Honing is a village and a civil parish in the English county of Norfolk.[1] The village is 15 miles (24 km) north-northeast of Norwich, 13 miles (21 km) south east of Cromer and 4 miles (6.4 km) east of North Walsham.
Honing is a large parish in north-east of the county of Norfolk. Its northern boundary is with the civil parish of Witton whilst to the south is the parish of Dilham. West lies Worstead and on the eastern boundary is the parish of East Ruston. The disused North Walsham and Dilham Canal runs along the south-west boundary of the parish. There are several areas of common land within the parish, including Crostwight Common and Honing Common. The Weavers' Waylong distance footpath runs across the south east corner of the parish along the old track bed of the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway that ran between North Walsham and Stalham. The Weavers Way runs for 56 miles (90 km) between Cromer and Great Yarmouth. The village sign depicts a labourerhoning his scythe. Since 1935, the civil parish of Honing has incorporated its very small neighbouring village of Crostwight. The name Honing derives from the Old English for something approaching settlement of the people at the hill or rock.[4]
History
There is very little evidence of any human settlement or activity in the parish of Honing until the medieval period and beyond, apart from a Mesolithic or possibly Neolithic flint axehead.
Domesday Book
Honing has an entry in the Domesday Book of 1085 where it, its population, land ownership and productive resources were extensively detailed[5] In the survey Honing is recorded by the name of Haninga. The main tenants being the Robert Malet from the abbot of Holme who had held the land before and after 1066, Robert de Glanville from Robert Malet, and Ranulf brother of Ilger. The survey also list that there have always been 13 smallholders on this land. 2 ploughs in lordship; 3 men's ploughs; meadow, 35 acres (140,000 m2); woodland, 8 pigs; 1 mill: 2 cobs; 4 head of cattle; 12 pigs; 40 sheep; 30 goats. Also 8 freemen, 41 acres (170,000 m2). Always 2 ploughs; meadow, 5 acres (2.0 ha). Value of the whole 40s. It has 1 league in length and 10 furlongs in width; tax of 10d, whoever holds there.[6]
War trophy
After the First World War, Honing was given a German trench mortar, a 1917 25 cm schwerer Minenwerfer, as a war trophy. It stood outside Honing Post Office until it was given to Strumpshaw Hall Steam Museum, circa 1970. It was returned in 2014 and stands outside the village hall.[7]
Notable buildings and structures
As of 2023[update] there are 19 listed buildings in the parish; Crostwight church is Grade I, Honing church and Honing Hall are Grade II*, and 16 other buildings, including the war memorial, the railway bridge, and Crostwight Hall, are Grade II.[8]
Parish church
The Church of England parish church of St Peter and St Paul is situated on raised ground north of the village, and is Grade II* listed.[9] On its west elevation is a tall perpendicular tower with flushwork panelling at its base and battlements.[10] The tower has a three light window with transom and tracery. Below the window is another window which was once the west door and thought to have been filled in a period of reconstruction c.1795.[10] In the same period of restoration the aisles were reduced to narrow passages and the length of the chancel was shortened to only four feet.[11] The font dates from the 13th century.[12] The stem is perpendicular with the bowl of Purbeck marble. The roof dates from the 18th century.[11] Between the choir stalls is a brass to Nicholas Parker of 1496. He is depicted in full armour. On the north wall hang two hatchments, both to a man leaving a surviving wife. There are also two tablets, one to Thomas Cubitt who died in 1829,[10] and the other to Edward George Cubitt who died in 1865.[10]
Honing Hall is a Grade II* listed[13] country house which was built in 1748[14] and altered and renovated in 1790 by the prominent architect John Soane.[15][self-published source?] Landscaping and further work on the hall was carried out under the instructions of Humphry Repton[16] in 1792. The house was built for a wealthy worsted weaver called Andrew Chambers[15] on the land once occupied by previous dwellings. The hall and grounds are in private ownership and are owned by the Cubitt family who have lived there since 1784.[15]
The Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway ran through the parish, part of a line that linked Great Yarmouth to Sutton Bridge via Stalham, North Walsham, Aylsham, Melton Constable, Fakenham and King's Lynn.[17] It opened in stages between 1865 and 1933. The line closed in 1959, although some sections survive and are now part of the Weaver's Way footpath. Other remnants of the line that can still be seen in the parish are a cast iron, steel and brick railway bridge of 1881 on the Dilham road south of the village. At Briggate there are still the disused platforms of Honing Station.[18]
Gallery
The parish church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, Honing
^Pevsner, Nikolaus; Wilson, Bill (1976). Norfolk I: Norwich and North-east. Penguin Books. p. 170. ISBN978-0-300-09607-1.
^ abcClarke, David (2006). "Details and description of Honing Hall". The Country Houses of Norfolk – The Major Houses. Wymondham, Norfolk: Geo. R. Reeve Ltd. p. 33. ISBN978-0-900616-76-1.
^Humphry Repton landscape gardener 1752–1818. Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts. 1982. ISBN0-946009-03-1.