For a small market town
which has been
by passed by the A14 - and perhaps because of that very fact - Needham
Market possesses a variety of historic lettering examples. The centre
of the town remains largely unspoilt; it includes an handsome railway
station, too. On the road leading to Needham Lake is the picturesquely
named Rampant Horse Inn, still bearing two of the relief lettering
brewery signs which survive on the front of The
Emperor
public house in Ipswich (as well as the house further up the main
street - see below). The Ferry Boat Inn in Old Felixstowe,
Hadleigh, Manningtree,
The Globe
in Ipswich ('Cobbold's) and Off
licences
in Ipswich also carry the name. To the right is:
'TOLLY
COBBOLD'
and to the
left
'TOLLY COBBOLD
ALES & SPIRITS'
Between them
the
splendid arc of
'RAMPANT
HORSE
INN'
encloses a window, all picked out in black paint.
Nearby, on
the old Ipswich to Stowmarket road is a bus
shelter with a
Victorian wall post-box bearing the 'V' and 'R' of Victoria Regina
either side of a regal crown. It is a plain cast iron design with 'POST
OFFICE' in capitals on the projecting rain cover. All are readable
still despite many coats of red paint. To the left, under the bus
shelter itself is a rather grand stone tablet in the shape of a shield
with curved pediment. It is set into the same red brick wall and reads
in small and large caps:
'V ... R
This tablet
was erected
in commemoration
of the
Queen's long reign.
1897.'
(The lead of the figure
one in the date has dropped out and
three holes remain.)
Up the busy
road on the same side, a modest terrace of
shops (Needham
Market still supports butchery, bakery and other small businesses which
have disappeared in much of nearby Ipswich) whose frontages belie their
age, if the '1716' date (see
inset) is to be believed. Further along
the initials 'JB' are fixed in
large wrought iron decorative
characters, painted white and positioned between the first and second
storeys (again, see inset). We wonder whose initials they are.

-
Accross the
street an entrance in white Suffolk brick
with a large
green painted plaque above, bearing the white lettering:
'The Alms
House
for eight poor widows or widowers belonging to
this place was
originally built and endowed by some benevolent individual whose name
is now unknown.
Further endowed by the late Saml.
Alexander Esq. repaired and in part rebuilt by public subscription
A.D. 1856 [?]'

-
Towards
Stowmarket is a remarkable frontage bearing a
circle with
masonic dividers above the initials
'SM' and the date '1718'.
Directly
accross the street is the former public house on the corner of Bridge
Street which again bears
'TOLLY
COBBOLD'
in relief lettering on two
faces. The decorative gable end lettering is picked out in black, but
that on the long side is painted the same colour as the cement
rendering, although (see enlargement) the fluorescent lighting fitment
is still above it.