Ipswich

Ipswich
Borough of Ipswich
Motto: King, Commons, Lords
Shown within Suffolk

Shown within Suffolk
Coordinates:
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Constituent Country England
Region East of England
County Suffolk
Borough Ipswich
Government Leadership:Leader & Cabinet
 - Type Ipswich Borough Council
 - MPs Michael Lord, Chris Mole
Area - Ranked 320th
 - City 15.2 sq mi (39.42 km²)
Population
 - City Ranked 165th
121,000
 - Density 7,951.3/sq mi (3,070/km²)
 - Urban 146,000
 - Ethnicity 90.5% White
2.1% Black
3.9% S.Asian
1.1% Chinese or Other
2.4% Mixed Race
ONS code 42UD
Timber-frame buildings in St Nicholas Street
The Ancient House is decorated with a particularly fine example of pargeting

Ipswich (pronunciation; IPA: /ˈɪpswɪtʃ/) is a non-metropolitan district and the county town of Suffolk, England on the estuary of the River Orwell. Nearby towns are Felixstowe in Suffolk, Harwich in Essex and Colchester also in Essex. The town of the same name overspills the borough boundaries significantly, with only 85% of the town's population living within the borough at the time of the 2001 Census, when it was the third-largest settlement in the United Kingdom's East of England region, and the 38th largest urban area in England.[1]

As of 2007, the borough of Ipswich is estimated to have a population of approximately 128,000 inhabitants.

Contents

History

The Eemian Stage of the Ice Age is known as the Ipswichian stage in geology. It started about 130,000 years ago and ended about 80,000 years ago.[2]

Under the Roman empire, the area around Ipswich formed an important route inland to rural towns and settlements via the Orwell and Gipping. A large Roman fort, part of the coast defences of Britain, stood at Felixstowe (13 miles, 21 km), and the largest villa in Suffolk stood at Castle Hill (north-west Ipswich).

Ipswich is one of England's oldest towns,[3][4] and took shape in Anglo-Saxon times as the main centre between York and London for North Sea trade to Scandinavia and the Rhine. It served the Kingdom of East Anglia, and began developing in the time of King Rædwald, supreme ruler of the English (616-624). The famous ship-burial and treasure at Sutton Hoo nearby (9 miles, 14.5 km) is probably his grave. The Ipswich Museum houses replicas of the Roman Mildenhall Treasure and the Sutton Hoo treasure. A gallery devoted to the town's origins includes Anglo-Saxon weapons, jewellery and other artefacts.

The seventh-century town, called 'Gippeswick'[5] was centred near the quay. Towards 700 AD, Frisian potters from the Netherlands area settled in Ipswich and set up the first large-scale potteries in England since Roman times. Their wares were traded far across England, and the industry was unique to Ipswich for 200 years.[6][7] With growing prosperity, in about 720 AD a large new part of the town was laid out in the Buttermarket area. Ipswich was becoming a place of national and international importance.[8] Parts of the ancient road plan still survive in its modern streets. After the invasion of 869 Ipswich fell under Viking rule. The earth ramparts circling the town centre were probably raised by Vikings in Ipswich around 900 to prevent its recapture by the English.[9][10] They were unsuccessful. The town operated a Mint under royal licence from King Edgar in the 970s, which continued through the Norman Conquest until the time of King John, in about 1215.[11] The abbreviation 'Gipes' appears on the coins.

King John granted the town its first charter in 1200, laying the mediaeval foundations of its modern civil government.[12][13] In the next four centuries it made the most of its wealth, trading Suffolk cloth with the Continent. Five large religious houses, including two Augustinian Priories (St Peter and St Paul, and Holy Trinity, both mid-12th century[14]), and those of the Greyfriars (Franciscans, before 1298), Ipswich Whitefriars (Carmelites founded 1278-79) and Blackfriars (Dominicans, before 1263), stood in mediaeval Ipswich. The last Carmelite Prior of Ipswich was the celebrated John Bale, author of the oldest English historical verse-drama (Kynge Johan, c.1538).[15] There were also several hospitals, including the leper hospital of St Mary Magdalene, founded before 1199. During the Middle Ages the Marian Shrine of Our Lady of Grace was a famous pilgrimage destination, and attracted many pilgrims including Henry VIII and Katherine of Aragon.[16][17] At the Reformation the statue was taken away to London to be burned, though some claim that it survived and is preserved at Nettuno, Italy.[18]

Around 1380, Geoffrey Chaucer satirised the merchants of Ipswich in the Canterbury Tales. Thomas Cardinal Wolsey, the son of a wealthy landowner, was born in Ipswich about 1475. One of Henry VIII's closest political allies, he founded a college in the town in 1528, which was for its brief duration one of the homes of the Ipswich School.[19] He remains one of the town's most famed figures.

