Tour through the Eastern Counties of England, 1722

particular for the carrying young turkeys or turkey poults in their

season, which are valuable, and yield a good price at market; as

also for live chickens in the dear seasons, of all which a very

great number are brought in this manner to London, and more

prodigiously out of this country than any other part of England,

which is the reason of my speaking of it here.

In this part, which we call High Suffolk, there are not so many

families of gentry or nobility placed as in the other side of the

country. But it is observed that though their seats are not so

frequent here, their estates are; and the pleasure of West Suffolk

is much of it supported by the wealth of High Suffolk, for the

richness of the lands and application of the people to all kinds of

improvement is scarce credible; also the farmers are so very

considerable and their farms and dairies so large that it is very

frequent for a farmer to have 1,000 pounds stock upon his farm in

cows only.

NORFOLK.

From High Suffolk I passed the Waveney into Norfolk, near Schole

Inn. In my passage I saw at Redgrave (the seat of the family) a

most exquisite monument of Sir John Holt, Knight, late Lord Chief

Justice of the King’s Bench several years, and one of the most

eminent lawyers of his time. One of the heirs of the family is now

building a fine seat about a mile on the south side of Ipswich,

near the road.

The epitaph or inscription on this monument is as follows:-

M. S.

D. Johannis Holt, Equitis Aur.

Totius Anglioe in Banco Regis

per 21 Annos continuos

Capitalis Justitiarii

Gulielmo Regi Annoequr Reginae

Consiliarii perpetui:

Libertatis ac Legum Anglicarum

Assertoris, Vindicis, Custodis,

Vigilis Acris & intrepidi,

Rolandus Frater Uncius & Hoeres

Optime de se Merito

posuit,

Die Martis Vto. 1709. Sublatus est

ex Oculis nostris

Natus 30 Decembris, Anno 1642.

When we come into Norfolk, we see a face of diligence spread over

the whole country; the vast manufactures carried on (in chief) by

the Norwich weavers employs all the country round in spinning yarn

for them; besides many thousand packs of yarn which they receive

from other countries, even from as far as Yorkshire and

Westmoreland, of which I shall speak in its place.

This side of Norfolk is very populous, and thronged with great and

spacious market-towns, more and larger than any other part of

England so far from London, except Devonshire, and the West Riding

of Yorkshire; for example, between the frontiers of Suffolk and the

city of Norwich on this side, which is not above 22 miles in

breadth, are the following market-towns, viz.:-

Thetford, Hingham, Harleston,

Diss, West Dereham, E. Dereham,

Harling, Attleborough, Watton,

Bucknam, Windham, Loddon, etc.

Most of these towns are very populous and large; but that which is

most remarkable is, that the whole country round them is so

interspersed with villages, and those villages so large, and so

full of people, that they are equal to market-towns in other

countries; in a word, they render this eastern part of Norfolk

exceeding full of inhabitants.

An eminent weaver of Norwich gave me a scheme of their trade on

this occasion, by which, calculating from the number of looms at

that time employed in the city of Norwich only, besides those

employed in other towns in the same county, he made it appear very

plain, that there were 120,000 people employed in the woollen and

silk and wool manufactures of that city only; not that the people

all lived in the city, though Norwich is a very large and populous

city too: but, I say, they were employed for spinning the yarn used

for such goods as were all made in that city. This account is

curious enough, and very exact, but it is too long for the compass

of this work.

This shows the wonderful extent of the Norwich manufacture, or

stuff-weaving trade, by which so many thousands of families are

maintained. Their trade, indeed, felt a very sensible decay, and

the cries of the poor began to be very loud, when the wearing of

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