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Wikipedia

King's Lynn

King's Lynn, known until 1537 as Bishop's Lynn and colloquially as Lynn,[2] is a port and market town in the borough of King's Lynn and West Norfolk in the county of Norfolk, England. It is located 98 miles (158 km) north of London, 36 miles (58 km) north-east of Peterborough, 44 miles (71 km) north-north-east of Cambridge and 44 miles (71 km) west of Norwich.[2][1]

King's Lynn
King's Lynn
Location within Norfolk
Population42,800 (2007)[1]
• London98 miles (158 km)
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townKING'S LYNN
Postcode districtPE30-PE34
Dialling code01553
PoliceNorfolk
FireNorfolk
AmbulanceEast of England
UK Parliament
Websitewww.west-norfolk.gov.uk
List of places
UK
England
Norfolk
52°45′14″N 0°23′53″E / 52.754°N 0.398°E / 52.754; 0.398

History edit

Toponymy edit

The etymology of King's Lynn is uncertain. The name Lynn may signify a body of water near the town – the Welsh word llyn means a lake; but the name is plausibly of Anglo-Saxon origin, from lean meaning a tenure in fee or farm.[2] As the 1086 Domesday Book mentions saltings at Lena (Lynn), an area of partitioned pool’s may have existed there at the time. Other places with Lynn in the name include Dublin, Ireland, with An Dubh Linn meaning “the Black Pool.” The presence of salt, which was relatively rare and expensive in the early medieval period, may have added to the interest of Herbert de Losinga and other prominent Normans in the modest parish.

The town was named Len Episcopi (Bishop's Lynn) while under the temporal and spiritual jurisdiction of the Bishop of Norwich, but in the reign of Henry VIII it was surrendered to the crown and took the name Lenne Regis or King's Lynn.[2] Domesday records it as Lun and Lenn, and ascribes it to the Bishop of Elmham and the Archbishop of Canterbury.[2]

The town is generally known locally as Lynn.

The city of Lynn, Massachusetts, north of Boston, was named in 1637 in honour of its first official minister of religion, Reverend Samuel Whiting Sr, who arrived there from Lynn, Norfolk.[3][4]

Middle Ages edit

Lynn originated on a constricted site south of where the River Great Ouse now discharges into the Wash. Development began in the early 10th century, but the place was not recorded until the early 11th century. Until the early 13th century, the Great Ouse emptied via the Wellstream at Wisbech. After its redirection, Lynn and its port gained significance and prosperity.[5]

In 1101, Bishop Herbert de Losinga of Thetford began to build the first medieval town between the rivers Purfleet to the north and Mill Fleet to the south. He commissioned St Margaret's Church and authorised a market to be held on Saturday.[6][7] Trade built up along the waterways that stretched inland; the town expanded between the two rivers.

Lynn's 12th-century Jewish community was exterminated in the widespread massacres of 1189.[8]

During the 14th century, Lynn ranked as England's most important port. It was seen to be as vital to England in the Middle Ages as Liverpool was during the Industrial Revolution. Sea trade with Europe was dominated by the Hanseatic League of ports; the transatlantic trade and the rise of England's western ports began only in the 17th century. The Trinity Guildhall was rebuilt in 1421 after a fire. Walls entered by the South Gate and East Gate were erected to protect the town.[9] It retains two former Hanseatic League warehouses: Hanse House of 1475[10] and Marriott's Warehouse, in use between the 15th and 17th centuries.[11] These are the only remaining buildings of the Hanseatic League in England.

Modern edit

 
Hanseatic warehouse
 
Trinity Guildhall

In the first decade of the 16th century, Thoresby College was built in Lynn by Thomas Thoresby to house priests of the Guild of The Holy Trinity. It had been incorporated in 1453 under a petition of its alderman, chaplain, four brethren and four sisters, who were licensed to found a chantry of chaplains for the altar of Holy Trinity in Wisbech. Lands were granted in mortmain.[12] Lynn acquired a mayor and corporation in 1524. In 1537 the king took over the town from the bishop. In the same century the town's two annual fairs were reduced to one. In 1534 a grammar school was founded; four years later Henry VIII closed the Benedictine priory and the three friaries.

A piped water supply was created in the 16th century, although many could not afford to connect to the elm pipes carrying water under the streets. Lynn suffered from outbreaks of plague, notably in 1516, 1587, 1597, 1636 and finally in 1665. Fire was another hazard – in 1572 thatched roofs were banned to reduce the risk. In the English Civil War, King's Lynn supported Parliament, but in August 1643 it was in Royalist hands. It changed sides again after Parliament sent an army and the town was besieged for three weeks. Valentine Walton brother-in-law of Oliver Cromwell was appointed governor.

A heart carved on the wall of the Tuesday Market Place supposedly marks the burning of an alleged witch, Margaret Read, in 1590. It is said that as she was burning her heart burst from her body and struck the wall.[13] Other sources put forward Mary Smith, hanged in 1616, as the witch.[14]

 
The Custom House

In 1683, the architect Henry Bell, once the town's mayor, designed the Custom House. He also designed the Duke's Head Inn, North Runcton Church and Stanhoe Hall, having gained ideas while on travel in Europe as a young man.[15]

In the 16th and 17th centuries, the town's main export was grain. Lynn was no longer a major international port, but iron and timber were imported. King's Lynn suffered from the discovery of the Americas, which benefited ports on the west coast of England. It was also affected by the growth of London.

In the late 17th century, imports of wine from Spain, Portugal and France boomed, and there was still much coastal trade. It was cheaper to transport goods by water than by road at the time. Large amounts of coal arrived from the north-east of England.

The Fens began to be drained in the mid–17th century and the land turned to farming, allowing vast amounts of produce to be sent to London's growing market. Meanwhile, King's Lynn was still a major fishing port. Greenland Fishery House in Bridge Street was built in 1605. By the late 17th century shipbuilding and glass-making had also developed.

In the early 18th century, Daniel Defoe called the town "beautiful, well built and well situated". Shipbuilding thrived, as did associated trades such as sail-making and rope-making. Glass-making prospered; brewing was another important industry. The Norwich company of comedians had been visiting since the 1750s, in 1766 a permanent theatre was created. A new playhouse was built in 1805.[16] The first bank in King's Lynn opened in 1784.

A fearsome example of penal brutality occurred on 28 September 1708, when a seven-year-old boy, Michael Hammond, and his 11-year-old sister Ann were convicted of stealing a loaf of bread and sentenced to hanging. Their public executions took place near the South Gates. The Member of Parliament at the time was Sir Robert Walpole, generally regarded as the first Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.[17]

 
King's Lynn railway station in July 2017

The town's decline from the late 17th century was reversed by the arrival of the railways in 1847, mainly by the Great Eastern Railway, later the London and North Eastern Railway, running to Hunstanton, Dereham and Cambridge. The town was also served by the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway (M&GN), with offices at Austin Street and a station at South Lynn (now dismantled), which was also its operational control centre. It relocated to Melton Constable. The M&GN lines across Norfolk closed to passengers in February 1959.

The town's amenities continued to improve in the 20th century. A museum opened in 1904 and a public library in 1905. The first cinema, the Majestic, officially opened on 23 May 1928. (The year is marked in a stained-glass window on the front of the building.) The town council began a programme of regeneration in the 1930s.

During the First World War, King's Lynn was one of the UK's first towns to suffer aerial bombing, on the night of 19 January 1915 by a naval Zeppelin, L4 (LZ 27),[18] commanded by Captain Lieutenant Magnus von Platen-Hallermund. Eleven bombs were dropped, both incendiary and high explosive, doing much damage, killing two people in Bentinck Street and injuring several more. When the Second World War began in 1939, it was assumed that King's Lynn would be safe from bombing and many evacuees were sent from London, but the town suffered several raids.

The local breweries had closed by the 1950s, but new industries included food canning in the 1930s and soup-making in the 1950s. In the 1960s, the council sought to encourage development by adding an industrial estate at Hardwick.

In 1962, King's Lynn was classed as an overflow town for London. The population grew and estates were built at Woottons and Gaywood. The town centre was redeveloped in the 1960s and many earlier buildings knocked down. Lynnsport, a sports centre, opened in 1982. The Corn Exchange in Tuesday Market Place became a theatre in 1996.[19]

Recent changes edit

 
King's Lynn, as viewed from across the River Great Ouse

Since 2004, work has been under way to regenerate the town under a multi-million-pound scheme. The 1960s Vancouver Shopping Centre (now the Vancouver Quarter) was refurbished in 2005 under the scheme, but was expected to last only 25 years, according to the construction firm, even with a planned extension.[when?] An award-winning £6 million multi-storey car park was built.

To the south of the town, residential housing appeared on a large area of brownfield land. Plans for another housing estate alongside the River Nar were opposed locally and halted by the economic situation. There is also a business park, parkland, a school, shops and a new relief road in a £300 million-plus scheme.

In 2006, King's Lynn became the United Kingdom's first member of The Hanse (Die Hanse), a network of towns across Europe that belonged historically to the Hanseatic League. The league was an influential medieval trading association of merchant towns around the Baltic Sea and the North Sea, which contributed to Lynn's development.[20]

 
Dow Chemical Company works in King's Lynn.

