Place:Creeting St. Peter, Suffolk, England

Watchers
NameCreeting St. Peter
Alt namesCreeting-St. Petersource: Family History Library Catalog
West Creetingsource: Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales of 1870-72
TypeParish
Coordinates52.183°N 1.038°E
Located inSuffolk, England
Also located inEast Suffolk, England     (1894 - 1974)
See alsoStow Hundred, Suffolk, Englandancient division of which it was a part
East Stow Rural, Suffolk, Englandrural district in which it was located 1894-1934
Gipping Rural, Suffolk, Englandrural district in which it was located 1934-1974
Mid Suffolk District, Suffolk, Englanddistrict municipality covering the area since 1974
source: Family History Library Catalog

A Vision of Britain through Time provides the following description of Creeting St. Peter from John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales of 1870-72:

"CREETING-ST. PETER, or West Creeting, a parish in Stow [registration] district, Suffolk; near the Eastern Union railway, 2½ miles SE of Stowmarket. Post town: Stowmarket. Acres: 1,335. Real property: £2,475. Population: 248. Houses: 49. The property is much subdivided. The living is a rectory in the diocese of Norwich. Value: £401. Patron: the Rev. E. Paske. The church is good."

Creeting St. Peter is 1.5 miles (2.4 km) northwest of Creeting St. Mary, Suffolk. This is measured directly between the two points 'as the crow flies' ignoring any geographical features such as rivers or hills. (Source: GENUKI)

Creeting St. Peter was originally a parish in the Stow Hundred. When rural districts were adopted as a form of local administration in 1894, the parish was placed in East Stow Rural District. In 1934 the rural district was abolished. Creeting St. Peter was divided into two parts with its more built-up section absorbed into Stowmarket which was an urban district and the section that remained rural became part of Gipping Rural District. In 1974 Creeting St. Peter joined the Mid Suffolk District along with Stowmarket and the rest of Gipping Rural District.

The present parish of Creeting St. Peter had a population of 275 at the UK census of 2011.

Wikipedia provides no historical facts about Creeting St. Peter.

Research Tips

  • A map of Suffolk from 1900 provided online by A Vision of Britain Through Time (University of Portsmouth Department of Geography) can be enlarged to view individual parishes. Careful inspection will usually lead to the discovery of smaller hamlets founded before 1900. The rural districts (marked with their names printed in blue) are those in existence in 1900, not those introduced in 1934. The more ancient hundreds are marked in red. Most (but not all) parish names are underlined in red.

Suffolk Information

  • Suffolk Family History Society A community of people who are interested in the local and family history pertaining to Suffolk.
  • Suffolk Archives (Record Office) ( e-mail archives@suffolk.gov.uk) - The Suffolk Archive has branches in Ipswich (at The Hold, 131 Fore Street, Ipswich, IP4 1LR), Bury St. Edmunds (at 77 Raingate Street, Bury St Edmunds, IP33 2AR) and Lowestoft (at Lowestoft Library, Clapham Road South, Lowestoft, NR32 1DR). Includes: a good-looking website, research services and publications.
  • Suffolk Churches This is an excellent guide to most of the Suffolk Churches with lots of pictures and descriptions of the architecture and history. It includes many chapels. If you have trouble visiting Suffolk to see where your ancestor were baptised, married and buried, or even those who want to just add to their knowledge, this is the site for you.

For those whose families may have wandered over the county borders:

British Government Information

  • The National Archives or "TNA" - More than 850,000 Probate Wills from 1610-1858 (PCC wills dating back to 1670 have been completed). Free access to indexes but copy of a will costs £10.00. (Ancestry has an index to wills published after 1858.) Access also available to the Domesday Book, World War One Diaries and various other information. Their catalogue called Discovery holds more than 32 million descriptions of records held by The National Archives and more than 2,500 archives across the country including County Record Offices. Over 9 million records are available for download.
  • The British Library - This vast collection contains millions of bibliographic records, British newspapers, many now digitised and searchable on-line and much more.
  • Commonwealth War Graves Commission - The database lists the 1.7 million men and women of the Commonwealth forces who died during the two world wars and the 23,000 cemeteries, memorials and other locations world-wide where they are commemorated. The register can also be searched for details of the 67,000 Commonwealth civilians who died as a result of enemy action in the Second World War.
  • General Register Office - provides official copies of birth marriage & death certificates for England & Wales.
  • FreeBMD - provides Civil Registration index information for England and Wales. The transcribing of the records, by volunteers, is ongoing and contains well over 279 million records at August 2020. Records are complete from 1837 to 1983. Later records are not complete.
  • FreeCEN - provides a "free-to-view" online searchable database of the UK census returns from 1841 to 1891. The transcribing of the records, by volunteers, is ongoing and contains well over 39 million records at August 2020. At that time Suffolk records appeared to be only for the 1891 census and a few for the 1871 census.
  • FreeREG - provides baptism, marriage, and burial records, which have been transcribed, by volunteers, from parish and non-conformist church registers in the UK. There are over 49 million entries with just under 300,000 records for Suffolk at August 2020.
  • Ministry of Defence (url not found)- provides information for obtaining details about service records post 1920
  • Royal Air Force Museum (url not found) - for information on the archive and library research material available.