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Mid Suffolk

Stowupland

Attractions and Places To See around Stowupland - Top 20

Best attractions and places to see around Stowupland offer a glimpse into traditional village life in Suffolk, England. The area features notable landmarks, natural spaces, and local points of interest. Situated on higher ground, the village provides a peaceful setting with a strong sense of community. Visitors can explore historical sites, tranquil lakes, and scenic country lanes.

Best attractions and places to see around Stowupland

  • The most popular attractions is Needham Lake, a lake that is a Local Nature Reserve with wetland areas, meadows, and a small woodland. It is home to a variety of wildlife and offers refreshments at a nearby café.
  • Another must-see spot is Suffolk Country Lanes Near Coddenham, a cycle way offering quiet roads and bucolic views. These lanes provide a scenic route for cycling and walking.
  • Visitors also love St Mary's Church, Woolpit, a historical site known for its 15th-century double-hammerbeam angel roof and finely crafted south porch. It is a significant medieval church with rich historical details.
  • Stowupland is known for its historical sites, natural features like lakes, and extensive footpaths. The area offers a variety of attractions to see and explore, from ancient churches to tranquil nature reserves.
  • The attractions around Stowupland are appreciated by the komoot community, with 10 upvotes and 11 photos shared by visitors.

Last updated: May 10, 2026

St Mary's Church, Woolpit

Highlight • Historical Site

15th century double-hammerbeam angel roof

The church of The Blessed Virgin Mary in Woolpit is one of the great medieval churches of Suffolk, a county blessed with some of the finest country churches in England. Like so many other Suffolk villages Woolpit owes its superb church to the wealth of the medieval wool trade, but there was a church on this spot centuries before Suffolk wool merchants gained their wealth.

The earliest record of a church at Woolpit comes from AD 1005 when the Earl of the East Angles gave the church and manor here to the Shrine of St Edmund at Beodricsworth (Bury St Edmunds). The church remained the property of the Abbey until the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The Woolpit church originally sent 10 marks worth of tithes to support the monks of Bury, but at some point in the medieval period this sum claimed by the crown.

The monks of St Edmundsbury Abbey were furious, and determined to seek reparation. Two monks disguised themselves as Scottish pilgrims and without permission left the abbey and made the long journey to Rome, where they sought and obtained a Papal charter affirming their right to the money.

They were attacked and robbed on their return journey, but one of the monks hid the charter in his mug, and so preserved it. The pair's belongings had been stolen, so they had no choice but to beg their way back to the abbey. The Papal charter did the trick, however, and Woolpit's tithe once more went to help maintain sick monks.

Shortly before 1087, a new church was built at the behest of Abbot Baldwin. The only remaining feature of this Norman building is the priest's door in the south wall of the chancel.

The double-hammerbeam angel roof

OUR LADY OF WOOLPIT

Woolpit became a destination for pilgrims during the medieval period, when it held a richly decorated statue of Our Lady in its own chapel. No trace of this chapel now survives but it was probably on the north side of the chancel, where the vestry now stands.

Alternatively, it may have stood at the east end of the south aisle. Pilgrims began arriving at least as early as 1211 when the Bishop of Norwich ordered that their offerings be given to St Edmundsbury Abbey.

The Shrine of Our Lady of Woolpit became extremely popular during the 15th and 16th centuries. Henry VI visited twice, and Queen Elizabeth of York, wife of Henry VII, ordered that a pilgrimage be made on her behalf in 1501. In 1538 Henry VIII ordered that Catholic images be destroyed, and it seems likely that the statue was pulled down at that time. in 1551 the Court of Augmentation ordered that the chapel itself be pulled down and the material sold.

A curious scene took place at Woolpit during the tumult of the English Civil War. The incumbent rector was John Watson, and when he was ordered to accept the new Puritan style of worship he refused. He was removed from his living, and the Earl of Manchester sent armed men to enforce the order. The village split into two factions, and a furious melee broke out in the church. The rector was removed, and retired to Norfolk where he died shortly after.

St Mary's is worth visiting for its superb double-hammerbeam roof, decorated with carved figures of angels. Iconoclast William Dowsing did his best to destroy the angels in 1644. His deputy found 80 'superstitious Pictures' some of which he destroyed and others he ordered to be taken down. Many of the angel's heads were defaced but these were sensitively restored in the 19th century.

Other highlights include beautifully carved medieval bench ends decorated with a wide variety of carved figures. These figures probably survived because the Puritans considered them heraldic symbols rather than religious. Eye-catching figures include griffins and a very mournful looking dog.

Another highlight is a finely crafted south porch dating to 1430-1455. Over the porch arch is a parvise, a small chamber possibly used for storing important documents. The porch roof is vaulted with exceptionally detailed lierne vaulting and decorated bosses.