The Borough Council commissioned and accepted a 2008 report by DTZ that dubbed King's Lynn's workforce as "low-value" with a "low skills base" and the town as having a "poor lifestyle offer". The quality of services and amenities was "unattractive to higher-value inward investors and professional employees with higher disposable incomes". Average earnings were well below regional and national levels, and many jobs in tourism, leisure and hotels were subject to seasonal fluctuations and likewise poorly paid. Education and workforce skills were described as below the national average. The borough ranked 150th out of 354 for social deprivation.[21]

In 2009, a proposal was made for the Campbell's Meadow factory site to be redeveloped as a 5-hectare (12-acre) employment and business park. In June 2011 Tesco gained a permit for a superstore.[22] On 8 June 2010, it unveiled regeneration plans that would cost £32 million and were billed to bring 900 new jobs.[23] Tesco pledged £4 million of improvements in other areas of the town. While it planned to spend £1.6 million widening Hardwick Road, the Sainsbury's bid was preferred by the Council as offering the town more benefits.[23]

 
Campbell's tower in 2006

Sainsbury's £40 million plans for a superstore opposite Tesco on the Pinguin Foods site yielded an estimated 300 jobs. This was the key to securing the future of Pinguin Foods in King's Lynn.[24] Pinguin Foods released 12 acres (5 ha) of its 44-acre (18 ha) site to accommodate the proposed store. Mortson Assets' and Sainsbury's plan included a link road between Scania Way and Queen Elizabeth Way to improve access and allow the industrial estate to attract new employers, while Sainsbury's maintains its store in the town centre. It has pledged £1.75 million for highways improvements and a further £7 million to invest in the Pinguin Foods factory.[23]

At 8 am on 15 January 2012, the landmark Campbell's Tower was demolished – competition winner Sarah Griffiths pulled the switch. Her father, Mick Locke, had died in 1995 aged 52 after being scalded by steam at the factory. It was Campbell's first UK factory when it opened in the 1950s. At its peak in the early 1990s it employed over 700.[25]

A fire station was opened by Queen Elizabeth II in February 2015.[26]

Governance edit

King's Lynn became a municipal borough in 1883. The present Borough of King's Lynn and West Norfolk was an amalgamation of the Borough of King's Lynn, the urban districts of Downham Market and Hunstanton, and the rural districts of Docking, Downham, Freebridge Lynn, and Marshland.[27]

Heraldry edit

 
Coat of arms of King's Lynn and West Norfolk

The shield in the coat of arms of King's Lynn and West Norfolk that of the ancient Borough of Lynn, recorded at the College of Arms in 1563. It shows the legend of Margaret of Antioch, who has appeared on Lynn shields since the 13th century, and to whom the parish church is dedicated.[27]

 
The heraldic badge of King's Lynn and West Norfolk

The per chevron division and addition of a bordure serve to distinguish the shield from its predecessor, while retaining its medieval simplicity. The bordure also suggests the wider bounds of the new authority, with the seven parts symbolising the seven amalgamated authorities.[27] The gull on the crest is a maritime reference. It has appeared as a supporter in some representations, but officially stands on a bollard to make it distinctive. It supports a crown or coronet like a King's Lynn supporter and a lion from the crest of Downham Market. The coronet refers to the Borough's royal connections. The cross held by the gull is an extension of the two in the shield, and the cross in the coat of arms of Freebridge Lynn Rural District.[27]

The supporters are based on the crest of the Hunstanton Urban District Council. The lion is a variation of the lions, or leopards, in the Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom and its fish tail suggests the borough's links with the sea.[27] The fish–lion is also the central feature in the borough's badge, but here it is surrounded by a garland of oak leaves as a reference to the rural nature of much of the district. Oak leaves also appear in the coronet in the crest of the former Downham Market Urban District Council.[27]

Twinning edit

King's Lynn is twinned with:[28]

Geography edit

Topography edit

 
The mouth of Gaywood River

King's Lynn is the northernmost settlement on the River Great Ouse, lying 97 miles (156 km) north of London and 44 miles (71 km) west of Norwich.[2][30][31] The town lies about 5 miles (8 km) south of the Wash, a fourfold estuary subject to dangerous tides and shifting sandbanks, on the north-west margin of East Anglia. King's Lynn has an area of 11 square miles (28 km2).

The Great Ouse at Lynn is about 200 metres (660 ft) wide and the outfall for much of the Fens' drainage system. The much smaller Gaywood River also flows through the town, joining the Great Ouse at the southern end of South Quay, close to the town centre. A small section known as West Lynn lies on the west bank, linked to the town centre by one of the oldest ferries in the country.[citation needed] Other districts of King's Lynn include the town centre, North Lynn, South Lynn, and Gaywood.

Climate edit

King's Lynn has a temperate oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb). The annual mean daytime temperature is around 14 °C (57 °F). January is the coldest month with mean minimum temperatures between 0 to 1 °C (32.0 to 33.8 °F). July and August are the warmest, with mean daily maximum temperatures of some 21 °C (70 °F).[32]

There are two Met Office weather stations close to King's Lynn: Terrington St Clement, about 4 miles (6 km) to the west and RAF Marham, about 10 miles (16 km) to the south-east.

The absolute maximum temperature at Terrington stands at 35.1 °C (95.2 °F)[33] recorded in August 2003, though in a more average year the warmest day will only reach 29.4 °C (84.9 °F),[34] with 13.8 days[35] in total attaining a temperature of 25.1 °C (77.2 °F) or more. Typically all these figures are marginally lower than those for the southern half of the Fens due to the presence of onshore sea breezes, and occasional haar (cold sea fog), especially in early summer and late spring. However, with a strong enough offshore breeze, the area can be notably warm. Terrington (along with Cambridge Botanical Gardens) achieved the national highest temperature of 2007, 30.1 °C (86.2 °F)[36]

The absolute minimum at Terrington is −15.4 °C (4.3 °F),[37] set in January 1979. A total of 41.6 nights will report an air frost at Terrington and 51.9 nights at Marham.

Annual rainfall totals 621 mm (24 in) at Marham, and 599 mm (24 in) at Terrington,[38] with 1 mm or more falling on 115 and 113 days,[39] respectively. All averages refer to the 30-year observation period 1971–2000.

Climate data for Terrington St Clement
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 13.9
(57.0)
17.4
(63.3)
24.4
(75.9)
25.3
(77.5)
28.4
(83.1)
32.4
(90.3)
33.5
(92.3)
35.1
(95.2)
29.0
(84.2)
25.0
(77.0)
17.8
(64.0)
16.4
(61.5)
35.1
(95.2)
Average high °C (°F) 6.5
(43.7)
7.1
(44.8)
10.0
(50.0)
12.2
(54.0)
15.9
(60.6)
18.7
(65.7)
21.5
(70.7)
21.8
(71.2)
18.4
(65.1)
14.2
(57.6)
9.5
(49.1)
7.2
(45.0)
13.6
(56.5)
Average low °C (°F) 0.9
(33.6)
1.0
(33.8)
2.6
(36.7)
3.9
(39.0)
6.7
(44.1)
9.5
(49.1)
11.4
(52.5)
11.4
(52.5)
9.7
(49.5)
6.8
(44.2)
3.4
(38.1)
1.8
(35.2)
5.8
(42.4)
Record low °C (°F) −15.4
(4.3)
−12.8
(9.0)
−8.3
(17.1)
−5.4
(22.3)
−4.2
(24.4)
0.0
(32.0)
2.7
(36.9)
3.3
(37.9)
−4.3
(24.3)
−8.2
(17.2)
−11.5
(11.3)
−15.4
(4.3)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 54.65
(2.15)
36.43
(1.43)
46.75
(1.84)
42.73
(1.68)
47.97
(1.89)
51.13
(2.01)
45.73
(1.80)
54.53
(2.15)
53.51
(2.11)
55.07
(2.17)
57.86
(2.28)
52.44
(2.06)
598.79
(23.57)
Source: KNMI[40]
Climate data for Marham
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 6.6
(43.9)
7.1
(44.8)
10.0
(50.0)
12.2
(54.0)
16.2
(61.2)
19.0
(66.2)
21.7
(71.1)
21.8
(71.2)
18.6
(65.5)
14.3
(57.7)
9.7
(49.5)
7.4
(45.3)
13.8
(56.8)
Average low °C (°F) 0.5
(32.9)
0.6
(33.1)
2.3
(36.1)
4.0
(39.2)
6.9
(44.4)
9.7
(49.5)
11.8
(53.2)
11.8
(53.2)
9.6
(49.3)
6.6
(43.9)
3.2
(37.8)
1.6
(34.9)
5.7
(42.3)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 54.7
(2.15)
38.5
(1.52)
49.5
(1.95)
46.8
(1.84)
48.1
(1.89)
55.9
(2.20)
44.1
(1.74)
50.5
(1.99)
54.9
(2.16)
59.8
(2.35)
63.3
(2.49)
55.3
(2.18)
621.3
(24.46)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 53.6 73.2 101.7 150.6 204.3 191.1 202.7 192.8 139.8 109.7 69.0 48.1 1,536.6
Source: Met Office[41]

Parks edit

The largest of the town's several public parks are the Walks, a historic 17-hectare urban park in the centre of King's Lynn. They are the only town walk in Norfolk to survive from the 18th century. The Heritage Lottery Fund donated £4.3 million towards restoring them and adding modern amenities. They also include the Red Mount, a Grade II-listed 15th-century chapel. In 1998, the Walks were designated by English Heritage as a Grade II national historic park.

The Walks as a whole had a different, earlier origin, conceived of not as a municipal park, as one understands the term today, but as a promenade for citizens, away from the smell, grime and bustle of the town centre.[42] Harding's Pits form another public park, to the south of the town. This informal area of open space with large public sculptures was laid out to reflect the town's history. Harding's Pits are managed by local volunteers under a management firm, which successfully fought off a Borough Council attempts to turn them into an attenuation drain.

Demography edit

In 2007, King's Lynn had a population of 42,800.[1] At Norfolk's 2007 census, King's Lynn, together with West Norfolk, had a population of 143,500, with an average population density of 1.0 persons per hectare.[1] For figures after 2011 see King's Lynn and West Norfolk.

Economy edit

King's Lynn has always been a centre for fishing and seafood (especially inshore prawns, shrimps and cockles).[43] There have also been glass-making and small-scale engineering works – many fairground and steam engines were built here. It still contains much farm-related industry, including food processing. There are several chemical factories and the town retains a role as an import centre. In general, it is a regional centre for a still sparsely populated part of England.