In the time of Queen Mary the Ipswich Martyrs were burnt at the stake on the Cornhill for their Protestant beliefs. A monument commemorating this event now stands in Christchurch Park. From 1611 to 1634 Ipswich was a major centre for emigration to New England. This was encouraged by the Town Lecturer, Samuel Ward. His brother Nathaniel Ward was first minister of Ipswich, Massachusetts, where a promontory was named 'Castle Hill' after the place of that name in north-west Ipswich, UK.

The painter Thomas Gainsborough lived and worked in Ipswich. In 1835, Charles Dickens stayed in Ipswich and used it as a setting for scenes in his novel The Pickwick Papers. The hotel where he resided first opened in 1518; it was then known as The Tavern and is now known as the Great White Horse Hotel. Dickens made the hotel famous in chapter XXI of The Pickwick Papers, vividly describing the hotel's meandering corridors and stairs.

In 1797 Lord and Lady Nelson moved to Ipswich, and in 1800 Lord Nelson was appointed High Steward of Ipswich.

In the mid-19th century Coprolite was discovered, the material was mined and then dissolved in acid, the resulting mixture forming the basis of Fisons fertilizer business.[20]

Modern Ipswich

Ipswich has undergone an extensive gentrification programme in recent years, principally centred around the waterfront. Though this has turned a deindustrialized dock area into an emerging residential and commercial centre, it is being completed at the expense of much of the town's industrial and maritime heritage and in spite of efforts made by a local civic group, The Ipswich Society. Much of this development is residential and is marketed at high net-worth individuals in the DINKY demographic. As such, some have considered it incompatible with Ipswich's existing socio-economic mix. It could therefore be considered to be aimed at encouraging economic migration to the town, particularly as a commutable satellite town of London.

The Tolly Cobbold brewery, built in the 19th century and rebuilt 1894–1896, is one of the finest Victorian breweries in the United Kingdom. There was a Cobbold brewery in the town from 1746 until 2002 when Ridley's Breweries took Tolly Cobbold over.[21] Felix Thornley Cobbold presented Christchurch Mansion to the town in 1896.

Former stables,[22] reflected in the glass panels of the Willis Building

The town centre contains the glass-clad building owned by Willis Limited, properly called the Willis Building but still often called the "Willis-Faber building" by locals, as the company Willis Corroon themselves used to be called Willis Faber. Designed by Norman Foster, the building dates from 1974. It became the youngest Grade I listed building in Britain in 1991 and at the time one of only two buildings to be listed and be under 30 years of age.[23]

Ipswich is set to be the main hub for University Campus Suffolk, which will give Suffolk its first university, though it is essentially a collaborative project between Suffolk College and two other regional universities. It is hoped that within a decade, a University of Suffolk in its own right will become established out of UCS.

In September 1993 Ipswich and Arras, Nord Pas-de-Calais, France, became twin towns, and a square in the new Buttermarket development was named Arras Square to mark the relationship. [24]

On 13 March 2007 Ipswich was awarded the cleanest town award.[25]

Ipswich remains a 'town' despite a few attempts at winning 'city' status.[26] It does not have a cathedral, so the Bishop of St Edmundsbury and Ipswich is based at Bury St Edmunds the former headquarters of West Suffolk.

Districts

The Docks is the area around the old commercial docks that are now devoted essentially to leisure use. The area includes extensive recent development of residential apartment blocks and includes the campus of the new University College.

Holywells is the area around Holywells Park, a 67 acre (27 ha) public park, situated near the docks, that was painted by Thomas Gainsborough.

Chantry is the name of a housing estate and park to the South-West of Ipswich. Its schools include Chantry High School and the Chantry Infant and Junior Schools which have merged, and been renamed 'The Oaks'. Another school that can be found in the outskirts of Chantry is St Joseph's College.