The eagle lectern is a rare early Tudor relic, made around 1520 and one of just 20 surviving examples made to accept a chained Bible. A local tradition suggests that Elizabeth I gave the lectern to the church, though there is no proof of this. The queen did visit nearby Haughley Park in 1600 and sent one of her knights to visit Woolpit on her behalf. It is certainly possible that he gave the parishioners money that was used to buy the lectern.

The screen is 15th century, though the gates are Jacobean. The screen is painted and gilded and retains the medieval beam made to hold the rood, or crucifix. The base of the screen is painted with figures of saints including St Withburga, St Edmund, St Etheldreda, and St Felix. The face of St Felix is actually a portrait of Henry Page, the serving rector at the time of the Victorian restoration. Over the arch is a beautifully vaulted painted dedication board, decorated with figures of angels.

The large east window is a beautiful example of Decorated Gothic style, with reassembled fragments of medieval glass in the upper lights.

Each end of the chancel choir stalls has a bench end with an intricate figure of a Green Man. Set against the wall is a fascinating carving of a woodwose, a wild man of the woods figure found throughout East Anglia.

Most of the building is Perpendicular Gothic, dating from the mid-15th century but the chancel and south aisle are 14th century. The tower and spire were added in the 1850s by architect Richard Phipson after the medieval originals were damaged by lightning. This is actually the third tower; the first was damaged in a thunderstorm in 1602 and the second was blown down in a hurricane in 1703.

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Needham Lake

Highlight • Lake

Needham Lake is the site of a Local Nature Reserve - with wetland areas, meadows and a small woodland. It's home to a variety of wildlife.

Needham Lake has been consistently ranked among Visit England's top most-visited free attractions in the UK.

The Duck and Teapot café near the main entrance offers refreshments including hot snacks, cake, tea, coffee and ice cream.

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Woolpit Jubilee Pump

Highlight • Monument

A very imposing commemorative pump in the centre of the village of Woolpit, Suffolk, erected to mark the Jubilee of Queen Victoria. Each wooden pillar carries the carved wooden effigy of a renowned British queen, and the pump itself is capped by what seems to be a lion couchant - or maybe it's a dog couchant. The pump is in a boxed wooden housing, with a padlocked inspection door at the back, and the wrought iron handle with its system of levers, is chained. There's some decorative ironwork on the wooden housing, some of which has been lost, especially around the spout. The spout itself is made of lead.

Around the top of the pump, each face in turn carries the words:

"All noblest things are still the commonest"; "Every place has"; "Water light and air and"; God's abounding grace".

The front face carries a carved crown and the inscription:A Well of
Remembrance
Victoria
By the
Grace of God
Queen and Empress
1837 1897

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Gislingham Road, Finningham

Highlight • Settlement

Finningham is a village and civil parish in the Mid Suffolk district of Suffolk in the East of England, located approximately 7.5 miles north of Stowmarket and 16 miles from the county town of Ipswich. In 2011 its population was 480.

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Hit these country lanes as the sun is first appearing for a beautiful reminder of how pretty Suffolk can be.

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Tips from the Community

Neil Sneade
June 2, 2024, Suffolk Country Lanes Near Coddenham

Lovely bucolic views eastwards towards Coddenham.

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Mark Ngui
January 6, 2024, Needham Lake

Dunwich Dynamo feed stop - featured a coffee truck, and 3 food vendors. Long queues at 3am but much needed caffeine and extra snack as the temperatures dropped. There are toilets here.

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Neil Sneade
September 5, 2023, Needham Lake

It’s a pleasant enough spot for a quick stop if the weather’s decent but one of Visit England’s top attractions? I find that hard to believe for a glorified duck pond in an old gravel pit next to a railway line!

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Adie
September 1, 2022, Needham Lake

Needham Lake is the site of a Local Nature Reserve - with wetland areas, meadows and a small woodland. It's home to a variety of wildlife. Needham Lake has been consistently ranked among Visit England's top most-visited free attractions in the UK. The Duck and Teapot café near the main entrance offers refreshments including hot snacks, cake, tea, coffee and ice cream.

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0

Just Another Suffolk Village. Nice enough but nothing special.

