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The Glaven Valley BeneficeWIVETON |
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WIVETON, which is
pronounced "Wifton" or "Wiverton" means "Wifa's
Tun" and the derivation of the name is the same as with
Wivenhoe in Essex—Wifa's "Hoh" or spur of land.
Wiveton also spreads along a ridge, and before they enter the
church, visitors might well stand at the east side of the churchyard
and get the lie of the land.
The Estuary 
The
church and churchyard stand at the southern end of the village;
due east is Cley which, like Wiveton, straggles along the banks
of the
Glaven.
Both villages face one another across green meadows which were,
until a century and a half ago, a tidal estuary, and both places
were ports with harbour frontage. Just east of
the churchyard and along the river bank to the north was Wiveton
Quay, and in the Middle Ages, during the fifteenth
century when the church was built, and for long afterwards, ships
went from here to Continental ports. In 1575, eight ships belonged
to the town; and twelve years later the port possessed four ships
of a hundred tons or over. There was considerable trade with
the Low Countries, Scandinavia and Iceland, though by the seventeenth
century coasting seems to have become more important than the
foreign
trade.
But early in the seventeenth
century, Sir Cornelius Vermuyden's success in draining the
Fens inspired the Calthorpe family
to reclaim part of their coastal estates in Norfolk, with the
assistance
of
another Dutch engineer, Van Hasedunck. During the seventeen
thirties and forties the marshes eastward around Salthouse were
embanked
to the ruin of that town as a port; and with the making of
a bank across the estuary—on the site of the present coast road
between Cley and Blakeney—the merchants of Cley and Wiveton,
especially Wiveton, saw the same fate awaiting them.
On January 31st, 1638,
an "Admirall Court" was held
at Cley, to which witnesses (many of them from Wiveton) were
called
in support of the claim by the townsmen that their livelihood
would be destroyed. A petition was made to the King to restrain
Sir Henry Calthorpe of Cockthorpe, and
his son Philip Calthorpe, from embanking their saltings at
Blakeney and Wiveton. But
though the petition was successful and the bank demolished,
enough seems
to have been done to impede the flow of the tides to the
port of Wiveton, even though ships could pass up the estuary
to the Cley
quays on the other side of the river.
From this time the maritime trade of Wiveton began to decline,
and though small ships were able to come up to the Cley Quay, near
the windmill on the other side of the river, until the early years
of the present century, Wiveton ceased to be a port and dwindled
into the small village of under two hundred inhabitants that it
is today.
In 1823 the Enclosure
Act completed what the Calthorpes had begun, and a new embankment
was made and the "new road" constructed
parallel to it—the modern coast road. Until that time
the tides had flowed up the estuary under the high arch of
the fourteenth
century Wiveton Bridge east of the church, and up to Glandford.
But with the encroachments of the sea, the embankments which were
adequate to protect the marshes in the seventeenth century, are
no longer so; and twice in the last sixty years, in 1897 and in
1953, the sea has found its way back into the old estuary, and
the floods came right up to the top of Wiveton Bridge and to the
edge of Wiveton churchyard on the east.
Wiveton Church
Wiveton Church was
entirely rebuilt during the fifteenth century at the time when
the port was most prosperous, and it is
one of the most splendid buildings of the period in the district.
Of the earlier church little remains. The tower, with its right-angle
buttresses and with its lancet windows in the
lower stages, represents
all that is left of the earlier work, which was brought into
line with the new building by the addition of a top belfry
stage and
parapet. The pinnacles at the corners, in the shape of urns,
belong to the seventeenth or early eighteenth century.
Unlike many mediaeval
church buildings, St. Mary's, Wiveton, seems to have been built
all at one time, and it presents
a very good
example of the fifteenth century "Perpendicular" style,
as that style
is represented in East Anglia. A lofty Nave with very beautiful
slender columns and arcades rising to a clerestory and arch
braced roofs in the Nave and Aisles. The Aisle Windows, it
will be noticed,
are also arcaded, as is often the case with fifteenth century
churches in East Anglia, and the sills have been lowered
for seats.
Across the Chancel Arch was the Rood Screen, remains of which
have been worked up into a tower screen set into the very fine
fifteenth
century Tower Arch. The Rood Loft and Rood Beam above the
screen was lighted by the window in the east wall of the Nave
above the
Chancel Arch, and the Loft was reached by a stair, to which
there was access through a doorway at the east end of the North
Aisle,
and by another doorway (now blocked) in the north wall of
the Chancel. A double entrance to the Rood Stair like this is
very unusual,
but it can be seen also in the church at Cley.
At the east end of the aisles were Altars, the piscinas for
which remain. As St. Mary's Church, the high altar
would
be dedicated to our Lady; and the Archdeacon of Norwich's
Visitation Return of 1368 makes it clear that the other altars
were dedicated
to St. John and St. Thomas. Dedications which were evidently
allowed to remain in the new aisles of the fifteenth century
church. By
his will, dated 1518, James Steele, of Wiveton, left a legacy
to the repair of the Lady Chapel. Some authorities refer to this
as
being a separate building in the churchyard, or near Wiveton
Bridge, but all traces of it have disappeared.
In the Chancel, the windows to the north (now blocked up) and to
the south, are similar in style to those in the aisles, and there
is a very fine East Window with wide interlacing tracery On the
exterior of the east wall of the Chancel, around the parapet of
the Tower, and in other parts of the church are designs in flint
flush work. The original Sacristy remains on the north side of
the Chancel, and there are two fifteenth century Porches on the
north and south.
Throughout the nineteenth century it received a number of careful
restorations. In 1809 the old bells were recast and two new
ones added by William Dobson, bell-founder, of Downham Market,
to make a ring of six with the following inscriptions: —
Treble: ''Let us sing praises unto the Lord on high."
2: "William Dobson fecit Anno Domini 1809."
3: "Fear God and honour the King."
4: "Let us lift up our voices with joy."
5: "William Dobson Founder Downham Norfolk 1809."
Tenor: "Thomas Crofts and William Gowen Churchwardens
1809."
The tenor weighs 12 cwt, and the whole is a beautifully toned ring
and the only one in working order for many miles around.
In 1849 came the existing oak Pulpit and Box Pews, which unfortunately enclose the bases of the pillars. In 1864 the whole building was thoroughly restored, and again in 1874. The Choir Stalls were given by Sir Alfred Jodrell in 1912, in memory of the Rev. J. G. B. Parmien.