Other districts outside the town centre include Bixley Farm, Broke Hall, California, Castle Hill, The Dales, Gainsborough, Greenwich, Kesgrave, Maidenhall, Pinebrook, Priory Heath, Racecourse, Ravenswood, Rose Hill, Rushmere, Springvale, St Margarets, Stoke, Warren Heath, Whitehouse and Whitton.

To the east of the town is Trinity Park near Bucklesham the home of the annual Suffolk Show one of the County shows in United Kingdom. The 'Trinity' is the name given to the three animals native to the county of Suffolk, namely Red Poll cattle, the powerful Suffolk Punch horse and the black faced Suffolk Sheep.

Culture

Willis Faber and Dumas Headquarters in Ipswich, was one of Norman Foster's earliest commissions.

Like many other similar towns, Ipswich is home to many artists, with galleries at Christchurch Mansion, the Town Hall, a gallery in the Ancient House and the Artists Gallery in Electric House being the more prominent. The visual arts are further supported with many sites of sculpture with easy accessibility. The Borough Council promotes creation of new public works of art and has been known to make this a condition of planning permission.[27]

The town houses Ipswich Museum and the Ipswich Transport Museum.

Performing arts are well represented with Ipswich being home to DanceEast which has the primary aim of advocating innovation and development of dance in the East of England.[28] They are building new premises as part of the waterfront development. These will be the first custom built dance facilities in the East of England at a cost of around £8million.

The Eastern Angles theatre group are based at the Sir John Mills Theatre [1] in Ipswich, named after the famous actor who lived in Felixstowe as a child.

Since 1991, there has been an annual arts festival called Ip-Art [2] which brings together many events across art disciplines and different venues, notably a free music day in Christchurch Park, which in 2006 had over 50 different acts performing over 7 stages.

Norwich remains the regional centre for TV broadcasting, but both BBC East and Anglia TV have presenters and offices in Ipswich. The town has three local radio stations, BBC Radio Suffolk covering the entire county, where the East Anglian Accent can be heard on its many phone-ins, the commercial SGR-FM which was founded in 1975 as Radio Orwell covering the A14 corridor in Suffolk and Town 102 which was founded in 2006 and is the first full time commercial station specific for Ipswich. The younger audience is catered for with Suffolk based Kiss 105-108. On 15 August 2007, Ipswich Community Radio launched full-time after successfully gaining a licence in early 2006.

The town's daily evening newspaper is the Evening Star (Ipswich) which is the sister title to the county's daily morning newspaper the East Anglian Daily Times.

Buildings

In addition to Christchurch Mansion and the Ancient House, Ipswich in the 21st century has some important cultural buildings including the New Wolsey Theatre and the Regent Theatre - the largest theatre venue in East Anglia where in the 1960s The Beatles performed under its former name the Gaumont.

There are several medieval[29] Ipswich churches but the grandest is the Victorian St Mary le Tower.

Modern buildings include the new Suffolk County Hall in the area known as Ipswich Village close to Ipswich Town's Portman Road stadium. The stadium has hosted England under 21, under 23 and full international matches in addition to an England hockey game.

On the north-west side of Ipswich lies Broomhill Pool, a Grade II listed Olympic-sized lido which opened in 1938 and closed in 2002, since which time a campaign to see it restored and re-opened has been run.

Politics

Ipswich Borough Council offices, on Russell Road

Ipswich is governed locally by a two-tier Council System. Ipswich Borough Council fulfils District Council functions such as refuse collection, housing and planning and Suffolk County Council provides the County Council services such as transport, education and social services.

Between 1979 and September 2004 Ipswich Borough Council was under Labour control but the town is now governed by a Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition.

The town is covered by two parliamentary constituencies – Ipswich, which covers about 75% and is represented by Labour MP Chris Mole, and Central Suffolk & North Ipswich, which covers the remaining 25% and is represented by Conservative MP Michael Lord.