King's Lynn was the fastest growing port in Great Britain in 2008. Department for Transport figures show that through-put increased by 33 per cent.[44]

In 2008, the German Palm Group began to erect one of the world's largest paper machines, constructed by Voith Paper. With a web speed of up to 2000 metres a minute and a web width of 10.63 metres, it can produce 400,000 tons a year of newsprint paper, based on 100-per-cent recycled paper. The start-up was on 21 August 2009.[45]

The Port of King's Lynn has facilities for dry bulk cargo such as cereals and liquid bulk products such as petroleum products for Pace Petroleum. It also handles timber imported from Scandinavia and the Baltics and has handling sheds for steel imports.[46]

 
The Vancouver Shopping District at night

King's Lynn is the prime retail centre in West Norfolk. The town centre is dominated by budget shops, reflecting the spending power of much of the population. The town centre fulfils a leisure role with entertainment centres, bars and restaurants, and has a range of service functions. It provides about 5,300 retailing jobs.[47]

The town centre has 73,000 sq. m. of retail floor space in 347 shops, which exceeds the comparable centres of Bury St Edmunds and Boston. However, whilst the percentage of floor space in comparison shopping and that occupied by multiple retailers is above the national average, King's Lynn offers a more limited range of choice.[47]

Tourism in King's Lynn is a minor industry, but it attracts visitors to its historic centre, and as a base for visiting Sandringham House and other country houses in the area. Within the town and across the nearby Fenland are some of the finest historic churches in Britain, built in a period when King's Lynn and its hinterland were wealthy from trade and wool.

Transport edit

Roads edit

King's Lynn is linked to the cities of Norwich and Peterborough by the A47, to Cambridge by the A10, and to Spalding and the North via the A17. Parts of north and east Norfolk are reached by the A148 and the A149. There is currently a campaign led by Norfolk County Council to dual the A47, due to the area's poor road networks and lack of motorways compared to other areas of the country.[48]

Railway edit

 
A Class 365 train at King's Lynn station in November 2009

King's Lynn railway station, terminus of the Fen Line, is the sole railway facility in King's Lynn. It provides regular services to Cambridge and London King's Cross. South Lynn railway station closed to passengers in 1959, as did Hunstanton in 1969.

West Norfolk Council is still considering ostensibly reopening a railway between King's Lynn and Hunstanton. The possibility was proposed at a meeting of the council's Regeneration and Environment Panel on 29 October 2008, having last been discussed in the 1990s. An environmental case was made for reviving the line to relieve road congestion.[49]

Buses edit

Nearly all Stagecoach services in the area have been withdrawn, leaving most services in King's Lynn operated by Lynx or Go To Town (West Norfolk Community Transport Project).

King's Lynn is served by the excel bus route between Peterborough and Norwich operated by First Eastern Counties. The Coasthopper route from King's Lynn runs round the Norfolk Coast to Cromer but, since Stagecoach withdrew from Norfolk, the western section has been run by Lynx as Coastliner 36 and extended inland from Wells-next-the-Sea to Fakenham.[50] The Wells–Cromer section is run by Sanders Coaches and still known as Coasthopper, but now extends inland to North Walsham.[51]

South Transport Project edit

 
The developments taking place as part of the King's Lynn South Transport Project

A £7 million programme to redevelop the infrastructure of the town centre in the 2010s was largely provided by the Community Infrastructure Fund. The department programme is a collection of smaller developments, which are detailed below.[52]

Work on a cycle and bus route between the town centre and South Lynn began in June 2010, at a cost of £850,000. It is 720 metres long, from Morston Drift to Millfleet, with buses in both directions, and features a separate path for pedestrians and bicycles, which coincides with the bus route when crossing the Nar sluice. As part of the development, the Millfleet–St James' Road junction is being developed.[52]

A contraflow lane for bicycles was proposed, but not built along Norfolk Street from Albert Street to Blackfriars Road. This would have included a development of the Norfolk Road/Railway Road junction to better accommodate buses and bicycles. Similar work was to have taken place at the Norfolk Street–Littleport Street junction, so that buses would not get caught in the town-centre gyratory system.[52]

Bus priority measures have been added to four sets of traffic lights along St James' Road. These give buses quicker access to the town centre and normalise journey times.[52]

Southgates roundabout has been redeveloped. Many of its approach roads have been widened in the run-up to the junction and the road markings redone[clarification needed] in an attempt to improve lane discipline. It is a noted congestion hot spot.[52]

Other small developments are taking place to make junctions more car-friendly.[52]

Media edit

King's Lynn has two local newspapers: the twice-weekly Lynn News, owned by Iliffe Media, and Your Local Paper, a free weekly.[53] KL magazine is a free lifestyle magazine that promotes the best of west and north Norfolk. It has been published monthly since October 2010 and is distributed to local businesses; it also issues special Food and Home Design & Build editions.[54]

King's Lynn is served by BBC Radio Norfolk, Heart East, Greatest Hits Radio (West Norfolk), KL1 Radio, Radio West Norfolk and all national BBC radio stations. The local college has a web-based TV station run by media students, entitled SpringboardTV.com, and holds an awards ceremony at the end of each academic year.

Television services are provided by BBC East, BBC Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, ITV Anglia, and ITV Yorkshire.

Education edit

Three of King's Lynn four secondary schools are located in the town: King Edward VII School, the King's Lynn Academy and Springwood High School. The fourth, St Clements High School, is in the nearby village of Terrington St Clement. The first is known for its physical education department, King's Lynn Academy for its maths and IT specialities, and Springwood for performing arts and drama.[55][56][57] The nearest independent school is Wisbech Grammar School in Cambridgeshire.

The town's further education college, the College of West Anglia, was founded in 1894 as King's Lynn Technical School. In 1973, it was renamed Norfolk College of Arts and Technology, and, in 1998, merged with Cambridgeshire College of Agriculture and Horticulture, which added campuses in Wisbech (now closed) and Milton; it changed the name to the College of West Anglia. It retained this name in April 2006, when it merged with the Isle College in Wisbech.[58]

Culture edit

St George's Guildhall edit

 
Guildhall of St George

The Guild of St George was founded in 1376 and acquired land for the Guildhall of St George in 1406, which was in use by 1428. It offered plays in the Guildhall, the first known being a nativity play in January 1445. This makes it the UK's oldest working theatre.

The Guildhall was used for meetings, dinners and performance until 1547, when King Edward VI dissolved the Guilds. It then became the property of Lynn Corporation and known as the Common Town Hall. Research by the University of East Anglia confirms as probable the oral history of King's Lynn that William Shakespeare performed in the Guildhall in 1593. This is the only still-working theatre in the world that can credibly claim to have hosted Shakespeare. In 1766, Guildhall shows were so popular that a new interior was built inside the present structure, probably on the earlier footprint. By 1945, the Guildhall was almost derelict and in danger of demolition. It was bought by Alexander Penrose, who gave it to the National Trust in 1951. The Pilgrim Trust, Arts Council and public subscription led to conversion into an Arts Centre. Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother opened it in July 1951 and launched the King's Lynn Festival.

Today, the Guildhall is owned by the National Trust and leased to the Borough Council of King's Lynn and West Norfolk. Various groups hire the building for a year-round programme of theatre, dance, music, lectures and film; amongst them are Shakespeare's Guildhall Trust, King's Lynn Festival, King's Lynn Community Cinema Club. Shakespeare's Guildhall Trust have volunteers who open the theatre to visitors.

Arts edit

Composer Ralph Vaughan Williams visited King's Lynn in January 1905 and collected several folk songs from the area.[59]

Ruth, Lady Fermoy, a concert pianist, moved to King's Lynn in 1931 as the bride of Lord Edmund Fermoy, who would become the town mayor and local MP. She helped to organise concerts of high-standard professional music.[60]

In 1951, Lady Fermoy complemented the Festival of Britain with a King's Lynn Festival of the Arts. She was a friend and lady-in-waiting to Queen Elizabeth – later the Queen Mother – who agreed to become the festival patron and, in July 1951, officially opened the restored St George's Guildhall. She remained an enthusiastic and active supporter and patron of the festival until her death in March 2002.[60]

The King's Lynn Festival remains the premier music and arts festival in West Norfolk. It is primarily known for classical music, but also hosts jazz, choral, folk, opera, dance, films, talks and exhibitions, along with fringe events each year.[61]

The King's Lynn Literature Festivals are held on single weekends in March (fiction) and September (poetry) each year, usually in the town hall.[62] The Annual Hanse Festival first took place in 2009.[63]

Displays edit

Storeys of Lynn Museum opened in March 2016, as part of the King's Lynn Town Hall complex. Set within the newly-revealed vaulted undercroft of the 15th-century Trinity Guildhall, it presents the town's collection in an extensive, nationally significant interactive and multi-media exhibition. True's Yard Fisherfolk Museum displays the social history of the North End fishermen, run by volunteers. It includes a cottage and a smokehouse.[64] Since 2013, there has been a local award-winning Military Museum operated by The Bridge for Heroes Charity to raise funds.[65] Lynn Museum, run by Norfolk Museums Service in Market Street, covers the town's local history and the Bronze Age timber circle Seahenge.

Festival Too is held in Tuesday Market Place each summer. Performers have included Midge Ure, Deacon Blue, Suzi Quatro, 10cc, Mungo Jerry, the Human League, the Buzzcocks, M People, Atomic Kitten, Kieran Woodcock, S Club and Beverley Knight.

The Majestic Cinema in the town centre is the town's only cinema.

King's Lynn's main venue for concerts, stand-up comedy shows and other live events is the Corn Exchange, in Tuesday Market Place. Many smaller venues such as Bar Red and the Wenns contribute to the local music scene, along with acts from other parts of the country.[66]

Mart edit

 
The Mart on the Tuesday Market Place

In the 16th century, King's Lynn's Tuesday Market Place hosted two trade fairs that attracted visitors from as far as Italy and Germany. As the importance of such fairs declined, the Mart has become a funfair, reduced to a single fortnight's annual event that begins on 14 February (Valentine's Day). It is also a memorial to Frederick Savage, who partnered the Showmen's Guild of Great Britain to develop new funfair attractions.[67]

Sport edit

The town's football club King's Lynn Town, play in the National League North as of the 2023–24 season. It was formed in 2010, after the original King's Lynn F.C. was wound up in December 2009. Its home games are played at the Walks Stadium in Tennyson Road.

King's Lynn's speedway team, the King's Lynn Stars, races at the Adrian Flux Arena in Saddlebow Road. The track has been run since 1965 on an open licence. It hosted Speedway-type events in the 1950s.