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15th century double-hammerbeam angel roof The church of The Blessed Virgin Mary in Woolpit is one of the great medieval churches of Suffolk, a county blessed with some of the finest country churches in England. Like so many other Suffolk villages Woolpit owes its superb church to the wealth of the medieval wool trade, but there was a church on this spot centuries before Suffolk wool merchants gained their wealth. The earliest record of a church at Woolpit comes from AD 1005 when the Earl of the East Angles gave the church and manor here to the Shrine of St Edmund at Beodricsworth (Bury St Edmunds). The church remained the property of the Abbey until the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The Woolpit church originally sent 10 marks worth of tithes to support the monks of Bury, but at some point in the medieval period this sum claimed by the crown. The monks of St Edmundsbury Abbey were furious, and determined to seek reparation. Two monks disguised themselves as Scottish pilgrims and without permission left the abbey and made the long journey to Rome, where they sought and obtained a Papal charter affirming their right to the money. They were attacked and robbed on their return journey, but one of the monks hid the charter in his mug, and so preserved it. The pair's belongings had been stolen, so they had no choice but to beg their way back to the abbey. The Papal charter did the trick, however, and Woolpit's tithe once more went to help maintain sick monks. Shortly before 1087, a new church was built at the behest of Abbot Baldwin. The only remaining feature of this Norman building is the priest's door in the south wall of the chancel. The double-hammerbeam angel roof OUR LADY OF WOOLPIT Woolpit became a destination for pilgrims during the medieval period, when it held a richly decorated statue of Our Lady in its own chapel. No trace of this chapel now survives but it was probably on the north side of the chancel, where the vestry now stands. Alternatively, it may have stood at the east end of the south aisle. Pilgrims began arriving at least as early as 1211 when the Bishop of Norwich ordered that their offerings be given to St Edmundsbury Abbey. The Shrine of Our Lady of Woolpit became extremely popular during the 15th and 16th centuries. Henry VI visited twice, and Queen Elizabeth of York, wife of Henry VII, ordered that a pilgrimage be made on her behalf in 1501. In 1538 Henry VIII ordered that Catholic images be destroyed, and it seems likely that the statue was pulled down at that time. in 1551 the Court of Augmentation ordered that the chapel itself be pulled down and the material sold. A curious scene took place at Woolpit during the tumult of the English Civil War. The incumbent rector was John Watson, and when he was ordered to accept the new Puritan style of worship he refused. He was removed from his living, and the Earl of Manchester sent armed men to enforce the order. The village split into two factions, and a furious melee broke out in the church. The rector was removed, and retired to Norfolk where he died shortly after. St Mary's is worth visiting for its superb double-hammerbeam roof, decorated with carved figures of angels. Iconoclast William Dowsing did his best to destroy the angels in 1644. His deputy found 80 'superstitious Pictures' some of which he destroyed and others he ordered to be taken down. Many of the angel's heads were defaced but these were sensitively restored in the 19th century. Other highlights include beautifully carved medieval bench ends decorated with a wide variety of carved figures. These figures probably survived because the Puritans considered them heraldic symbols rather than religious. Eye-catching figures include griffins and a very mournful looking dog. Another highlight is a finely crafted south porch dating to 1430-1455. Over the porch arch is a parvise, a small chamber possibly used for storing important documents. The porch roof is vaulted with exceptionally detailed lierne vaulting and decorated bosses. The eagle lectern is a rare early Tudor relic, made around 1520 and one of just 20 surviving examples made to accept a chained Bible. A local tradition suggests that Elizabeth I gave the lectern to the church, though there is no proof of this. The queen did visit nearby Haughley Park in 1600 and sent one of her knights to visit Woolpit on her behalf. It is certainly possible that he gave the parishioners money that was used to buy the lectern. The screen is 15th century, though the gates are Jacobean. The screen is painted and gilded and retains the medieval beam made to hold the rood, or crucifix. The base of the screen is painted with figures of saints including St Withburga, St Edmund, St Etheldreda, and St Felix. The face of St Felix is actually a portrait of Henry Page, the serving rector at the time of the Victorian restoration. Over the arch is a beautifully vaulted painted dedication board, decorated with figures of angels. The large east window is a beautiful example of Decorated Gothic style, with reassembled fragments of medieval glass in the upper lights. Each end of the chancel choir stalls has a bench end with an intricate figure of a Green Man. Set against the wall is a fascinating carving of a woodwose, a wild man of the woods figure found throughout East Anglia. Most of the building is Perpendicular Gothic, dating from the mid-15th century but the chancel and south aisle are 14th century. The tower and spire were added in the 1850s by architect Richard Phipson after the medieval originals were damaged by lightning. This is actually the third tower; the first was damaged in a thunderstorm in 1602 and the second was blown down in a hurricane in 1703.

1

0

A very imposing commemorative pump in the centre of the village of Woolpit, Suffolk, erected to mark the Jubilee of Queen Victoria. Each wooden pillar carries the carved wooden effigy of a renowned British queen, and the pump itself is capped by what seems to be a lion couchant - or maybe it's a dog couchant. The pump is in a boxed wooden housing, with a padlocked inspection door at the back, and the wrought iron handle with its system of levers, is chained. There's some decorative ironwork on the wooden housing, some of which has been lost, especially around the spout. The spout itself is made of lead. Around the top of the pump, each face in turn carries the words: "All noblest things are still the commonest"; "Every place has"; "Water light and air and"; God's abounding grace". The front face carries a carved crown and the inscription:A Well of Remembrance Victoria By the Grace of God Queen and Empress 1837 1897

1

0

Stunning church with wonderful carved wooden gargoyles and angels inside and beautiful graveyard outside

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Frequently Asked Questions

What natural features can I explore around Stowupland?