In April 2006 the borough council initiated public discussions about the idea of turning the borough into a unitary authority[30] (Ipswich had constituted a county borough from 1889 to 1974, independent of the administrative county of East Suffolk, and this status was not restored by the Banham/Cooksey Commission in the 1990s). Ipswich, Norwich, Exeter and Oxford united to campaign for unitary authority status for the four towns, hoping to use the window of opportunity presented by the October 2006 Local Government White Paper. In March 2007, it was announced that Ipswich was one of sixteen shortlisted councils[31] and on the 2007-07-25, the Secretary of state announced that she was minded to implement the unitary proposal for Ipswich, but that there were 'a number of risks relating to the financial case set out in the proposal',[32] on which she invited Ipswich to undertake further work before a final decision is taken.[33] Early in December plans were thrown into doubt as the Government announced that it had 'delayed' the unitary bids for Ipswich and Exeter.[34] In July 2008 the Boundary Committee announced their preferred option was for a unitary authority covering Ipswich and the south-eastern corner of Suffolk (including Felixstowe).[35]

Industry

4 Fairline Yachts outside Fairline's Ipswich testing facility

Industry around Ipswich has had a strong agricultural bias with Ransomes, Sims & Jefferies Ltd, one of the most famous agricultural manufacturers, located in the town. It is notable that the world's first commercial motorised lawnmower was built by Ransomes in 1902. There was a sugar beet factory at Ipswich for many years; it was closed in 2001 as part of a rationalisation by British Sugar.

The British Telecom Research Laboratories were located to the east of the town in 1975 at Martlesham Heath. They are now a science park called Adastral Park. The area was originally RAF Martlesham Heath - a WW2 airfield from where Douglas Bader fought. However, some senior locals confirm that Douglas Bader never flew from Ipswich/Martlesham.

Ipswich is one of the Haven ports and is still a working port, handling several million tonnes of cargo each year. Prior to decommissioning, HMS Grafton was a regular visitor to the port which has special links with the town and the county of Suffolk. HMS Orwell, named after the river, is also closely linked with the town. With the rise in popularity of the town around the Neptune Marina and the Wet Dock a number of ship and boatbuilders have become established, in particular Fairline Yachts are a significant employer.

Transport infrastructure

Railway viaduct over Spring Road, Ipswich

Road

The A12 links Ipswich to London (84 miles), Lowestoft, Great Yarmouth and the M25. The A14 links the town with Cambridge (57 miles), the Midlands and Felixstowe. The A140(single carriageway) links the town with Norwich.

A Roman road originally known as Pye Road and part of which is now the A140, linked Colchester with Caistor St. Edmund near Norwich.[36] An old milestone in Ipswich shows London as 69 miles (111 km) and Gt Yarmouth 54 miles (87 km) north.

Rail

Ipswich railway station is located on the Great Eastern Main Line from London Liverpool Street to Norwich. It is also the junction of railway lines to Felixstowe and Lowestoft. The station is served by National Express East Anglia. There is another railway station serving the Rose Hill area, called Derby Road which is on the line to Felixstowe.

Bus & tram

Bus services are operated by Ipswich Buses and First Eastern Counties. Route number 66 is a partially guided busway connecting Martlesham Heath and Kesgrave to the town and the railway station.[37] It also had an electric tram system from 1903 until 1926 and a trolleybus system from 2 September 1923 until 23 August 1963.[38]

It is the last place in the area to have an independent bus company with the unusual practice of naming its buses .

Air

See also: Ipswich Airport

The town used to feature a small grass-runway airport (ICAO code: EGSE), opened by His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales on 26 June 1930 with regular flights to Clacton, Southend and Jersey by Channel Airways and later to the Netherlands and Manchester by Suckling Airways. The airport was delicensed on 31 December 1996. Ipswich Airport[39] and the area was re-developed into the residential district of Ravenswood with the front of the Grade 2 listed control building, designed by Heining and Chitty in 1938, integrated into new scheme.[40]

The nearest international flights now are from Stansted Airport and Norwich International Airport, both approximately 47 miles (76 km) away. Other airports within a 2 hour drive are Gatwick, Heathrow and Luton Airport.

Port

The Port of Ipswich, operated by Associated British Ports[41] offers a mix of facilities for handling containers, timber, dry bulk cargo oil as well as a Ro-Ro terminal. It is one of the Haven ports along with the Port of Felixstowe and Harwich International.

Sport

Ipswich's sole professional football team are Ipswich Town, who were established in 1878 and play at the 30,300 capacity Portman Road Stadium.[42][43] They have a strong rivalry with Norwich City F.C.. Ipswich Town was home to the two most successful England managers, Sir Alf Ramsey (who is buried in the Old Cemetery in the town) and Sir Bobby Robson. They won the League Championship in 1962 during Ramsey's reign and an FA Cup in 1978 and the UEFA Cup in 1981 under Robson.[44] They currently play in English football's second-tier league, the Football League Championship. Ipswich is also home to minor-lower league football team, Ipswich Wanderers and many others in the Suffolk and Ipswich Football League.