One of the town's basketball clubs, King's Lynn Fury, previously played in the National League out of Lynnsport and represented the town in national competitions from 2004 to 2017. Lynn Nets, formed in 2008, also runs a programme in local competitions.

The historic hockey team The Pelicans, dating from 1920, currently plays at Lynnsport, having been based in nearby North Runcton until 1996.[68]

Notable people edit

Location edit

In popular culture edit

Ruth Galloway, fictional heroine of Elly Griffiths' novels, is a forensic anthropologist living in a cottage near King's Lynn and teaching at the University of North Norfolk.[116]

Peter Grainger's DC Smith Investigation series of detective novels is set in "Kings Lake", a thinly-disguised King's Lynn.[117]

The fictional comedy character Alan Partridge was born in Queen Elizabeth Hospital, King's Lynn. The character itself, played by Steve Coogan, grew up in Norwich and frequently makes references to Norfolk.[118]

Media appearances edit

King's Lynn and surroundings have since the early 20th century been popular with film and TV producers. Their architecture and landscape often allow them to stand in for other parts of the world, especially the Netherlands and France. The town appeared as the Netherlands in The Silver Fleet (1943) and One of Aircraft Is Missing (1942), as Germany in Operation Crossbow in 1965,[citation needed] and as France in 'Allo 'Allo!, the long-running BBC comedy.[citation needed]

The town served as an earlier Dutch New York in the 1985 feature film Revolution.[citation needed] The BBC series Lovejoy also used the town,[citation needed] as did the Anglia Television series Tales Of The Unexpected and the Granada series Sherlock Holmes, starring Jeremy Brett in the title role.[citation needed]

In the early 2000s, the BBC used the town bus station, local roads and the nearby Royal estate of Sandringham in the comedy drama series Grass, featuring Simon Day.[citation needed] It has, in recent times, appeared many times on programmes such as the BBC's Antiques Road Trip, Flog It!, and a BBC Four documentary The Last Journey of the Magna Carta King, following the trail of John, King of England and how he lost his treasure in the Wash.[119]

Further reading edit

Susan Yaxley, ed. (2009). The Siege of King's Lynn. Larks Press. ISBN 9780948400209.

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External links edit

  • King's Lynn at Curlie
  • Information from Genuki Norfolk
  • History of medieval Lynn

