Mildenhall Museum, King Street, Mildenhall, Suffolk IP28 7EX
( 01638 716970 : info@mildenhallmuseum.co.uk
Home Page | A Brief History of Mildenhall | About the Museum | MMildenhall Treasure | Programme | Links to other Sites | About this site | Contact us | Education & Schools page | Our Latest Exhibits | 'End of an era' for Sandfords
A Brief History of Mildenhallby Dr. C M. Dring The history of
the small market town of
Mildenhall can be traced back to Anglo-Saxon times although nothing
remains of the original settlement except for a large cemetery just
outside the limits of the present town. The Domesday survey of 1086
recorded that the town was well established with a church, a mill and a
total of sixty-four families, not to mention a flock of a thousand sheep.
The whole of the manor of Mildenhall belonged to the abbey of Bury St
Edmunds and the abbot had total control over the area, including the right
to hang criminals in the market-place. On a less macabre note, a weekly
market on Fridays has been held regularly since 1412 when a royal charter
for this was first granted. An annual two-day timber and servant hiring
fair was also held on Fair Spot Field, the site of the present Riverside
School, until about 1850. |
|
![]() |
The manor of Mildenhall was confiscated by the Crown at the dissolution of the monasteries in 1536 and later sold to Sir Roger North of Kirtling, whose son Henry settled in Mildenhall soon after 1586 and built the manor house. The estate passed through four generations of the North family, some of whom were prominent in national politics and all of whom were staunch royalists — King Charles II stayed at the manor during one of his regular visits to Newmarket. The last of the local Norths, Sir Henry, was a melancholy man who shot himself in the manor house in 1671 but, being lord of the manor, was buried in the parish church rather than in unconsecrated ground as was normal then for suicides. The estate passed to Sir Thomas Hanmer, Henry’s nephew, who became a famous speaker of the House of Commons. Sir Thomas extended the manor house and gave the town four almshouses and a workhouse, all in the churchyard. It is said that he married twice, once for love and once for money but was successful in neither: his second wife eloped with his cousin, Thomas Hervey. Sir William Bunbury, Hanmer’s nephew, inherited in 1747 and Mildenhall remained in the hands of this family until the final break up of the estate in 1933. Legend has it that in 1780 Sir Thomas Charles Bunbury tossed a coin with Lord Derby to decide whose name should be given to a new race. Derby won the toss but Bunbury’s horse won the first Derby.
|
|
The ancient parish of Mildenhall, which included the hamlets of Beck Row, Holywell Row, Kenny Hill and West Row, covered 17,000 acres and was the largest in Suffolk. The parish was so extensive because much of the land was of marginal value and a large area was required to support the population. The following account by the 2nd Earl of Oxford, who was clearly not impressed by the area, gives a graphic description of the landscape in the eighteenth century: "The next day Thursday, September the 21st, 1732, we set out from Brandon, seven long, very long miles to Barton Mills over the sands, terrible tedious travelling both to man and horse. I could not but reflect what terrible travelling it must be where the heat of the sun is intense upon the wide sandy deserts, where the poor travellers are often smothered with the sand or scorched with the sun’s heat reflected from the burning sands. We leave the sands at Barton Mills which we were very glad of. The river that runs by Barton Mills is navigable as I said to Bury. We left Mildenhall, the seat of Sir Thomas Hanmer, on the right hand, a most miserable situation. On one side he is subject to be choked with sand, on the other he lives close to a dark vile black fen which lies to the north east of him; so that he enjoys that wicked wind with the addition of the air from that fen." The
landscape has changed much since then. The fens have been drained and now
comprise some of the most fertile land in the country. The dry Breckland
area, formerly used mainly as rabbit warrens and sheep walks before
becoming vast sporting estates, is now largely covered by the plantations
of the Forestry Commission. Ancient man evidently found the region much
more congenial than did the Earl of Oxford for there has been life here
for at least half a million years, the date confidently ascribed to the
traces of Old Stone Age man found at High Lodge, just outside Mildenhall.
The combination of the marshy fenland and the dry, easily tilled,
Breckland was favourable to hunting and early farming so it is
not surprising that so many traces of settlement, from the Old Stone Age
onwards, have been found in the vicinity. The Romans had a ring of
farmsteads around the fen edge and the fabulous Mildenhall Treasure,
thirty-two pieces of silver tableware now in the British Museum, was
discovered near one of these during the Second World War. Another Roman
hoard, this time of pewter, was discovered in 1962 when the remains of a
crashed wartime bomber were being excavated. The
economy of the town and the surrounding villages has, until recent times,
been based almost solely on agriculture and Mildenhall has figured little
in national history. However, in 1144 Geoffrey de Mandeville, the
archetypal robber baron who changed sides frequently during the troubled
reign of King Stephen, made the mistake of taking off his helmet to cool
down while besieging the unfinished castle at nearby Burwell. He was
struck by an arrow and retired wounded to die at Mildenhall. Then, during
the 1381 Peasants’ Uprising, John de Cambridge, the prior of the abbey
at Bury St Edmunds, was murdered on Mildenhall Heath. Apart from such
events as these the town lay low for centuries. The old open fields were
enclosed in 1812 but the area suffered greatly during the agricultural
depression of the later nineteenth century. The main London to Norwich
railway could have come through Mildenhall but this was opposed by the
local gentry; it was not
until 1885 that a branch line from Cambridge appeared, but this was too
late and too little to allow the town to expand to any extent, and finally
closed in 1964. All
began to change in 1931 when Mildenhall was selected to be the home of the
first of the Royal Air Force’s new style bomber bases. Building began
then and the base was officially opened in 1934, just after the famous
Great Air Race from Mildenhall to Melbourne, Australia had started from
here on 20 October 1934. The race attracted enormous international
interest and Mildenhall was at last in the limelight. Crowds came to see
such famous fliers as Amy Johnson and there were traffic jams for miles
around on the actual starting day. The race was won by a de Havilland
Comet, flown by C.W.A. Scott and T. Campbell Black, who reached Australia
in less than seventy-two hours, an incredible feat for those days. The
airfield was also in the news in 1935 when King George V, accompanied by
his sons the Prince of Wales and the Duke of York, came for the first ever
full review of the Royal Air Force in honour of the king’s silver
jubilee. RAF Mildenhall was an important British bomber base during the
Second World War but, since 1950, has
been home to the United States Air Force and is now one of the most
important American installations in this country. Crowds in their hundreds
of thousands attend the annual two-day air fetes which are now an
established feature of life in the area.
|
|
|
The
arrival of the air force started to improve the economy but major
development did not come until the 1960s when an agreement was reached
with the Greater London Council to move families here from London. Many
new houses were built and a light industrial estate established to provide
employment for the newcomers. The town now has a secure industrial base
and can face the future with some confidence.
The picture right shows the High Street looking east, in 1895.
|
![]() |
Home Page/a> | A Brief History of Mildenhall | About the Museum | Mildenhall Treasure | Programme | Links to other Sites | About this site | Contact us | Education & Schools page | Our Latest Exhibits | 'End of an era' for Sandfords