Ipswich Gymnastics Centre is one of only three fully Olympic accredited gymnastics facilities in the United Kingdom[45][46] The resident club has also been home to international gymnasts.

Speedway team, the Ipswich Witches, have ridden at Foxhall Stadium on the outskirts of Ipswich since 1951.[47] The Witches have won the national league title four times, and the national cup five times.[48] The stadium is also regularly used for Stock car racing. Ipswich had a racecourse which ran a mix of flat and National Hunt races from 1710 to 1911.

The town has representation in both codes of Rugby. It has two amateur Rugby Union teams, Ipswich RUFC who play in London 3 North East League, and Ipswich YM RUFC and an amateur rugby league side, Ipswich Rhinos, who play in the Rugby League Conference.

Ipswich is home to TeamIpswich Swimming. Formed in 1884, as Ipswich Swimming Club, the club is based at the town's 'Crown Pools', but also uses other pools in the town. The club have been Suffolk champions for several years running and have experienced high finishes in the Speedo league. TeamIpswich Swimming's most successful member is World Championship gold medallist Karen Pickering.

Ipswich 2006 serial murders

Main article: Ipswich 2006 serial murders

A serial killer or spree killer responsible for the murders of five women in Ipswich gained notoriety in late 2006, as the Ipswich Murderer. The five women were identified as sex workers; their bodies were found in December 2006.[49] Suffolk Constabulary formally linked the murders in their investigation.

Steven Gerald James Wright, who had previously worked at the Port of Felixstowe, was arrested at his house in Ipswich on 19 December.[50] On 21 December, Wright was formally charged with the murders of Gemma Adams, 25, Anneli Alderton, 24, Tania Nicol, 19, Paula Clennell, 24, and Annette Nicholls, 29. He appeared in Ipswich Magistrates' Court on 22 December 2006 and was remanded in custody until 2 January 2007 to appear in Ipswich Crown Court where he was remanded in custody for a second court appearance, held on 1 May 2007.[51] At that hearing he pleaded not guilty to all five murders. His trial began in Ipswich on 14 January 2008.[52] The jury returned a guilty verdict on 21 February, [53] and the next day, Wright was sentenced to life imprisonment by Mr Justice Gross, who recommended that he should never be released from prison, on the basis that the murders resulted from a "substantial degree of pre-meditation and planning".[54]

Famous residents

Main category: People from Ipswich

Probably the most famous person born in the town is the Tudor Cardinal Thomas Wolsey. The artist Thomas Gainsborough and the cartoonist "Giles" worked here, Horatio, Lord Nelson became Steward of Ipswich, and Margaret Catchpole began her adventurous career here. Alf Ramsey and Bobby Robson were both successful managers of Ipswich Town F.C. It is also purported that Geoffrey Chaucer, author of The Canterbury Tales was born here.

