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{{Redirect|Barley Green|the hamlet in Lancashire|Barley, Lancashire}}
{{infobox England place with map|
{{About|the village in Suffolk}}
|Place= Stradbroke
[[File:Stradbroke Village Sign.webp|thumb|Stradbroke [[Village Sign]]]]
|MapX= 163
{{Use British English|date=July 2020}}
|MapY= 186
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2019}}
|Population = 1250
{{Short description|Village in Mid-Suffolk, England}}
|District= [[Mid Suffolk]]
{{Infobox UK place
|Region= [[East of England]]
|country=England
|County= [[Suffolk]]
|official_name = Stradbroke
|Ceremonial= [[Suffolk]]
|coordinates = {{coord|52.318|1.274|display=inline,title}}
|Traditional= [[Suffolk]]
|population = 1408
|Constituency= [[Central Suffolk and North Ipswich (UK Parliament constituency)|Central Suffolk and North Ipswich]]
|area_total_km2 = 15.35
|PostalTown= EYE
|population_density =
|PostCode= IP21
|population_ref = (2011)<ref>{{NOMIS2011|title=Stradbroke Parish|id=E04009257|accessdate=2020-05-30}}</ref>
|DiallingCode= 01379
|shire_district = [[Mid Suffolk]]
|GridReference= TM231739
|region = East of England
|Euro= [[East of England (European Parliament constituency)|East of England]]
|shire_county |Police= [[Suffolk Constabulary]]
|constituency_westminster |Constituency= [[Central Suffolk and North Ipswich (UK Parliament constituency)|Central Suffolk and North Ipswich]]
|post_town = [[Eye, Suffolk|Eye]]
|postcode_district = IP21
|postcode_area = IP
|dial_code = 01379
|os_grid_reference = TM231739
|static_image_name = File:Allsaintstradbroke.jpg
|static_image_caption = Church of All Saints, Stradbroke
}}
'''Stradbroke''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|s|t|r|æ|d|b|r|ʊ|k}} {{respell|STRAD|brook}})<ref>G.M. Miller, ''BBC Pronouncing Dictionary of British Names'' (London: Oxford UP, 1971), p. 142.</ref> is an English village in the [[Mid Suffolk]] district of the [[English county|county]] of [[Suffolk]]. The census of 2011 gave the parish a population of 1,408, with an estimate of 1,513 in 2018.
 
==Heritage==
[[Image:Snowystrad.jpg|left|thumb|Stradbroke, Suffolk]]
[[File:Stradbroke Primary School Opening.jpg|left|270px|thumb|The opening of Stradbroke Primary School on 28 October 1864.]]
 
The village was listed in the [[Domesday Book]] of 1096 as being in the Bishop's Hundred,<ref name=OD>[https://opendomesday.org/place/TM2373/stradbroke/ Open Domesday: Stradbroke], accessed February 2020.</ref> later renamed [[Hoxne Hundred]]. The village name was sometimes spelt Stradbrook in the Middle Ages and in local documents as late as the early 19th century.
'''Stradbroke''' is a village in [[Suffolk]], [[England]], [[United Kingdom]]. It is in the [[Mid Suffolk]] District and part of the [[East of England]] Region of England. Stradbroke is near to the small Suffolk town of [[Eye, Suffolk|Eye]] and the larger Norfolk market town of [[Diss]]. It has a population of around 1250.
 
A post-medieval source states that the prominent medieval philosopher [[Robert Grosseteste]], also Bishop of Lincoln, was born in Stradbroke in about 1175, but there is no medieval evidence to confirm this. Its parish church of All Saints, with a 15th-century tower and a raised stair turret, dominates the village as a landmark.<ref name=church>[http://www.suffolkchurches.co.uk/stradbroke.html Stradbroke All Saints'], Suffolk Churches Website. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref> Most of the church is in the perpendicular style, including the tower and nave, with 15th-century flint flushwork on the battlements, highlighting the village's wealth at the time.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Pevsner |first=Nikolaus |title=The Buildings of England: Suffolk |publisher=Penguin Books |year=1974 |isbn=0140710205 |edition=2nd |___location=London |pages=446–447}}</ref>
Stradbroke is midway between [[Norwich]] and [[Ipswich]] and within easy driving distance of the Suffolk coastal towns of [[Southwold]] and [[Aldeburgh]]. By train from [[Diss]] it is an hour and a half to [[London]].
 
