DEOPHAM is a parish, 3 miles from Kimberley station, 4 north from Attleborough station on the Thetford and Norwich railway, and 4 south-west from Wymondham, comprising the small village of DEOPHAM GREEN, a mile south-west from the church. The parish is in the Mid division of the county, Forehoe hundred, petty sessional division and union, Wymondham county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, Forehoe division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Andrew is a building of flint and stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, lofty nave, aisles, north porch and an embattled western tower, with octagonal turrets and pinnacles, and containing 5 bells: in 1864 the chancel was entirely restored and new roofed, and in 1867 the south aisle was restored at a cost of £240: the nave was thoroughly restored and new roofed and new windows inserted in 1884 at a cost of over £2,000, and the porch has also been restored: the estimated cost for the restoration of the tower is £750: there are 280 sittings. The register dates from the year 1560. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £135, net yearly value £75, with 23 acres of glebe in Shipdham and 6 acres in this parish, and residence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury, and held since 1861 by the Rev. Hibbert Wanklyn, L.Th. of University College, Durham. The Ecclesiastical Commissioners are impropriators of the rectoriaI tithes. There are two Primitive Methodists chapels, one at Deopham Green, erected in 1837, the other at Low Common. The Rev. Henry Rix, who died in 1728, left £60 to be invested in land, which produces a rental of £9 yearly, now appropriated for teaching four poor children and for an annual sermon, the minister to receiving 10s., the clerk 1s., and each child 8s., the remainder being given in bread to the poor. A sum of about £12, arising from 14 acres of land, awarded at the inclosure in 1814 in lieu of common rights, is distributed among the poor in coal annually. The Earl of Kimberley, the Sutton family and the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, are lords of the manor. The principal landowners are the Earl of Kimberley K. G., P.C. the trustees of the late J. B. Graver Browne, esq. and the Crown. The soil is marl; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The area is 1,661 acres; rateable value, £2,631; the population in 1891 was 395.
Parish Clerk, Charles Hurrell.
POST OFFICE.- Robert Phnix, receiver. Letters through Wymondham, arrive at 8.30 a.m. & are dispatched at 5.50 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at Hingham. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
PILLAR LETTER BOX (Low Common), cleared at 5.30 p.m. week days
National School (mixed), erected in 1851, for 84 children; average attendance, 62; Mrs. Georgina Penlington, mistress
CARRIERS.- John Raynor, from Rockland, & ---- Knott, from Rockland, pass through to Norwich on wed. & sat
Peacock Mrs. South
End cottage
Porter Rev. Jacob M.A
[rector of Hackford]
Rowing Miss, The
Green
Wanklyn Rev. Hibbert [vicar], Vicarage
COMMERCIAL
Allen
Herbert, farmer, Old farm
Allen
William, farmer & cattle
dealer, Hall farm
Baldwin
Frederick, farmer, South hill
Bateson
John, Halfmoon P. H.
& blacksmith, The Green
Bowman Walter, farmer, High elm
Bush John, farmer & shopkeeper, The Green
Clarke
Hannah (Mrs.), farmer, Mill farm
Clarke
James William, farmer
Clarke
Thomas Leeder, farmer, Stalland
Clements
James Blackwell, carpenter
& wheelwright, The Green
Dack
Robert, farmer
Gathergood
William, beer retailer and farmer, Low common
Hart
John William, farmer, Glass
Bottle farm
Harwood
George Jabez, farmer, Stalland
Howling
Robert, farmer
Hurrell
Charles, farmer, High Elm
farm & Hingham road
Jude
Charles, farmer & drill
owner, Hingham road
Lake
George, farmer, Low common
Lord
Robert, bricklayer
Lyngcoln
William, farmer, Pattengill
farm
Martin
James, farmer, Stalland
Minns
Reuben, farmer
Mordey
Alfred, miller (wind)
Morter
John, farmer, Red barn
Nicholls
Alfred, farmer, Low common
Page
William, shopkeeper
Patrick
William, farmer, South hill
Phnix
Robert, jun., thrashing
machine owner, Stalland
Phnix
Samuel, farmer, Low common
Phnix
Walter C, farmer, The Green
Phnix-Stone
Martha Ann (Miss), farmer
Pitts
Jane (Mrs.), farmer
Potter
Alfred, carpenter, Stalland
Read
John, beer retailer, The
Green
Riches
John, farm bailiff to Mrs.
Hannah Clarke
Ringer
Urban, farmer
Shaw
Henry, farmer &
landowner, Hingham road
Smith
Fras. Robert, farmer, Church
farm
Smith
George, shoe maker, The Green
Smith
Isaac, tailor, The Green
Smith
John, shoe maker, The Green
Stone
George, thatcher
Turner
William, draper & grocer
Ward
William, farmer
Watling
Henry, farmer
Webster
James, farmer
Whitehand
Charles, farmer, The Green