References in popular culture

References

  1. List of English cities by population from Census 2001 figures
  2. McMillan, A.A., 2005, A provisional Quaternary and Neogene lithostratigraphic framework Great Britain, Netherland Journal of Geosciences. vol. 84, n0. 2, pp, 87-107.
  3. "History of Medieval Ipswich". Retrieved on 2007-06-13.
  4. ""England's Oldest Town"". Retrieved on 2007-06-27.
  5. "Gypiswic in Doomsday book". Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
  6. K. Wade, 'Gipeswic - East Anglia's First Economic Capital 600-1066,' in N. P. Salmon and R. Malster (Eds), Ipswich Fron the First to the Third Millennium (Papers from an Ipswich Society Symposium), (Ipswich Society, Ipswich 2001), 1-6, at pp. 3-4.
  7. S. J. Plunkett, Suffolk in Anglo-Saxon Times (Tempus, Stroud 2005), 130-133, 201.
  8. Wade 2001.
  9. Wade 2001, 5.
  10. R. Malster, A History of Ipswich (Phillimore, Chichester 2000), 13.
  11. J. J. North, English Hammered Coinage (Spink and Son, London 1980), Volume I: Early Anglo-Saxon to Henry III, 'Mint Towns' (page 194), Ipswich, Suffolk: Edgar to John. Example figure:Aethelred II first hand type, Plate X no. 23, Cat. 766 & p. 120.
  12. Geoffrey Martin, 'The Medieval and Early Modern Borough' in N. P. Salmon and R. Malster (Eds), Ipswich From the First to the Third Millennium (Papers from an Ipswich Society Symposium), (Ipswich Society, Ipswich 2001), 7-17.
  13. Text of charter (translated into English) and image of 1200 Town Seal, see J. Wodderspoon, Memorials of the Ancient Town of Ipswich (Pawsey (Ipswich): Longman, Brown, Green & Longmans (London) 1850), 'Ancient Incorporation of the Town', pp 75-130, at pp 75-85.
  14. Malster 2000, 41-45.
  15. B. Zimmerman, 1899, 'The White Friars at Ipswich', Proc. Suffolk Institute of Archaeology 10 Part 2, 196-204, at p. 199.
  16. Wodderspoon 1850, 331-332.
  17. Malster 2000, 43-47, 63-67.
  18. Malster 2000, 67.
  19. J. M. Blatchly, A Famous Antient Seed-Plot of Learning (Ipswich School 2003), 27-41.
  20. "Fisons at the root of modern agriculture". Retrieved on 2007-06-17.
  21. "Tolly Cobbold Heritage". Retrieved on 2006-06-18.
  22. "Borin Van Loon: Ipswich Historic Lettering". Retrieved on 2007-06-15.
  23. "PIONEERING MANAGEMENT GUIDELINES FOR MODERN LISTED BUILDINGS". Context (September 1995).
  24. "Ipswich - Arras". Ipswich Borough Council. Retrieved on 2008-05-06.
  25. "Ipswich wins Clean Britain Award 2007", Evening Star (2007-03-13). 
  26. "Ipswich town competes for city status", BBC (1999-08-07). 
  27. "Grant of Planning Permission" (PDF). Retrieved on 2007-04-06.
  28. "About DanceEast". Retrieved on 2007-04-06.
  29. "The churches of Ipswich". Retrieved on 2007-06-15.
  30. Richard Atkins, David Ellesmere, Elizabeth Harsant (2006-04-01). "The case for a unitary Ipswich". Ipswich Borough Council.
  31. "Town council unitary bid success" (2007-03-27). Retrieved on 2007-06-04. 
  32. "Decision letters for the unitary proposals". Department for Communities and Local Government (25 July 2007). Retrieved on 2008-03-27.
  33. "Borough is awarded unitary status" (2007-07-25). 
  34. (2007-12-05). "Unitary bid put on hold". Retrieved on 2007-12-29.
  35. Draft proposals for unitary local government in Norfolk and Suffolk Boundary Committee
  36. By Nennius, John Allen and others (1848). "Six Old English Chronicles, of which Two are Now First Translated from the". Retrieved on 2008-01-20.
  37. "Eastern Counties Timetables - 66". Retrieved on 2008-01-15.
  38. "UK Trolleybus Systems - Ipswich". Retrieved on 2008-03-27.
  39. "Ipswich Airport". Ipswich Transport Museum. Retrieved on 2008-01-20.
  40. "Ipswich Airport". Risky Buildings. Retrieved on 2008-01-20.
  41. "Port of Ipswich". Retrieved on 2008-01-22.
  42. "Club History". Ipswich Town F.C.. Retrieved on 2008-11-25.
  43. "History of the Stadium". Ipswich Town F.C.. Retrieved on 2007-03-16.
  44. "Club honours". Ipswich Town F.C.. Retrieved on 2008-11-25.
  45. "Ipswich bids for Olympic glory", The Evening Star (9 November 2006). 
  46. London Organising Committee for the Olympic Games (3 March 2008). "East - Pre-games Training Camp Guide".
  47. "Club History". www.ipswich-witches.com. Retrieved on 2008-11-25.
  48. "Club Information". www.ipswich-witches.com. Retrieved on 2008-11-25.
  49. "Third prostitute 'was strangled'", BBC News, BBC (12 December 2006). Retrieved on 2006-12-12. 
  50. "Second man held in murders probe", BBC News (19 December 2006). 
  51. "Man remanded over Suffolk murders", BBC News (2 January 2007). 
  52. "Driver denies five murders", Times Online (2 May 2007). 
  53. "Wright guilty of Suffolk murders", BBC News (21 February 2008). 
  54. "Suffolk killer will die in prison", BBC News (22 February 2008). 

External links

Ipswich institutions

History