1
Station Road
Stone house in Little Houghton.
Image: © Burgess Von Thunen
Taken: 25 Mar 2013
0.02 miles
2
The Village of Little Houghton
The church tower can be seen on the right. Regarding the water in the middle distance, a lot of work has been done to construct pits that reduce flooding in the valley.
Image: © Kokai
Taken: 31 May 2006
0.04 miles
3
Little Houghton-Station Road
At the junction with Meadow Lane.
Image: © Ian Rob
Taken: 9 Oct 2019
0.06 miles
4
Little Houghton
Stone property on the corner of Meadow Lane and Station Road.
Image: © Burgess Von Thunen
Taken: 25 Mar 2013
0.07 miles
5
Little Houghton
Little Houghton looking along Bedford Road to the village centre.
Image: © Gordon Cragg
Taken: 13 Jun 2009
0.08 miles
6
Little Houghton, Bedford Road
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 19 Aug 2018
0.09 miles
7
Little Houghton
The Bedford Road leading into village.
Image: © Gordon Cragg
Taken: 13 Jun 2009
0.09 miles
8
St Mary's and her churchyard
Image: © Philip Jeffrey
Taken: 18 Nov 2018
0.10 miles
9
The Post Office, Little Houghton
The Post Office, Little Houghton with village stocks outside.
Image: © Gordon Cragg
Taken: 13 Jun 2009
0.10 miles
10
Little Houghton Parish Church
The Church of St Mary the Virgin at Little Houghton is a Grade II* listed building (Historic England List entry Number: 1041558 https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1041558 ).
There is no record of a church in the village of Little Houghton at the time of the Domesday Book but there is evidence that one was founded by William de Hohtone around AD1100. There are no traces of the original building, probably of wood, remaining. Of the present church, the south door arch and the font are thought to date from about AD1200. The original three-storey tower, dating from around 1225, is of fine proportion with an upper arcade of five openings on each face. It is likely that these were filled-in, creating a ‘blind’ arcade, when the fourth, bell stage, storey with parapet and finely decorated limestone frieze, was added in about 1425. The blind arcade is considered to be an unusual and special feature of the tower, the whole of which underwent a complete restoration in 2010.
The church was substantially rebuilt in the Gothic style in 1873-74 when the nave was heightened with a three-bay clerestory and the north aisle was added. The tower arch, heavily restored during the Victorian rebuilding, and the chancel arch together with an adjacent, smaller arch in the south wall of the chancel, are the only parts that remain of the early thirteenth century work. An extension to the west end of the north aisle was added in 2000, to provide kitchen facilities (http://www.littlehoughtonvillage.co.uk/the-parish-church/ History of The Parish Church of St Mary the Virgin).
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 19 Aug 2018
0.10 miles