king, lynn, known, until, 1537, bishop, lynn, colloquially, lynn, port, market, town, borough, west, norfolk, county, norfolk, england, located, miles, north, london, miles, north, east, peterborough, miles, north, north, east, cambridge, miles, west, norwich,. King s Lynn known until 1537 as Bishop s Lynn and colloquially as Lynn 2 is a port and market town in the borough of King s Lynn and West Norfolk in the county of Norfolk England It is located 98 miles 158 km north of London 36 miles 58 km north east of Peterborough 44 miles 71 km north north east of Cambridge and 44 miles 71 km west of Norwich 2 1 King s LynnKing s LynnLocation within NorfolkPopulation42 800 2007 1 London98 miles 158 km DistrictKing s Lynn and West NorfolkShire countyNorfolkRegionEastCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townKING S LYNNPostcode districtPE30 PE34Dialling code01553PoliceNorfolkFireNorfolkAmbulanceEast of EnglandUK ParliamentNorth West NorfolkWebsitewww west norfolk gov ukList of places UK England Norfolk 52 45 14 N 0 23 53 E 52 754 N 0 398 E 52 754 0 398 Contents 1 History 1 1 Toponymy 1 2 Middle Ages 1 3 Modern 1 4 Recent changes 2 Governance 2 1 Heraldry 2 2 Twinning 3 Geography 3 1 Topography 3 2 Climate 3 3 Parks 4 Demography 5 Economy 6 Transport 6 1 Roads 6 2 Railway 6 3 Buses 6 4 South Transport Project 7 Media 8 Education 9 Culture 9 1 St George s Guildhall 9 2 Arts 9 3 Displays 9 4 Mart 9 5 Sport 10 Notable people 11 Location 12 In popular culture 13 Media appearances 14 Further reading 15 References 16 External linksHistory editToponymy edit The etymology of King s Lynn is uncertain The name Lynn may signify a body of water near the town the Welsh word llyn means a lake but the name is plausibly of Anglo Saxon origin from lean meaning a tenure in fee or farm 2 As the 1086 Domesday Book mentions saltings at Lena Lynn an area of partitioned pool s may have existed there at the time Other places with Lynn in the name include Dublin Ireland with An Dubh Linn meaning the Black Pool The presence of salt which was relatively rare and expensive in the early medieval period may have added to the interest of Herbert de Losinga and other prominent Normans in the modest parish The town was named Len Episcopi Bishop s Lynn while under the temporal and spiritual jurisdiction of the Bishop of Norwich but in the reign of Henry VIII it was surrendered to the crown and took the name Lenne Regis or King s Lynn 2 Domesday records it as Lun and Lenn and ascribes it to the Bishop of Elmham and the Archbishop of Canterbury 2 The town is generally known locally as Lynn The city of Lynn Massachusetts north of Boston was named in 1637 in honour of its first official minister of religion Reverend Samuel Whiting Sr who arrived there from Lynn Norfolk 3 4 Middle Ages edit Lynn originated on a constricted site south of where the River Great Ouse now discharges into the Wash Development began in the early 10th century but the place was not recorded until the early 11th century Until the early 13th century the Great Ouse emptied via the Wellstream at Wisbech After its redirection Lynn and its port gained significance and prosperity 5 In 1101 Bishop Herbert de Losinga of Thetford began to build the first medieval town between the rivers Purfleet to the north and Mill Fleet to the south He commissioned St Margaret s Church and authorised a market to be held on Saturday 6 7 Trade built up along the waterways that stretched inland the town expanded between the two rivers Lynn s 12th century Jewish community was exterminated in the widespread massacres of 1189 8 During the 14th century Lynn ranked as England s most important port It was seen to be as vital to England in the Middle Ages as Liverpool was during the Industrial Revolution Sea trade with Europe was dominated by the Hanseatic League of ports the transatlantic trade and the rise of England s western ports began only in the 17th century The Trinity Guildhall was rebuilt in 1421 after a fire Walls entered by the South Gate and East Gate were erected to protect the town 9 It retains two former Hanseatic League warehouses Hanse House of 1475 10 and Marriott s Warehouse in use between the 15th and 17th centuries 11 These are the only remaining buildings of the Hanseatic League in England Modern edit nbsp Hanseatic warehouse nbsp Trinity GuildhallIn the first decade of the 16th century Thoresby College was built in Lynn by Thomas Thoresby to house priests of the Guild of The Holy Trinity It had been incorporated in 1453 under a petition of its alderman chaplain four brethren and four sisters who were licensed to found a chantry of chaplains for the altar of Holy Trinity in Wisbech Lands were granted in mortmain 12 Lynn acquired a mayor and corporation in 1524 In 1537 the king took over the town from the bishop In the same century the town s two annual fairs were reduced to one In 1534 a grammar school was founded four years later Henry VIII closed the Benedictine priory and the three friaries A piped water supply was created in the 16th century although many could not afford to connect to the elm pipes carrying water under the streets Lynn suffered from outbreaks of plague notably in 1516 1587 1597 1636 and finally in 1665 Fire was another hazard in 1572 thatched roofs were banned to reduce the risk In the English Civil War King s Lynn supported Parliament but in August 1643 it was in Royalist hands It changed sides again after Parliament sent an army and the town was besieged for three weeks Valentine Walton brother in law of Oliver Cromwell was appointed governor A heart carved on the wall of the Tuesday Market Place supposedly marks the burning of an alleged witch Margaret Read in 1590 It is said that as she was burning her heart burst from her body and struck the wall 13 Other sources put forward Mary Smith hanged in 1616 as the witch 14 nbsp The Custom HouseIn 1683 the architect Henry Bell once the town s mayor designed the Custom House He also designed the Duke s Head Inn North Runcton Church and Stanhoe Hall having gained ideas while on travel in Europe as a young man 15 In the 16th and 17th centuries the town s main export was grain Lynn was no longer a major international port but iron and timber were imported King s Lynn suffered from the discovery of the Americas which benefited ports on the west coast of England It was also affected by the growth of London In the late 17th century imports of wine from Spain Portugal and France boomed and there was still much coastal trade It was cheaper to transport goods by water than by road at the time Large amounts of coal arrived from the north east of England The Fens began to be drained in the mid 17th century and the land turned to farming allowing vast amounts of produce to be sent to London s growing market Meanwhile King s Lynn was still a major fishing port Greenland Fishery House in Bridge Street was built in 1605 By the late 17th century shipbuilding and glass making had also developed In the early 18th century Daniel Defoe called the town beautiful well built and well situated Shipbuilding thrived as did associated trades such as sail making and rope making Glass making prospered brewing was another important industry The Norwich company of comedians had been visiting since the 1750s in 1766 a permanent theatre was created A new playhouse was built in 1805 16 The first bank in King s Lynn opened in 1784 A fearsome example of penal brutality occurred on 28 September 1708 when a seven year old boy Michael Hammond and his 11 year old sister Ann were convicted of stealing a loaf of bread and sentenced to hanging Their public executions took place near the South Gates The Member of Parliament at the time was Sir Robert Walpole generally regarded as the first Prime Minister of the United Kingdom 17 nbsp King s Lynn railway station in July 2017The town s decline from the late 17th century was reversed by the arrival of the railways in 1847 mainly by the Great Eastern Railway later the London and North Eastern Railway running to Hunstanton Dereham and Cambridge The town was also served by the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway M amp GN with offices at Austin Street and a station at South Lynn now dismantled which was also its operational control centre It relocated to Melton Constable The M amp GN lines across Norfolk closed to passengers in February 1959 The town s amenities continued to improve in the 20th century A museum opened in 1904 and a public library in 1905 The first cinema the Majestic officially opened on 23 May 1928 The year is marked in a stained glass window on the front of the building The town council began a programme of regeneration in the 1930s During the First World War King s Lynn was one of the UK s first towns to suffer aerial bombing on the night of 19 January 1915 by a naval Zeppelin L4 LZ 27 18 commanded by Captain Lieutenant Magnus von Platen Hallermund Eleven bombs were dropped both incendiary and high explosive doing much damage killing two people in Bentinck Street and injuring several more When the Second World War began in 1939 it was assumed that King s Lynn would be safe from bombing and many evacuees were sent from London but the town suffered several raids The local breweries had closed by the 1950s but new industries included food canning in the 1930s and soup making in the 1950s In the 1960s the council sought to encourage development by adding an industrial estate at Hardwick In 1962 King s Lynn was classed as an overflow town for London The population grew and estates were built at Woottons and Gaywood The town centre was redeveloped in the 1960s and many earlier buildings knocked down Lynnsport a sports centre opened in 1982 The Corn Exchange in Tuesday Market Place became a theatre in 1996 19 Recent changes edit nbsp King s Lynn as viewed from across the River Great OuseSince 2004 work has been under way to regenerate the town under a multi million pound scheme The 1960s Vancouver Shopping Centre now the Vancouver Quarter was refurbished in 2005 under the scheme but was expected to last only 25 years according to the construction firm even with a planned extension when An award winning 6 million multi storey car park was built To the south of the town residential housing appeared on a large area of brownfield land Plans for another housing estate alongside the River Nar were opposed locally and halted by the economic situation There is also a business park parkland a school shops and a new relief road in a 300 million plus scheme In 2006 King s Lynn became the United Kingdom s first member of The Hanse Die Hanse a network of towns across Europe that belonged historically to the Hanseatic League The league was an influential medieval trading association of merchant towns around the Baltic Sea and the North Sea which contributed to Lynn s development 20 nbsp Dow Chemical Company works in King s Lynn The Borough Council commissioned and accepted a 2008 report by DTZ that dubbed King s Lynn s workforce as low value with a low skills base and the town as having a poor lifestyle offer The quality of services and amenities was unattractive to higher value inward investors and professional employees with higher disposable incomes Average earnings were well below regional and national levels and many jobs in tourism leisure and hotels were subject to seasonal fluctuations and likewise poorly paid Education and workforce skills were described as below the national average The borough ranked 150th out of 354 for social deprivation 21 In 2009 a proposal was made for the Campbell s Meadow factory site to be redeveloped as a 5 hectare 12 acre employment and business park In June 2011 Tesco gained a permit for a superstore 22 On 8 June 2010 it unveiled regeneration plans that would cost 32 million and were billed to bring 900 new jobs 23 Tesco pledged 4 million of improvements in other areas of the town While it planned to spend 1 6 million widening Hardwick Road the Sainsbury s bid was preferred by the Council as offering the town more benefits 23 nbsp Campbell s tower in 2006Sainsbury s 40 million plans for a superstore opposite Tesco on the Pinguin Foods site yielded an estimated 300 jobs This was the key to securing the future of Pinguin Foods in King s Lynn 24 Pinguin Foods released 12 acres 5 ha of its 44 acre 18 ha site to accommodate the proposed store Mortson Assets and Sainsbury s plan included a link road between Scania Way and Queen Elizabeth Way to improve access and allow the industrial estate to attract new employers while Sainsbury s maintains its store in the town centre It has pledged 1 75 million for highways improvements and a further 7 million to invest in the Pinguin Foods factory 23 At 8 am on 15 January 2012 the landmark Campbell s Tower was demolished competition winner Sarah Griffiths pulled