The civil parish has an area of 5.53 km². In the 2001 census it had a population of 232 in 105 households. This eased to 215 at the Census 2011,[2] and was estimated at 216 in 2019.[3] For local government, the parish is in the district of North Norfolk.[4]
Heritage
The village's name derives from "Bacon's outlying farm/settlement", Bacon being the surname of the local landowner in Norman times.
The ruins of the 15th-century Baconsthorpe Castle lie about one mile (1.6 km) to the north of the village.
The medieval Anglican Church of St Mary was restored in 1868 and 1958. It contains monuments from the 15th–18th centuries and some 16th-century glass saved from the castle.[5]
Accommodation
There is a tourist campsite with full amenities at Pitt Farm near the west end of the village.[6] Some bed-and-breakfast accommodation and holiday lets are also available. Other facilities and services can be found in the nearby town of Holt.
John Heydon or Baxter (died 1479) rose from the yeomanry to become prominent as a lawyer.
Sir Henry Heydon (died 1504), lawyer, courtier and landowner, died at Baconsthorpe.
Sir Christopher Heydon (1561–1623), soldier, astrologer, and a county member of Parliament for Norfolk, ran his Norfolk estates from Baconsthorpe Castle.
Robert Brightiffe (c. 1666–1749), a barrister and a member of Parliament for Norwich and recorder there, was born at his father's house in Baconsthorpe.[7]
War memorial
Baconsthorpe's War Memorials take the form of two plaques in St. Mary's Church, they hold the following names for the First World War:
^John Venn, "Brightiffe, Robert", in Alumni Cantabrigienses (Part I, from earliest times to 1751, vol. i Abbas–Cutts; Cambridge University Press, 1922)