930s she was sold to Norway, converted her to a motor coaster and used to transport general cargo around the Scandinavian coasts. She narrowly escaped being sunk during the Second World War while being used for evacuation.

In 1954 she was renamed SVINØR, by the 1970s the construction of new roads linking the Scandinavian coastal communities meant that the old coasters were no longer needed.

John Wylson, then an architectural student, was looking for a vessel to re-rig back to sail. Having worked up to relief skipper in the Home Trade he was helping a fellow student bring a fishing vessel back from Norway when he heard that the owners of the SVINØR were retiring. He sailed her back to Lowestoft just over 50 years after she had been built there as EXCELSIOR LT472 in 1921.

The Centre for East Anglian Studies has hosted a seminar at the Julian Centre at UEA and visited the Excelsior.

Images: Lowestoft Maritime Heritage – CEAS Aboard Excelsior. CEAS Director Richard Mills and the Excelsior Trust’s Jamie Campbell on the deck of the Excelsior fishing smack in September 2023. The trawler was built by John Chambers & Co of Lowestoft in 1921, and is part of the National Historic Fleet.

Excelsior Trust’s Chairman Jamie Campbell at the UEA.

 

The Norfolk Archaeological & Historical Research Group (NAHRG)

NAHRG Lecture Programme

Meetings take place in the Thomas Paine Lecture Theatre at the UEA at 2.30 pm (except for December, when we meet jointly with the NNAS at 2.15 in Norwich Castle). There is a hearing loop in the lecture theatre. Refreshments will be available afterwards. Non-members are welcome to try one or two lectures before joining.
http://www.nahrg.org.uk/

2023

October 14
A History of Architects Through East Anglian Buildings
Eleanor Joliffe (Chartered Architect)

November 11
Riddlesworth: The Development and Decline of a Norfolk Estate
Sarah Pearson (Architectural Historian)

December 2
Latest Research on the Snettisham Hoards
NB 2.15 start. Joint meeting with the NNAS in Norwich Castle Auditorium (also on Zoom)
Julia Farley (British Museum) and Jody Joy (Cambridge University)

2024

January 20
What Can We Learn From Pillboxes?
Chris Kolonko (Freelance Archaeologist)

February 10
First World War German Prisoner-of-War Camps in Norfolk
Brendan Chester-Kadwell (Landscape Archaeologist)

March 9
Fornication and Penance: Unlocking the Norwich Consistory Court Archive
Jonathan Draper (Partnership and Development Manager, Norfolk Record Office)

April 20
Roman Temples in East Anglia
NARHG AGM followed by lecture
Natasha Harlow (Hon. Research Fellow, University of Nottingham)

July 20
Norfolk History Day
Non-members welcome!
Our annual local history day will take place on Saturday 20 July 2024 in the Thomas Paine Lecture Theatre at the UEA. The theme is expected to be ‘East Anglian Castles’. Non-members welcome.

Norfolk Record Society

The Norfolk Record Society was founded in 1930, to publish and make accessible scholarly editions of documents relating to the County of Norfolk and the City of Norwich, to promote the preservation of such documents and records, to assist educationally by lectures or otherwise in record research and generally to stimulate interest in archives relating to Norfolk.

NRS have published over 80 volumes since 1930, and have over 30 still available to purchase via our website. It has a programme of events and lectures (in-person and Online) throughout the year for our Members and Non-Members. It has a range of membership options available for individuals and organisations based in the UK or Overseas, Membership fees start from £15.00.

https://www.norfolkrecordsociety.org.uk/

Photo: Excelsior during the 2005 Tall Ships Race to Fredrikstad. Pete Verdon. CC 2.5