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Little Cressingham
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Little Cressingham : ウィキペディア英語版
Little Cressingham

Little Cressingham lies south east by road from Great Cressingham, west of Watton and south of Swaffham in the Breckland District of Norfolk. It covers an area of and had a population of 157 in 70 households at the 2001 census〔(Census population and household counts for unparished urban areas and all parishes ). Office for National Statistics & Norfolk County Council (2001). Retrieved 20 June 2009.〕 The village is located on the edge of the Stanford Battle Area.
The village is dispersed, with the main centre focused on a crossroads around the church and the mill. The village church is dedicated to St Andrew and is partially ruined.〔(St Andrew, Little Cressingham ), Norfolk Churches. Retrieved 2011-05-02.〕〔(St Andrews Church ). Retrieved 2011-05-02.〕 The building is medieval and designated as a Grade I listed building.〔(Church of St Andrew, Little Cressingham ), British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 2011-05-02.〕 The village is in the Benefice of Cockley Cley.〔(Benefice Of Cockley Cley )〕 The round tower Church of All Saints at Threxton lies to the east of the village.〔(Church of All Saints, Little Cressingham ), British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 2011-05-02.〕
The village pub, The White Horse, closed in 2004. Next to the church is the old Free School founded and endowed by William Farrer in 1809 and built at a cost of £144. It is now the village hall. The mill at Little Cressingham, a Grade II
* listed building, is both a water and wind mill, one of only two in Norfolk.〔(Wind and Water Mill, Little Cressingham ), British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 2011-05-02.〕〔(Little Cressingham Mill ), Norfolk Mills. Retrieved 2011-05-02.〕 It was built in about 1820 on the Clermont Estate and is now disused.〔
==Clermont estate==
The Clermont Estate in Threxton, hamlet near Little Cressingham, was created by the Irish peer William Henry Fortescue (1722–1806), Earl of Clermont, friend of the Prince of Wales.〔(Norfolk Records Office )〕 He built Clermont Lodge as a shooting box and it was extended for his nephew and heir William Charles Fortescue (1764–1829), Viscount Clermont to designs by the architect William Pilkington. Pilkington was a pupil and assistant to Sir Robert Taylor (architect of the Bank of England).
Following Viscount Clermont's death without issue Clermont Estate was sold to Sir Francis Lyttleton Holyoake Goodricke in 1844 and in 1858 it was purchased by the 2nd Duke of Wellington. In 1863 he conveyed the Hilborough and Clermont Estates to John Remington Mills.〔John Remington Mills was one of two sons of Samuel Mills (d 1847) of Russell Square. Both sons bought country estates. Thomas Mills, barrister and MP, bought Tolmers in Hertfordshire (which his brother inherited) and John Remington Mills bought the Hilborough and Clermont Estates at Little Cressingham, retaining property and business interests in London and elsewhere.〕 In 1869 Mills bought the Watton estate and an outlying farm at Tottenhill in Norfolk. His son Joseph Trueman Mills added the South Pickenham estate, Norfolk.
The last owner of Clermont Hall was Sir Richard Prince-Smith〔Richard Prince-Smith died in June 2007 at his home in Rancho Mirage, California. (''Yorkshire Post'': Obituary )〕 who acquired the estate in 1966 and sold it in 1997. The estate, which originally extended to , was broken up from 1977 onwards. Much of it is now owned by the UK Ministry of Defence.
Clermont House was built in 1971/2 in the walled garden of Clermont Hall as a replacement for Clermont Hall and as an agent's house. John Davies, Prince-Smith's resident land agent from 1971—1997, bought Clermont House in 1977. Davies added to the house in later years and in 1983 developed an arboretum extending which is open to public visitors. In 1972 Clermont Hall was found to be riddled with dry rot but attempts to demolish were thwarted by the imposition of a preservation order. The hall was sold in 1973 to Philip Jones, an artist, who demolished the servants quarters and restored the main house in of land with cottages.

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