A flood in 1236 that destroyed
Wisbech Castle is also said to have washed away the village of Dolproon (or Dolprun) near Long Sutton and its existence has been handed down in the lines: "When Dolproon stood, Long Sutton was a wood. When Dolproon was washed down, Long Sutton became a town."[3]
By the mid-14th century, it was considered to be one of the richest communities in Lincolnshire.[4]
In the 1800s the town was on the circuits of touring theatre companies, in 1842 the Bullen theatre company performed here.[5]Long Sutton Market House was completed in 1856.[6]
In 1987 a Butterfly Park was opened near Long Sutton. The park was closed in October 2012 after a series of losses and bad weather.[8]
On 21 June 2012, at about 2:30 pm, a tornado hit Long Sutton. Particular damage was caused in Woad Lane with the tornado "leaving a trail of destruction in its wake".[9]
Governance
An
electoral ward in the same name exists. This stretches south to
Tydd St Mary, with a total population at the 2011 Census of 7,260.[10]
Community
Long Sutton is the terminus of the
A1101. It is now bypassed, with
Sutton Bridge, by the
A17 which follows the former railway. In 2001 the town had a population of 6,461.[11][page needed]
Long Sutton is served by one main local newspaper company, Spalding Today, which produces the Spalding Guardian and the Lincolnshire Free Press.[12]
Food canning factory
Since the 1940s, one of the largest local employers was the factory of Eastern Counties Preserves Ltd (ECP).[13][14][15] Known for their ‘Peasant Boy’ brand, they were manufacturers of canned goods and jams, with another canning factory in
Forfar, Angus, Scotland, and an office in
Eastcheap, London. The company was owned by Philip B. Lockwood and later became known from 1959 as Lockwoods Foods Ltd.[13][16] Their principal factory was situated on Bridge Road, nestled between
Sutton Bridge and Long Sutton.[13] It produced a range of Lockwoods own-brand canned vegetables, fruits and carbonated beverages,[13] ranging from
mushy peas to seasonal strawberries to a variety of canned beverages including
cola[17][18]ginger beer,[19] and
lemonade shandy.[20] The firm catered to UK and overseas markets, including third-party brands such as
Del Monte. In the 1980s the factory was acquired by
Premier Foods, as Lockwoods Foods Limited went into
administrative receivership. Premier Foods, among other food brands, later produced the staple
Fray Bentos canned
steak and kidney pie at the Long Sutton factory. After the sale of Fray Bentos to
Baxters in 2011, production moved to Scotland in 2013.[21][22] Since 2011, the factory now belongs to the
Princes Food & Drink Group.[23] Long Sutton is its largest food production site in the United Kingdom.[15][23]
St Mary's Church has a 13th-century lead-covered timber spire similar in design to
Chesterfield Parish Church's twisted spire, but Long Sutton's is straight. The church is a
Grade I listed building.[24] The spire is 149 feet (45 metres) high.[25]
Within the church is a memorial inscribed "Alas! Poor Bailey" to a local surgeon, John Bailey, who was killed by robbers while returning from a visit to a patient in
Tydd St Mary just after midnight on 22 April 1795. His murderers were not caught.[26][27]
Town
public houses are the Olde Ship Inn in London Road, the Crown and Woolpack in High Street, and the Corn Exchange and the Granary in Market Street.
Dick Turpin (1705–1739), highwayman, lived in Long Sutton for about nine months as John Palmer (or Parmen).[34] There is a road in the town named after him.
Alfred Fletcher (1841–1915), journalist and left-wing politician, was born in Long Sutton.
Richard Winfrey (1858–1944) was a Liberal MP, newspaper publisher and campaigner for agricultural rights. His family donated Winfrey Park.[35]
^Quick, M. E. (2002). Railway passenger stations in England, Scotland and Wales – a chronology. Richmond: Railway and Canal Historical Society. p. 277.
OCLC931112387.