the switch Her father Mick Locke had died in 1995 aged 52 after being scalded by steam at the factory It was Campbell s first UK factory when it opened in the 1950s At its peak in the early 1990s it employed over 700 25 A fire station was opened by Queen Elizabeth II in February 2015 26 Governance editKing s Lynn became a municipal borough in 1883 The present Borough of King s Lynn and West Norfolk was an amalgamation of the Borough of King s Lynn the urban districts of Downham Market and Hunstanton and the rural districts of Docking Downham Freebridge Lynn and Marshland 27 Heraldry edit nbsp Coat of arms of King s Lynn and West NorfolkThe shield in the coat of arms of King s Lynn and West Norfolk that of the ancient Borough of Lynn recorded at the College of Arms in 1563 It shows the legend of Margaret of Antioch who has appeared on Lynn shields since the 13th century and to whom the parish church is dedicated 27 nbsp The heraldic badge of King s Lynn and West NorfolkThe per chevron division and addition of a bordure serve to distinguish the shield from its predecessor while retaining its medieval simplicity The bordure also suggests the wider bounds of the new authority with the seven parts symbolising the seven amalgamated authorities 27 The gull on the crest is a maritime reference It has appeared as a supporter in some representations but officially stands on a bollard to make it distinctive It supports a crown or coronet like a King s Lynn supporter and a lion from the crest of Downham Market The coronet refers to the Borough s royal connections The cross held by the gull is an extension of the two in the shield and the cross in the coat of arms of Freebridge Lynn Rural District 27 The supporters are based on the crest of the Hunstanton Urban District Council The lion is a variation of the lions or leopards in the Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom and its fish tail suggests the borough s links with the sea 27 The fish lion is also the central feature in the borough s badge but here it is surrounded by a garland of oak leaves as a reference to the rural nature of much of the district Oak leaves also appear in the coronet in the crest of the former Downham Market Urban District Council 27 Twinning edit King s Lynn is twinned with 28 nbsp Emmerich am Rhein Germany 29 nbsp Sandringham Victoria Australia nbsp Jicin Hradec Kralove Czechia nbsp Mlada Boleslav Central Bohemian Region CzechiaGeography editTopography edit nbsp The mouth of Gaywood RiverKing s Lynn is the northernmost settlement on the River Great Ouse lying 97 miles 156 km north of London and 44 miles 71 km west of Norwich 2 30 31 The town lies about 5 miles 8 km south of the Wash a fourfold estuary subject to dangerous tides and shifting sandbanks on the north west margin of East Anglia King s Lynn has an area of 11 square miles 28 km2 The Great Ouse at Lynn is about 200 metres 660 ft wide and the outfall for much of the Fens drainage system The much smaller Gaywood River also flows through the town joining the Great Ouse at the southern end of South Quay close to the town centre A small section known as West Lynn lies on the west bank linked to the town centre by one of the oldest ferries in the country citation needed Other districts of King s Lynn include the town centre North Lynn South Lynn and Gaywood Climate edit King s Lynn has a temperate oceanic climate Koppen Cfb The annual mean daytime temperature is around 14 C 57 F January is the coldest month with mean minimum temperatures between 0 to 1 C 32 0 to 33 8 F July and August are the warmest with mean daily maximum temperatures of some 21 C 70 F 32 There are two Met Office weather stations close to King s Lynn Terrington St Clement about 4 miles 6 km to the west and RAF Marham about 10 miles 16 km to the south east The absolute maximum temperature at Terrington stands at 35 1 C 95 2 F 33 recorded in August 2003 though in a more average year the warmest day will only reach 29 4 C 84 9 F 34 with 13 8 days 35 in total attaining a temperature of 25 1 C 77 2 F or more Typically all these figures are marginally lower than those for the southern half of the Fens due to the presence of onshore sea breezes and occasional haar cold sea fog especially in early summer and late spring However with a strong enough offshore breeze the area can be notably warm Terrington along with Cambridge Botanical Gardens achieved the national highest temperature of 2007 30 1 C 86 2 F 36 The absolute minimum at Terrington is 15 4 C 4 3 F 37 set in January 1979 A total of 41 6 nights will report an air frost at Terrington and 51 9 nights at Marham Annual rainfall totals 621 mm 24 in at Marham and 599 mm 24 in at Terrington 38 with 1 mm or more falling on 115 and 113 days 39 respectively All averages refer to the 30 year observation period 1971 2000 Climate data for Terrington St ClementMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 13 9 57 0 17 4 63 3 24 4 75 9 25 3 77 5 28 4 83 1 32 4 90 3 33 5 92 3 35 1 95 2 29 0 84 2 25 0 77 0 17 8 64 0 16 4 61 5 35 1 95 2 Average high C F 6 5 43 7 7 1 44 8 10 0 50 0 12 2 54 0 15 9 60 6 18 7 65 7 21 5 70 7 21 8 71 2 18 4 65 1 14 2 57 6 9 5 49 1 7 2 45 0 13 6 56 5 Average low C F 0 9 33 6 1 0 33 8 2 6 36 7 3 9 39 0 6 7 44 1 9 5 49 1 11 4 52 5 11 4 52 5 9 7 49 5 6 8 44 2 3 4 38 1 1 8 35 2 5 8 42 4 Record low C F 15 4 4 3 12 8 9 0 8 3 17 1 5 4 22 3 4 2 24 4 0 0 32 0 2 7 36 9 3 3 37 9 4 3 24 3 8 2 17 2 11 5 11 3 15 4 4 3 Average precipitation mm inches 54 65 2 15 36 43 1 43 46 75 1 84 42 73 1 68 47 97 1 89 51 13 2 01 45 73 1 80 54 53 2 15 53 51 2 11 55 07 2 17 57 86 2 28 52 44 2 06 598 79 23 57 Source KNMI 40 Climate data for Marham Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 6 6 43 9 7 1 44 8 10 0 50 0 12 2 54 0 16 2 61 2 19 0 66 2 21 7 71 1 21 8 71 2 18 6 65 5 14 3 57 7 9 7 49 5 7 4 45 3 13 8 56 8 Average low C F 0 5 32 9 0 6 33 1 2 3 36 1 4 0 39 2 6 9 44 4 9 7 49 5 11 8 53 2 11 8 53 2 9 6 49 3 6 6 43 9 3 2 37 8 1 6 34 9 5 7 42 3 Average precipitation mm inches 54 7 2 15 38 5 1 52 49 5 1 95 46 8 1 84 48 1 1 89 55 9 2 20 44 1 1 74 50 5 1 99 54 9 2 16 59 8 2 35 63 3 2 49 55 3 2 18 621 3 24 46 Mean monthly sunshine hours 53 6 73 2 101 7 150 6 204 3 191 1 202 7 192 8 139 8 109 7 69 0 48 1 1 536 6Source Met Office 41 Parks edit The largest of the town s several public parks are the Walks a historic 17 hectare urban park in the centre of King s Lynn They are the only town walk in Norfolk to survive from the 18th century The Heritage Lottery Fund donated 4 3 million towards restoring them and adding modern amenities They also include the Red Mount a Grade II listed 15th century chapel In 1998 the Walks were designated by English Heritage as a Grade II national historic park The Walks as a whole had a different earlier origin conceived of not as a municipal park as one understands the term today but as a promenade for citizens away from the smell grime and bustle of the town centre 42 Harding s Pits form another public park to the south of the town This informal area of open space with large public sculptures was laid out to reflect the town s history Harding s Pits are managed by local volunteers under a management firm which successfully fought off a Borough Council attempts to turn them into an attenuation drain Demography editIn 2007 King s Lynn had a population of 42 800 1 At Norfolk s 2007 census King s Lynn together with West Norfolk had a population of 143 500 with an average population density of 1 0 persons per hectare 1 For figures after 2011 see King s Lynn and West Norfolk Economy editKing s Lynn has always been a centre for fishing and seafood especially inshore prawns shrimps and cockles 43 There have also been glass making and small scale engineering works many fairground and steam engines were built here It still contains much farm related industry including food processing There are several chemical factories and the town retains a role as an import centre In general it is a regional centre for a still sparsely populated part of England King s Lynn was the fastest growing port in Great Britain in 2008 Department for Transport figures show that through put increased by 33 per cent 44 In 2008 the German Palm Group began to erect one of the world s largest paper machines constructed by Voith Paper With a web speed of up to 2000 metres a minute and a web width of 10 63 metres it can produce 400 000 tons a year of newsprint paper based on 100 per cent recycled paper The start up was on 21 August 2009 45 The Port of King s Lynn has facilities for dry bulk cargo such as cereals and liquid bulk products such as petroleum products for Pace Petroleum It also handles timber imported from Scandinavia and the Baltics and has handling sheds for steel imports 46 nbsp The Vancouver Shopping District at nightKing s Lynn is the prime retail centre in West Norfolk The town centre is dominated by budget shops reflecting the spending power of much of the population The town centre fulfils a leisure role with entertainment centres bars and restaurants and has a range of service functions It provides about 5 300 retailing jobs 47 The town centre has 73 000 sq m of retail floor space in 347 shops which exceeds the comparable centres of Bury St Edmunds and Boston However whilst the percentage of floor space in comparison shopping and that occupied by multiple retailers is above the national average King s Lynn offers a more limited range of choice 47 See also Buildings in King s Lynn Tourism in King s Lynn is a minor industry but it attracts visitors to its historic centre and as a base for visiting Sandringham House and other country houses in the area Within the town and across the nearby Fenland are some of the finest historic churches in Britain built in a period when King s Lynn and its hinterland were wealthy from trade and wool Transport editRoads edit King s Lynn is linked to the cities of Norwich and Peterborough by the A47 to Cambridge by the A10 and to Spalding and the North via the A17 Parts of north and east Norfolk are reached by the A148 and the A149 There is currently a campaign led by Norfolk County Council to dual the A47 due to the area s poor road networks and lack of motorways compared to other areas of the country 48 Railway edit nbsp A Class 365 train at King s Lynn station in November 2009King s Lynn railway station terminus of the Fen Line is the sole railway facility in King s Lynn It provides regular services to Cambridge and London King s Cross South Lynn railway station closed to passengers in 1959 as did Hunstanton in 1969 West Norfolk Council is still considering ostensibly reopening a railway between King s Lynn and Hunstanton The possibility was proposed at a meeting of the council s Regeneration and Environment Panel on 29 October 2008 having last been discussed in the 1990s An environmental case was made for reviving the line to relieve road congestion 49 Buses edit Nearly all Stagecoach services in the area have been withdrawn leaving most services in King s Lynn operated by Lynx or Go To Town West Norfolk Community Transport Project King s Lynn is served by the excel bus route between Peterborough and Norwich operated by First Eastern Counties The Coasthopper route from King s Lynn runs round the Norfolk Coast to Cromer but since Stagecoach withdrew from Norfolk the western section has been run by Lynx as Coastliner 36 and extended inland from Wells next the Sea to Fakenham 50 The Wells Cromer section is run by Sanders Coaches and still known as Coasthopper but now extends inland to North Walsham 51 South Transport Project edit nbsp The developments taking place as part of the King s Lynn South Transport ProjectA 7 million programme to redevelop the infrastructure of the town centre in the 2010s was largely provided by the Community Infrastructure Fund The department programme is a collection of smaller developments which are detailed below 52 Work on a cycle and bus route between the town centre and South Lynn began in June 2010 at a cost of 850 000 It is 720 metres long from Morston Drift to Millfleet with buses in both directions and features a separate path for pedestrians and bicycles which coincides with the bus route when crossing the Nar sluice As part of the development the Millfleet St James Road junction is being developed 52 A contraflow lane for bicycles was proposed but not built along Norfolk Street from Albert Street to Blackfriars Road This would have included a development of the Norfolk Road Railway Road junction to better accommodate buses and bicycles Similar work was to have taken place at the Norfolk Street Littleport Street junction so that buses would not get caught in the town centre gyratory system 52 Bus priority measures have been added to four sets of traffic lights along St James Road These give buses quicker access to the town