In October 2014 the state primary school marked the 150th anniversary of its predecessor's opening on 28 September 1864.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Clocks turned back in 150 years celebration at Stradbroke Primary School |url=http://www.dissexpress.co.uk/news/latest-news/clocks-turned-back-in-150-years-celebration-at-stradbroke-primary-school-1-6334761 |website=Diss Express |publisher=Johnson Press |accessdate=4 October 2014}}</ref>
The village is the centre of a working rural community set amidst quiet rolling countryside. It has a Post Office, convenience store, butcher, baker, a swimming pool, playing fields, community centre, doctors surgery and numerous social and sporting activities. There is both a primary school and a secondary school.
 
The village used to host a Navy Day on the last Saturday in July, to mourn the end of the Royal Navy's [[rum ration]] in July 1970; as part of the celebration a tot of rum was processed round the village. The last such event was held in 2007.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.stradbroke.org.uk/photo/album/show?id=885293%3AAlbum%3A4267 |title=Final Navy Day Photo Album |publisher=Stadbroke Village Website |accessdate=20 June 2014}}</ref>
The village boasts three pubs - The White Hart, Queen's Head and Ivy House. All of the pubs offer food and the Ivy House has a restaurant.
 
==Amenities==
[[Image:Allsaintstradbroke.jpg|left|thumb|All Saint's Church, Stradbroke, Suffolk]]
Stradbroke's position as a centre for smaller villages and hamlets means it has more facilities than its population might suggest. It serves as an education centre for Mid Suffolk, with a primary school and a high school in the village.
 
There are two pubs, several shops, and local services that include a public library, a community centre, a swimming pool and a gym. It has a playing field for cricket and football, three tennis courts, two bowling greens and a fitness track. The village includes some {{convert|12|mi|km|2|abbr=on}} of public footpaths, maintained by local government two or three times a year. Near the community centre there is a doctor's surgery and a play area for young children. At Westhall there is another play area and a recreation ground for informal games.
The village is dominated by All Saint's Church which can be seen from miles away, it boasts a 15th century tower. Several photographs and more information is available on the [http://www.suffolkchurches.co.uk/stradbroke.html Suffolk Churches Website]
 
Village services and the built environment are governed by the civil Stradbroke Parish Council, with 13 seats where councillors are elected every four years, which forms the first tier of local government for the area. The last elections were held in 2019,<ref>{{Cite web |last=roger |date=2019-04-15 |title=Local Elections May 2019 |url=https://www.stradbrokeonline.org.uk/local-elections-may-2019/ |access-date=2025-05-22 |website=Stradbroke Online |language=en-GB}}</ref> the 2023 election ran uncontested as there were not 13 persons nominated.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Election results - Mid Suffolk District Council - babergh.gov.uk / midsuffolk.gov.uk |url=https://www.midsuffolk.gov.uk/election-results |access-date=2025-05-22 |website=Mid Suffolk District Council |language=en-GB}}</ref> The village is also part of the electoral division for [[Hoxne & Eye Division, Suffolk|Hoxne & Eye]] electing to [[Suffolk County Council]], and the [[Stradbroke and Laxfield Ward|Stradbroke & Laxfield]] ward for [[Mid Suffolk|Mid Suffolk District]] Council.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Election results |url=https://www.midsuffolk.gov.uk/w/election-results |access-date=2025-06-09 |website=Mid Suffolk District Council |language=en-GB}}</ref>
There is an annual [http://festival.stradbroke.org.uk Real Ale and Jazz Festival] held on the weekend after the May Day Bank Holiday in a marquee at the Queen's Head public house. This event attracts visitors from East Anglia and further afield.
 
The village post office reopened in 2014 in the local library, housed in the historic courthouse building. The previous post office in a shop had closed.<ref>{{Cite news |title=Post Office returns to Stradbroke two years after closing |url=http://www.dissexpress.co.uk/news/latest-news/post-office-returns-to-stradbroke-two-years-after-closing-1-6361891 |accessdate=20 October 2014 |work=Diss Express}}</ref> Library staff work on both the post office and library counters.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Stradbroke Library Post Office is open! |url=http://suffolklibraries.co.uk/stradbroke-library-post-office-opens-this-week/ |publisher=Suffolk Libraries |access-date=20 October 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141102185812/http://suffolklibraries.co.uk/stradbroke-library-post-office-opens-this-week/ |archive-date=2 November 2014 }}</ref> The village shop was refurbished in 2014. There is also a bakery, a butcher's shop, a wedding shop, and an antiques centre and cafe.
The village also hosts a more unusual event on the last Saturday in July known as Navy Day. This mourns the end of the Royal Navy's rum ration and as part of the celebrations a tot of rum is processed around the village. Quite how a Suffolk village some 18 miles from the sea has come to host such a celebrartion has been the topic of an interesting post on the [http://www.stradbroke.org.uk/index.php?module=phpwsbb&PHPWSBB_MAN_OP=view&PHPWS_MAN_ITEMS=28 Village Website Forums]
 
In 2012 a field of {{convert|6|acre|m2|abbr=on}} was bought on Drapers Hill and 28 [[allotment (gardening)|allotment gardens]] laid out, along with a [[community orchard]] and wild flower meadow. A pond was donated at the top of the site, overlooked by donated public seats. There are views of the church towards the centre of the village.
[[Stradbroke Business and Enterprise College]] is the smallest secondary school in Suffolk and one of the smallest in England with only some 360 students. Previously known as Stradbroke High School, in October [[2004]] it made a successful application to become a [[Business and Enterprise College]].
 
