RICS Chartered Surveyors Beccles

RICS Chartered Surveyors Suffolk

Approximate Population: 9,746

is a market town and civil parish in the Waveney District of Suffolk, England, within an area known as The Broads. The town is shown on the milestone as 109 miles (175 km) from London via the A145 Blythburgh and A12 road, 98 miles (158 km) northeast of London as the crow flies, 16 miles (26 km) southeast of Norwich, and 33 miles (53 km) north northeast of the county town of Ipswich. Nearby towns include Lowestoft to the east and Great Yarmouth to the northeast.

It had a population at the 2001 census of 9,746. Worlingham is a suburb of . The combined population of and Worlingham in 2005 was estimated at 13,580. is twinned with Petit-Couronne in France.

Once a flourishing Saxon riverport, it lies in the Waveney valley and is a popular boating centre. The town was granted its Charter in 1584 by Elizabeth I.

Sir John Leman (died 1632) was a tradesman from who became Lord Mayor of London.

Long associated with (including recent mayors) is the Peck family. Among those Pecks who have made a place in history is the Rev. Robert Peck, described by Blomfield in his history of Norfolk as a man with a ‘violent schismatic spirit’ who led a movement within the church of St Andrews in nearby Hingham, Norfolk, in opposition to the established Anglicanism of the day. The Puritan Peck was eventually forced to flee to Hingham, Massachusetts, founded by many members of his parish, where he resided for several years, until King Charles I had been executed and Oliver Cromwell had taken the reins of government. Robert Peck then elected to return to Hingham, Norfolk, and resumed as rector of St Andrews Church. He died in Hingham but left descendants in America, including his brother Joseph Peck, who settled in Rehoboth, Massachusetts.

Under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 the borough was reformed, retaining municipal borough status until the reorganisation of local government in 1974, when it was merged with surrounding authorities to become Waveney District. The successor civil parish has adopted town status.

The townscape is dominated by the detached sixteenth-century bell tower (known as the bell tower) of St Michael’s church. Like the main body of the church, the tower is Perpendicular Gothic in style and is 97 ft tall. The interior of the church was badly damaged by fire in 1586. It has a 13th-century font.

The tower is not attached to the church and at the wrong end of the church as the correct end would be too close to a large cliff.

It was at this church in 1749 that the mother of Horatio Nelson, Catherine Suckling, married the Reverend Edmund Nelson (a former curate of ). The Suffolk poet George Crabbe married Sarah Elmy at church in the 18th century.

RICS Chartered Surveyors Suffolk

RICS Chartered Surveyors Bedford

RICS Chartered Surveyors Bedfordshire

Approximate Population: 79,190

is the county town of Bedfordshire, in the East of England. It is a large town and the administrative centre for the wider Borough of . According to Bedfordshire County Council’s estimates, the town had a population of 79,190 in mid 2005, with 19,720 in the adjacent town of Kempston. The wider borough, including a rural area, had a population of 153,000.

was a market town for the surrounding agricultural region from the early Middle Ages. The Anglo-Saxon King Offa of Mercia was buried in the town in 796.[1] In 886 it became a boundary town separating Wessex and Danelaw.[2][3] It was the seat of the Barony of . In 919 Edward the Elder built the town’s first known fortress, on the south side of the River Ouse and there received the area’s submission. This fortress was destroyed by the Danes. William II gave the barony of to Paine de Beauchamp who built a new, strong castle. The new Castle was razed in 1224 and today only a mound remains.

is the largest settlement in Borough of . The borough council is led by a directly elected mayor who holds the title ‘Mayor of ’. the current mayor is Frank Branston, who is an Independent (affiliated to no political party).

itself is divided into 10 wards: Brickhill, Castle, Cauldwell, De Parys, Goldington, Harpur, Kingsbrook, Newnham, Putnoe and Queens Park. Brickhill elects its own parish council, while Queens Park and Kingsbrook & Cauldwell have their own urban community councils (which have similar powers to a parish council). The rest (and majority) of is an unparished area.

forms part of the and Kempston constituency, represented in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom Parliament. The current MP for and Kempston is Patrick Hall, who is a member of the Labour Party.

The town of is divided into 10 wards or areas: Brickhill, Castle, Cauldwell, De Parys, Goldington, Harpur, Kingsbrook, Newnham, Putnoe and Queens Park.

RICS Chartered Surveyors Bedfordshire