centre and normalise journey times 52 Southgates roundabout has been redeveloped Many of its approach roads have been widened in the run up to the junction and the road markings redone clarification needed in an attempt to improve lane discipline It is a noted congestion hot spot 52 Other small developments are taking place to make junctions more car friendly 52 Media editKing s Lynn has two local newspapers the twice weekly Lynn News owned by Iliffe Media and Your Local Paper a free weekly 53 KL magazine is a free lifestyle magazine that promotes the best of west and north Norfolk It has been published monthly since October 2010 and is distributed to local businesses it also issues special Food and Home Design amp Build editions 54 King s Lynn is served by BBC Radio Norfolk Heart East Greatest Hits Radio West Norfolk KL1 Radio Radio West Norfolk and all national BBC radio stations The local college has a web based TV station run by media students entitled SpringboardTV com and holds an awards ceremony at the end of each academic year Television services are provided by BBC East BBC Yorkshire and Lincolnshire ITV Anglia and ITV Yorkshire Education editThree of King s Lynn four secondary schools are located in the town King Edward VII School the King s Lynn Academy and Springwood High School The fourth St Clements High School is in the nearby village of Terrington St Clement The first is known for its physical education department King s Lynn Academy for its maths and IT specialities and Springwood for performing arts and drama 55 56 57 The nearest independent school is Wisbech Grammar School in Cambridgeshire The town s further education college the College of West Anglia was founded in 1894 as King s Lynn Technical School In 1973 it was renamed Norfolk College of Arts and Technology and in 1998 merged with Cambridgeshire College of Agriculture and Horticulture which added campuses in Wisbech now closed and Milton it changed the name to the College of West Anglia It retained this name in April 2006 when it merged with the Isle College in Wisbech 58 Culture editSt George s Guildhall edit nbsp Guildhall of St GeorgeThe Guild of St George was founded in 1376 and acquired land for the Guildhall of St George in 1406 which was in use by 1428 It offered plays in the Guildhall the first known being a nativity play in January 1445 This makes it the UK s oldest working theatre The Guildhall was used for meetings dinners and performance until 1547 when King Edward VI dissolved the Guilds It then became the property of Lynn Corporation and known as the Common Town Hall Research by the University of East Anglia confirms as probable the oral history of King s Lynn that William Shakespeare performed in the Guildhall in 1593 This is the only still working theatre in the world that can credibly claim to have hosted Shakespeare In 1766 Guildhall shows were so popular that a new interior was built inside the present structure probably on the earlier footprint By 1945 the Guildhall was almost derelict and in danger of demolition It was bought by Alexander Penrose who gave it to the National Trust in 1951 The Pilgrim Trust Arts Council and public subscription led to conversion into an Arts Centre Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother opened it in July 1951 and launched the King s Lynn Festival Today the Guildhall is owned by the National Trust and leased to the Borough Council of King s Lynn and West Norfolk Various groups hire the building for a year round programme of theatre dance music lectures and film amongst them are Shakespeare s Guildhall Trust King s Lynn Festival King s Lynn Community Cinema Club Shakespeare s Guildhall Trust have volunteers who open the theatre to visitors Arts edit Composer Ralph Vaughan Williams visited King s Lynn in January 1905 and collected several folk songs from the area 59 Ruth Lady Fermoy a concert pianist moved to King s Lynn in 1931 as the bride of Lord Edmund Fermoy who would become the town mayor and local MP She helped to organise concerts of high standard professional music 60 In 1951 Lady Fermoy complemented the Festival of Britain with a King s Lynn Festival of the Arts She was a friend and lady in waiting to Queen Elizabeth later the Queen Mother who agreed to become the festival patron and in July 1951 officially opened the restored St George s Guildhall She remained an enthusiastic and active supporter and patron of the festival until her death in March 2002 60 The King s Lynn Festival remains the premier music and arts festival in West Norfolk It is primarily known for classical music but also hosts jazz choral folk opera dance films talks and exhibitions along with fringe events each year 61 The King s Lynn Literature Festivals are held on single weekends in March fiction and September poetry each year usually in the town hall 62 The Annual Hanse Festival first took place in 2009 63 Displays edit Storeys of Lynn Museum opened in March 2016 as part of the King s Lynn Town Hall complex Set within the newly revealed vaulted undercroft of the 15th century Trinity Guildhall it presents the town s collection in an extensive nationally significant interactive and multi media exhibition True s Yard Fisherfolk Museum displays the social history of the North End fishermen run by volunteers It includes a cottage and a smokehouse 64 Since 2013 there has been a local award winning Military Museum operated by The Bridge for Heroes Charity to raise funds 65 Lynn Museum run by Norfolk Museums Service in Market Street covers the town s local history and the Bronze Age timber circle Seahenge Festival Too is held in Tuesday Market Place each summer Performers have included Midge Ure Deacon Blue Suzi Quatro 10cc Mungo Jerry the Human League the Buzzcocks M People Atomic Kitten Kieran Woodcock S Club and Beverley Knight The Majestic Cinema in the town centre is the town s only cinema King s Lynn s main venue for concerts stand up comedy shows and other live events is the Corn Exchange in Tuesday Market Place Many smaller venues such as Bar Red and the Wenns contribute to the local music scene along with acts from other parts of the country 66 Mart edit nbsp The Mart on the Tuesday Market PlaceIn the 16th century King s Lynn s Tuesday Market Place hosted two trade fairs that attracted visitors from as far as Italy and Germany As the importance of such fairs declined the Mart has become a funfair reduced to a single fortnight s annual event that begins on 14 February Valentine s Day It is also a memorial to Frederick Savage who partnered the Showmen s Guild of Great Britain to develop new funfair attractions 67 Sport edit The town s football club King s Lynn Town play in the National League North as of the 2023 24 season It was formed in 2010 after the original King s Lynn F C was wound up in December 2009 Its home games are played at the Walks Stadium in Tennyson Road King s Lynn s speedway team the King s Lynn Stars races at the Adrian Flux Arena in Saddlebow Road The track has been run since 1965 on an open licence It hosted Speedway type events in the 1950s One of the town s basketball clubs King s Lynn Fury previously played in the National League out of Lynnsport and represented the town in national competitions from 2004 to 2017 Lynn Nets formed in 2008 also runs a programme in local competitions The historic hockey team The Pelicans dating from 1920 currently plays at Lynnsport having been based in nearby North Runcton until 1996 68 Notable people editNick Aldis born 1986 wrestler known as Magnus etc is billed as from King s Lynn 69 Robert Armin c 1563 1615 actor with Lord Chamberlain s Men and writer was born in Bishop s Lynn 70 Thomas Baines 1820 1875 painter and explorer in Africa and Australia was born in King s Lynn 71 William Baly 1814 1861 physician extraordinary to Queen Victoria was born and raised in King s Lynn 72 Robert Barnes c 1495 1540 an English reformer and martyr 73 Mrs Bernard Beere 1851 1915 actress 74 Emily Bell born 1965 journalist and academic was born in King s Lynn 75 Martin Brundle born 1959 Formula One racing driver and commentator was born in King s Lynn as was his racing driver son Alex in 1990 76 Frederick Robert Buckley 1896 1976 author and broadcaster 77 Charles Burney 1726 1814 historian of music served as organist of St Margaret s Church for nine years from 1751 78 Charles Burney 1757 1817 scholar and bibliophile was born in Lynn 79 Frances Burney 1752 1840 novelist Evelina etc and diarist was born in Lynn 80 Sarah Burney 1772 1844 novelist was born in Lynn 81 John Capgrave 1393 1464 prior historian and theologian was born and died in Bishop s Lynn 82 Richard Carpenter 1929 2012 actor screenwriter and author was born in King s Lynn 83 Gerry Conway born 1947 percussionist with Cat Stevens etc was born in King s Lynn citation needed lt ref gt G G Coulton 1858 1947 historian and controversialist was born and partly educated in King s Lynn 84 Samuel Gurney Cresswell 1827 1867 naval captain and Northwest Passage explorer born and died in King s Lynn 85 Joseph Dines 1886 1918 England amateur footballer and Olympic gold medallist 1912 born in King s Lynn 86 Clara Dow 1883 1969 soprano in Gilbert and Sullivan operas was born in King s Lynn 87 Tim FitzHigham born 1975 multi award winning comedian writer and record holder was born in King s Lynn 88 Charles Wycliffe Goodwin 1817 1878 Egyptologist bible scholar and judge of British Supreme Court for China and Japan was born and raised in King s Lynn Brother of Harvey Goodwin 89 Francis Goodwin 1784 1835 architect was born in King s Lynn and kept a house there 90 Harvey Goodwin 1818 1891 bishop and religious writer born and raised in King s Lynn 91 Florence Green 1901 2012 one of Britain s oldest people British World War I veteran moved to King s Lynn in 1920 92 William Gurnall 1616 1679 author and clergyman 93 Ian Hamilton 1938 2001 poet and critic was born in King s Lynn to Scottish parents 94 Deaf Havana formed 2005 English post hardcore rock band formed in King s Lynn citation needed Charles Edward Hubbard 1900 1980 botanist specializing in grasses attended King Edward VII Grammar School 95 John Hullier c 1520 1556 Protestant martyr was burnt at the stake for preaching in Lynn 96 Jack Huston born 1982 actor appeared as Richard Harrow in Boardwalk Empire in a supporting role in American Hustle and as the eponymous lead in Ben Hur 2016 film historical drama 97 Kathryn Johnson born 1967 Olympic field hockey player was born in King s Lynn 98 Sir Benjamin Keene 1697 1757 diplomat successful in Spain was born and educated in King s Lynn 99 Margery Kempe c 1373 c 1438 first autobiographer in English born and probably died in Bishop s Lynn 100 Anne Long c 1681 1711 friend of Jonathan Swift fled from creditors to King s Lynn and died there 101 George North born 1992 Wales rugby union international was born in King s Lynn citation needed Barbara Parker born 1982 Olympic track and field athlete was born and educated in King s Lynn 102 Lucy Pearson born 1972 women s test cricketer and educationalist was born in King s Lynn 103 Ali Price born 1993 Scotland Rugby Union player born in King s Lynn Miranda Raison born 1977 actress 104 William Richards 1749 1818 Baptist minister wrote a history of Lynn 105 Edward Villiers Rippingille c 1790 1859 genre and portrait painter was born in King s Lynn of farming parents 106 Joan G Robinson 1910 1988 children s writer lived in King s Lynn with her writer husband Richard Gavin Robinson 107 George Russell born 1998 Formula One driver for Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team was born in King s Lynn 108 Martin Saggers born 1972 England cricketer and umpire was born and raised in King s Lynn 109 Hardiman Scott 1920 1999 journalist broadcaster and novelist was born in King s Lynn 110 Helen Slatter born 1970 Olympic swimmer was born in King s Lynn 98 Roger Taylor born 1949 musician and drummer of Queen born in King s Lynn 111 Adam Thoroughgood 1604 1640 leading colonist in Virginia Colony was born and raised in Lynn citation needed Simon Thurley born 1962 architectural historian and head of English Heritage owns a second home in King s Lynn 112 Gwladys Sutherst Townshend 1884 1959 Marchioness of Townshend served as Mayor of King s Lynn in 1929 113 George Vancouver 1757 1798 naval officer and explorer after whom Vancouver BC is named was born in Lynn 114 Lucy Verasamy born 1980 TV weather forecaster attended King Edward VII School 115 Location editIn popular culture editRuth Galloway fictional heroine of Elly Griffiths novels is a forensic anthropologist living in a cottage near King s Lynn and teaching at the University of North Norfolk 116 Peter Grainger s DC Smith Investigation series of detective novels is set in Kings Lake a thinly disguised King s Lynn 117 The fictional comedy character Alan