Hassingham

Hassingham

Hassingham St Mary in the snow
Hassingham
Hassingham shown within Norfolk
OS grid reference TG369054
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Melton Constable
Postcode district NR24
EU Parliament East of England

Hassingham is a small village in the county of Norfolk, England, about ten miles east of Norwich. The village population is included in the civil parish of Stody (This cannot be true as Stody is in North Norfolk!).

Its church, St Mary, is one of 124 existing round-tower churches in Norfolk. The best-known former incumbent of Hassingham is the Rev. William Haslam, a nineteenth-Century evangelical, better known as the Vicar who was converted by his own sermon. Haslam held the living, together with that of nearby Buckenham from 1863 to 1871, having been presented to the living by Sir Thomas Beauchamp of Langley Hall. During Haslam's ministry in Hassingham, most of the population of this small village professed evangelical conversion.[1]

Rail Access

The nearest station is Buckenham railway station on the Wherry Line.

Notes

  1. Haslam, William (1882). Yet Not I. London: Morgan & Scott. ISBN 0-548-77869-8. (Currently out of print)

Media related to Hassingham at Wikimedia Commons


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