History
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More interesting facts about Whissonsett!
The area around Whissonsett, like most of Norfolk, is rich in reminders
of those who have lived here over thousands of years.
The oldest finds are flint tools and weapons and then
pieces of pottery, coins and the remains of buildings, many from the
centuries of Roman occupation.
Metal detector enthusiasts may often be seen searching
in the local fields before the next season's crops are sown.
In 1995 when the Church Close building development
began in Whissonsett it became clear that the meadow, known as Betts
Field, on which the houses were being built, was part of a Saxon settlement.
Skeletons were uncovered in the field which lies at
the rear of St. Mary's Church.
Over the years human remains had been dug up in the
Stone Pit in High Street and in the gardens at the rear of the Gravel
Pit Cottages.
One skull was on display in the pub and school until
it mysteriously disappeared.
A skeleton that was dug up during the erection of
an air raid shelter in 1940 was wrapped in a sack and deposited in
the bottom of a newly dug grave in the churchyard!
Before the second phase of building at Church Close
in 2005 a thorough archaeological dig was carried out. Eight skeletons
were found in a corner of what is believed to be an extensive Saxon
cemetery, much of it now lies under existing houses. One was of a
large man over six feet tall.
Other finds included shears, spindles and loom weights
indicating the production of woollen goods at the settlement. Lumps
of smelted iron showed evidence of blacksmiths working there. Personal
items included carved bone combs, ironwork pins and what could be
a book clasp.
Animal bones and oyster shells were remnants of long
forgotten meals. Walls can be traced with foundations of flint and
wattle and even the incorporation of Roman blocks brought from elsewhere.
A large building, perhaps a church or main village
meeting place, is at the centre of the settlement.
The Celtic Cross found in the churchyard could have been set up here.
When the skeletons and all the artefacts have been
examined and dated an exhibition is to be held in Whissonsett village
hall so we may all learn much more about the early development of
the village.
The skeletons will be buried in the churchyard. It
may be that some of their descendants still live in Whissonsett.
click for larger images
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