You can visit Needham Lake, a Local Nature Reserve with wetland areas, meadows, and a small woodland, home to diverse wildlife. Within Stowupland village,

Thorney Green offers a large communal space, and numerous footpaths crisscross the area, providing opportunities for peaceful walks through the local landscape.

Are there historical sites to visit in and around Stowupland?

Yes, the area boasts several historical points of interest. In Stowupland, you can find the welcoming Holy Trinity Church, built in 1843, and the United Reformed Church. While a private residence, Stowupland Hall is a significant Grade II listed building adding to the village's character. Nearby, St Mary's Church, Woolpit, is a must-see medieval church known for its 15th-century double-hammerbeam angel roof and finely crafted south porch. Also in Woolpit, the Woolpit Jubilee Pump is an imposing commemorative monument.

What outdoor activities, like cycling or running, are available near Stowupland?

Stowupland is a great base for outdoor activities. For cycling, you can explore the Suffolk Country Lanes Near Coddenham, offering quiet roads and bucolic views. There are also several cycling routes, including easy to moderate options, detailed in the Cycling around Stowupland guide and the Road Cycling Routes around Stowupland guide. For runners, the Running Trails around Stowupland guide features routes like 'The River Gripping, Combs & Badley loop' and 'The Crown loop from Stowupland'.

Are there family-friendly attractions in the Stowupland area?

Yes, Needham Lake is a family-friendly Local Nature Reserve perfect for walks and wildlife spotting, with a café nearby for refreshments. The village also has a Children's Play Park located behind the village hall. Many of the local footpaths and country lanes are suitable for family walks or gentle bike rides.

Where can I find peaceful walking paths in Stowupland?

Stowupland is known for its extensive network of footpaths, historically used by locals and now valued by walkers. These paths offer a peaceful way to explore the village and its surrounding countryside. Needham Lake also provides tranquil walking trails around its wetland areas and woodland.

What do visitors particularly enjoy about the attractions near Stowupland?

Visitors appreciate the peaceful setting and strong sense of community. Highlights like Needham Lake are enjoyed for their wildlife and natural beauty, while the Suffolk Country Lanes Near Coddenham are praised for their quiet roads and bucolic views. The historical significance and architectural beauty of sites like St Mary's Church, Woolpit, are also highly valued.

Is Stowupland suitable for cycling?

Absolutely. Stowupland and its surroundings are very suitable for cycling, particularly on the quiet country lanes. The Suffolk Country Lanes Near Coddenham are a prime example, offering scenic routes. You can find various cycling routes, from easy to moderate, in the Cycling around Stowupland guide and the Road Cycling Routes around Stowupland guide.

Are there any unique or 'hidden gem' spots worth discovering?

While not widely advertised, the historical significance of Stowupland Hall, though private, adds a unique character to the village. The network of ancient footpaths, once essential for local life, can feel like hidden gems for those seeking quiet exploration. The detailed carvings and history within St Mary's Church, Woolpit, also offer a rich discovery for history enthusiasts.

What are the local amenities like pubs and cafes in Stowupland?

Stowupland offers several local amenities. You can find public houses like The Crown and The Retreat. For refreshments, there's a petrol station with a Co-op shop, a post office, butcher's shops, a cafe, a fish and chip shop, and a Chinese takeaway. Needham Lake also has The Duck and Teapot café nearby.

Is there anything to see in Stowupland village itself?

Within Stowupland village, you can visit the historic Holy Trinity Church and the United Reformed Church. The large Thorney Green is a central communal space, and the village is crisscrossed by many footpaths. The Stowupland Village Hall serves as a community hub, and there's a Children's Play Park and the Stowupland Sports Centre for recreation.

Are there any wheelchair-accessible attractions or paths?

The Woolpit Jubilee Pump is noted as wheelchair accessible. While specific accessible paths are not extensively detailed, many village greens and wider footpaths may offer easier access. It's always recommended to check specific conditions for individual routes.

When is the best time of year to visit Stowupland for outdoor activities?

The spring and summer months generally offer the most pleasant weather for exploring the footpaths and cycling routes around Stowupland. Autumn can also be a beautiful time for walks, with changing foliage, though some paths might be muddier. For specific events or community activities, checking local listings closer to your visit is advisable.

Can I find dog-friendly walking routes near Stowupland?

Many of the public footpaths and country lanes around Stowupland are suitable for dog walking, provided dogs are kept under control, especially near livestock. Needham Lake is also a popular spot for walks, and while dogs are generally welcome, specific rules may apply in certain areas of the nature reserve.

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