Partridge was born in Queen Elizabeth Hospital King s Lynn The character itself played by Steve Coogan grew up in Norwich and frequently makes references to Norfolk 118 Media appearances editKing s Lynn and surroundings have since the early 20th century been popular with film and TV producers Their architecture and landscape often allow them to stand in for other parts of the world especially the Netherlands and France The town appeared as the Netherlands in The Silver Fleet 1943 and One of Aircraft Is Missing 1942 as Germany in Operation Crossbow in 1965 citation needed and as France in Allo Allo the long running BBC comedy citation needed The town served as an earlier Dutch New York in the 1985 feature film Revolution citation needed The BBC series Lovejoy also used the town citation needed as did the Anglia Television series Tales Of The Unexpected and the Granada series Sherlock Holmes starring Jeremy Brett in the title role citation needed In the early 2000s the BBC used the town bus station local roads and the nearby Royal estate of Sandringham in the comedy drama series Grass featuring Simon Day citation needed It has in recent times appeared many times on programmes such as the BBC s Antiques Road Trip Flog It and a BBC Four documentary The Last Journey of the Magna Carta King following the trail of John King of England and how he lost his treasure in the Wash 119 King s Lynn Minster St Margaret s King s Lynn Power Station List of buildings in King s Lynn List of people from King s LynnFurther reading editSusan Yaxley ed 2009 The Siege of King s Lynn Larks Press ISBN 9780948400209 References edit a b c d Can Overview of King s Lynn and West Norfolk Part 1 PDF 2007 pp 2 4 Archived from the original PDF on 25 June 2010 Retrieved 15 May 2010 a b c d e f Lewis Samuel 1848 Lynn or Lynn Regis A Topographical Dictionary of England pp 203 208 A BRIEF HISTORY OF LYNN About Lynn City of Lynn Retrieved 1 December 2021 When the first official minister Samuel Whiting arrived from King s Lynn England the new settlers were so excited that they changed the name of their community to Lynn in 1637 in honor of him Brief History of Lynn Ci lynn ma us 30 May 1912 Archived from the original on 29 August 2012 Retrieved 9 August 2012 History of Lynn Volume 1 by William Richards M A 1812 Lambert Tim A history of King s Lynn Retrieved 2 June 2010 History and Heritage of King s Lynn Borough Council of King s Lynn amp West Norfolk Archived from the original on 7 May 2010 Retrieved 25 May 2010 The Jewish Community of King s Lynn The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot Retrieved 2 July 2018 King s Lynn Poppyland Publishing Retrieved 8 June 2010 Historic England Hanse House 1195393 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 12 January 2014 Historic England Marriott s Warehouse 1212000 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 12 January 2014 Pugh R B 2002 Guild of the Holy Trinity A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely Volume 4 City of Ely Ely N and S Witchford and Wisbech Hundreds pp 255 256 Castelow Ellen The history of witches in Britain Historic UK Retrieved 22 August 2014 Alison Gifford Ghosts amp Legends of Lynn True s Yard Custom House King s Lynn Eastern Daily Press Archived from the original on 9 July 2010 Retrieved 8 June 2010 Neil R Wright 2016 Treading the Boards SLHA p 92 18 December 1969 Death penalty abolished 1 April 2007 Retrieved 14 March 2013 Zeppelin L4 LZ 27 crashed at Denmark fuel shortage eZEP blog Blog ezep de Retrieved 9 August 2012 History and Heritage King s Lynn Corn Exchange Retrieved 14 May 2023 King s Lynn a Hanse League Member King s Lynn and West Norfolk Borough Council Website Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 15 January 2007 Economic Impact Assessment of King s Lynn Marina PDF June 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 22 August 2010 Welcome to Campbells Meadow Tesco 2009 Archived from the original on 23 January 2010 Retrieved 25 May 2010 a b c Supermarket giants battle it out for Hardwick contract Lynn News 8 June 2010 Retrieved 8 June 2010 A New Sainsbury s for King s Lynn Sainsbury s 2009 Archived from the original on 3 March 2009 Retrieved 11 June 2010 Video Thousands gather to watch Campbell s tower demolished in King s Lynn News Eastern Daily Press Edp24 co uk 14 January 2012 Retrieved 9 August 2012 Winchester Levi 2 February 2015 Queen and Duke of Edinburgh brave the cold to open new fire station in King s Lynn Daily Express a b c d e f King s Lynn and West Norfolk County Council Civic Heraldry Archived from the original on 28 August 2009 Retrieved 27 May 2010 King s Lynn Hanse org Retrieved 27 May 2022 Stadt Emmerich am Rhein Emmerich am Rhein Retrieved 15 May 2010 OS Explorer Map 250 Norfolk Coast West Ordnance Survey 2002 ISBN 0 319 21886 4 OS Explorer Map 236 King s Lynn Downham Market amp Swaffham Ordnance Survey 1999 ISBN 0 319 21867 8 Met Office Climate averages 1971 2000 Met Office 2000 Archived from the original on 2 March 2014 Retrieved 15 May 2010 2003 maximum Eca knmi nl Archived from the original on 7 May 2012 Retrieved 28 February 2011 1971 00 average warmest day Eca knmi nl Retrieved 28 February 2011 1971 00 gt 25c days Eca knmi nl Retrieved 28 February 2011 2007 maximum Archived from the original on 29 June 2011 Retrieved 28 February 2011 1979 minimum Eca knmi nl Archived from the original on 7 May 2012 Retrieved 28 February 2011 average rainfall Eca knmi nl Retrieved 28 February 2011 average rain days Eca knmi nl Retrieved 28 February 2011 Climate Normals 1971 2000 KNMI Retrieved 28 February 2011 Marham 1971 2000 climate averages Met Office Retrieved 1 July 2010 The Walks King s Lynn Online Archived from the original on 18 May 2011 Retrieved 6 June 2010 Frank Castleton 1988 Fisher s End Frank Castleton King s Lynn is fastest growing port in Britain Business Weekly 4 November 2009 Retrieved 7 July 2014 Standorte King s Lynn English The Palm Group Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 25 May 2010 Port of Kings Lynn Commodities Associated British Ports Retrieved 25 May 2010 a b The Vision for King s Lynn 2000 2023 PDF April 2004 pp 2 8 Archived from the original PDF on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 2 June 2010 The A47 Just Fund It Norfolk County Council Lynn Hunstanton rail line re opening hope revived Lynn News 29 October 2008 Retrieved 8 June 2010 1 dead link Archived copy PDF cdn website editor net Archived from the original PDF on 16 August 2018 Retrieved 30 June 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c d e f 2 permanent dead link Lynn News Retrieved 27 May 2010 KL magazine Issuu com Retrieved 27 May 2010 King Edward VII School Archived from the original on 22 May 2010 Retrieved 15 May 2010 The Park High School Archived from the original on 22 May 2010 Retrieved 15 May 2010 Springwood High School springwood norfolk sch uk Archived from the original on 8 June 2010 Retrieved 15 May 2010 History of College College of West Anglia Archived from the original on 28 March 2010 Retrieved 25 May 2010 Vaughan Williams Ursula R V W A Biography of Ralph Vaughan Williams Oxford University Press 1964 1988 p 72 a b History of the King s Lynn Festival kingslynnfestival org uk Archived from the original on 3 November 2014 Retrieved 8 July 2014 King s Lynn Festival Retrieved 8 December 2021 King s Lynn Literature Festivals Lynnlitfests com Retrieved 8 December 2021 Hanseatic League PDF U3asutes org uk Retrieved 10 September 2019 True s yard Fisherfolk Museum places to visit in King s Lynn Truesyard co uk Retrieved 27 May 2022 Home Thebridgeforheroes org Retrieved 27 May 2022 King s Lynn Corn Exchange King s Lynn Corn Exchange Retrieved 9 August 2012 King s Lynn History Borough Council of King s Lynn and West Norfolk Retrieved 6 June 2010 history of Pelicans Hockey Club Archived from the original on 29 October 2012 Retrieved 8 October 2012 Magnus 16 April 2015 Archived from the original on 16 April 2015 Retrieved 27 May 2022 ODNB Martin Butler Armin Robert 1563 1615 Retrieved 23 March 2014 pay walled ODNB Elizabeth Baigent Baines John Thomas 1820 1875 Retrieved 23 March 2014 pay walled ODNB Bill Forsythe Baly William 1814 1861 Retrieved 24 March 2014 pay walled Pollard Albert Frederick 1911 Barnes Robert Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed p 413 Free BMD volume 13 p 183 Debretts Retrieved 24 March 2014 Archived 27 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine citation still needed for King s Lynn birth Martin Brundle F1 Driver Profile ESPN F1 En espnf1 com Retrieved 9 August 2012 Alison Gifford KL Magazine October 2016 The Perfect Local Ghost Story For Halloween pp 22 24 ODNB John Wagstaff Burney Charles 1726 1814 Retrieved 23 March 2014 pay walled ODNB Lars Troide Burney Charles 1757 1817 Retrieved 23 March 2014 pay walled ODNB Pat Rogers Burney Frances 1752 1840 Retrieved 22 March 2014 pay walled ODNB Lorna J Clark Burney Sarah Harriet 1772 1844 Retrieved 22 March 2014 pay walled ODNB Peter J Lucas Capgrave John 1393 1464 Retrieved 22 March 2014 pay walled Richard Carpenter obituary The Guardian 5 March 2012 Retrieved 27 May 2022 ODNB Henry Summerson Coulton George Gordon 1858 1947 Retrieved 24 March 2014 pay walled Capturing Canada on Paper and Canvas ve torontopubliclibrary ca Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 30 June 2022 Liverpool career stats for Joe Dines LFChistory Stats galore for Liverpool FC Lfchistory net Retrieved 27 May 2022 Clara Dow Gsarchive net Retrieved 27 May 2022 Archived copy ASIN 1848090269 Francis Espinasse Goodwin Charles Wycliffe 1817 1878 rev Josef L Altholz Retrieved 23 March 2014 pay walled ODNB M H Port Goodwin Francis 1784 1835 Retrieved 24 March 2014 pay walled ODNB P C Hammond Goodwin Harvey 1818 1891 Retrieved 23 March 2014 pay walled Britten Nick 16 January 2010 108 year old woman emerges as Britain s oldest first World War veteran The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Gurnall William GNL632W A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge ODNB Karl Miller Hamilton Robert Ian 1938 2001 Retrieved 23 March 2014 pay walled Brenan J P M 1981 Dr Charles Edward Hubbard C B E 1900 1980 Kew Bulletin 36 3 437 440 JSTOR 4117577 Retrieved 27 May 2022 Foxe s Book of Martyrs No 337 Retrieved 24 March 2014 Person Details for Jack Alexander Huston England and Wales Birth Registration Index 1837 2008 FamilySearch org FamilySearch a b SR Olympic Sports Retrieved 24 March 2014 ODNB M J Mercer Keene Sir Benjamin 1697 1757 Retrieved 24 March 2014 pay walled ODNB Felicity Riddy Kempe Margery c 1373 in or after 1438 Retrieved 23 March 2014 pay walled J Swift Journal to Stella ed H Williams 1948 Vol I pp 118 119 College of West Anglia Hall of Fame Retrieved 24 April 2014 Archived 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Lucy Pearson profile and biography stats records averages photos and videos ESPNcricinfo com Retrieved 27 May 2022 The Raison being 20 October 2014 ODNB J A Oddy Richards William 1749 1818 Retrieved 24 March 2014 pay walled ODNB Francis Greenacre Rippingille Edward Villiers c 1790 1859 Retrieved 24 March 2014 pay walled Kirkpatrick D L ed 1978 Twentieth Century Children s Writers New York St Martin s Press pp 1066 1068 ISBN 0 312 82413 0 About George Russell georgerussellracing com George Russell Archived from the original on 15 December 2014 Retrieved 8 December 2014 Martin Saggers profile and biography stats records averages photos and videos ESPNcricinfo com Retrieved 27 May 2022 Hill Peter 24 September 1999 Peter Hardiman Scott The Guardian Retrieved 27 May 2022 Band Members Roger Taylor queenonline com Archived from the original on 13 January 2016 Simon Thurley Provost of Gresham College and Chair of the National Lottery Heritage Fund Simonthurley com Retrieved 27 May 2022 Lady Mayor of Lynn Boston Sunday Globe 26 May 1929 B3 ProQuest 758624515 ODNB Andrew C F David Vancouver George 1757 1798 Received 23 March 2014 pay walled Extreme Phone Calls Pilot Geography Blog Weather Geography Department King Edward School 12 May 2006 Ruth Galloway Elly Griffiths official website Archived from the original on 3 May 2015 Retrieved 25 July 2015 DC Smith Series Goodreads Alan Partridge on his new podcast This is the real raw be cardiganed me The Guardian 2 September 2020 Retrieved 18 July 2022 The Last Journey of the Magna Carta King Television production BBC 9 February 2015 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to King s Lynn nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for King s Lynn King s Lynn at Curlie Information from Genuki Norfolk History of medieval Lynn Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title King 27s Lynn amp oldid 1183103985, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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