Stradbroke has a free magazine, the ''Stradbroke Monthly'', and an online community radio station, Radio Stradbroke. The [[Stradisphere Festival]] was an annual music event held between 2013 and 2018 in the village featuring acts including [[Badly Drawn Boy]].<ref>{{Cite web|date=2018-10-09|title=Stradisphere organisers call it a day|url=https://www.dissexpress.co.uk/news/stradisphere-organisers-call-it-a-day-9045590/|access-date=2020-08-31|website=Diss Express|language=en}}</ref>
 
==Transport==
[[Image:stradbrokenavyday.jpg|left|thumb|Stradbroke Navy Day]]
Stradbroke lies midway between [[Norwich]] and [[Ipswich]] on the B1117 and B1118 secondary roads, some 7 miles (11&nbsp;km) from the Suffolk town of [[Eye, Suffolk|Eye]] and 9 miles (14.5&nbsp;km) from the Norfolk market town of [[Diss, Norfolk|Diss]], where the village's nearest railway station is located. Train services from Diss take an hour and a half to reach [[Liverpool Street station|London]]. There used to be a railway service linking Stradbroke with Haugley Junction to the West and Laxfield to the East, with [[Stradbroke railway station]] active between 1908 and 1952 on the [[Mid-Suffolk Light Railway]], until the whole line closed.<ref>{{Citation |last=Conolly |first=Phillip W. |title=British railways pre-grouping atlas and gazetteer |date=1972 |pages= |others=Railway Publications, ltd |edition=5th |place=Shepperton |publisher=Allan |isbn=978-0-7110-0320-0}}</ref> There is a limited public school bus service linking Stradbroke to Eye, [[Framlingham]] and [[Ipswich]].<ref name="Ipswich Buses">{{Cite web |title=118 Bus Timetable |url=https://www.ipswichbuses.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/118-119-Commercial.pdf |website=Ipswich Buses |accessdate=5 October 2020}}</ref>
 
==ExternalNotable linkspeople==
In birth order: <!-- Information not on the person's Wikipedia page needs referencing. -->
*[[Robert Grosseteste]] (c. 1175–1253), scholar and [[Bishop of Lincoln]], is said to have been born in Stradbroke.
*[[Mary Matilda Betham]] (1776–1852), diarist, poet and miniature painter, was born in Stradbroke.
*[[William Betham (1779–1853)]], antiquarian, brother of Mary Matilda, was born in Stradbroke.
*[[J. C. Ryle]] (1816–1900), became Vicar of Stradbroke in 1861 and set in motion a restoration of the church in the 1870s.<ref name="church"/> He later became [[Bishop of Liverpool]].
*[[Herbert Edward Ryle]] (1856–1925), son of J. C. Ryle, was brought up in Stradbroke. He later served successively as [[Bishop of Exeter]], [[Bishop of Winchester]] and [[Dean of Westminster]].
 
==Notes==
*[http://www.stradbroke.org.uk/ Stradbroke Village Website]
{{Reflist|30em}}
*[http://parishcouncil.stradbroke.org.uk/ Stradbroke Parish Council]
*[http://www.stradbrokebec.org/ Stradbroke Business and Enterprise College]
*[http://www.midsuffolk.gov.uk Mid Suffolk District Council]
*[http://www.suffolk.gov.uk Suffolk County Council]
*[http://www.ivyhousestradbroke.co.uk Ivy House Public House and Restaurant]
 
==References==
[[Category:Villages in Suffolk|Stradbroke]]
*S. Govier, 2010, ''An Illustrated History of Stradbroke and Denham'' {{Publisher missing|date=November 2014}}
 
==External links==
*{{Commons category-inline|Stradbroke}}
*<!--www.stradisphere.co.uk-->
 
{{authority control}}
 
[[itCategory:Stradbroke| ]]
[[Category:Villages in Suffolk|Stradbroke]]
[[Category:Civil parishes in Suffolk]]
[[Category:Mid Suffolk District]]