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Blundeston

Blundeston
Blundeston - Church of St Mary.jpg
Blundeston, Church of St Mary
Blundeston is located in Suffolk
Blundeston
Blundeston
Blundeston shown within Suffolk
Population 1,637 (2011 census)
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Lowestoft
Postcode district NR32 5
EU Parliament East of England
List of places
UK
England
Suffolk
52°31′08″N 1°42′18″E / 52.519°N 1.705°E / 52.519; 1.705Coordinates: 52°31′08″N 1°42′18″E / 52.519°N 1.705°E / 52.519; 1.705

Blundeston is a village and civil parish in the Waveney district of the English county of Suffolk. It is in the north of the county, about 2 miles (3 km) inland between Great Yarmouth and Lowestoft, close to the North Sea coast. Blundeston Prison was located on the southern edge of the village but closed and sold in 2016. The old prison site is being redeveloped to include housing and community facilities.

Blundeston was mentioned in Domesday Book as a small village in the hundred of Lothingland. It consisted of a handful of families and was part of the holding of Robert of Vaux.

The parish church is medieval in origin and dedicated to St Mary. It is a Grade I listed building and an example of a Round-tower church, the tower of which is of Norman or possibly Saxon origin and dates from the 11th century or earlier, whilst the nave is 12th century.

On the junction of Church Road and Pound Lane there is a circular village pound which was used for storing stray animals. At the end of Church Road on the junction between Short Road and The Street there is a disused windmill.

The village contains Blundeston CEVC Primary Schoolas well as a hairdresser, a scuba diving centre, and Blundeston Garden Centre. Situated on Church Road is the old fire station which has now become a piano gallery. The village has a pub, the Plough Inn. The Red Lion pub closed in 2010.

Blundeston is probably best known for being the birthplace of David Copperfield in the novel of the same name by Charles Dickens. It is not known whether Dickens ever visited Blundeston, but from letters he wrote he mentions choosing the name after seeing it on a signpost during a visit to Great Yarmouth. Links with the novel are prevalent in Blundeston today with road names such as Copperfield Terrace and Dickens Court. On the village sign David is pictured looking towards the church, and the Plough Inn has a plaque over its entrance that says "Barkis (the Carrier) from the novel David Copperfield by Charles Dickens, started from here". The classes in the primary school are called Micawber, Trotwood, Peggoty, Copperfield and Barkis after characters in the novel.


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