West Walton is a village and civil parish in the King's Lynn and West Norfolk District of Norfolk, England. OS Explorer Map 235(2006) – Wisbech & Peterborough North, Market Deeping & Crowland.
The parish of West Walton, in the 2001 Census, had a population of 1,659, increasing to 1,731 at the 2011 Census.
West Walton was established by the time of the Norman Conquest. The village's population, land ownership and productive resources were detailed in its entry in the Domesday Book of 1085. The Domesday Book, Englands Heritage, Then and Now, Editor: Thomas Hinde,Norfolk page 196, West Walton, In the great book West Walton is recorded by the name 'Waltuna'. The parish was held by William de Warenne with the Abbot of St Peter and St Paul, Cluny from him, The Abbot of Ely before and after 1066, and Oder from Ralph de Beufour. The survey mentions ½ church, 38 salt houses and 1100 sheep. The survey also records the presence of a fishery. In the Domesday survey fractions were used to indicate that the entry, in this case the church, was situated within more than one parish. The Normans in Norfolk, by Sue Margeson, Fabienne Seillier and Andrew Rogerson, (1994), p. 21,
The village is west-north-west of Norwich, west-south-west of King's Lynn and north of London and its location makes it, along with Walsoken, the most westerly village in Norfolk. The nearest town is Wisbech which is south of the village. The nearest railway station is at Watlington, Norfolk for the Fen Line which runs between King's Lynn and Cambridge. The nearest airport is Norwich International Airport.
West Walton parish council has 11 councillors. The councillors elect a chair. West Walton is part of the electoral ward of Walton. The population of this ward at the 2011 Census was 2,641.
The bell tower, and the church, are both recorded in the National Heritage List for England as Grade I listed buildings. The bell tower is under the care of the Churches Conservation Trust. The tower is 77 feet high (23 metres) high to parapet, or 90 feet (27 metres) high when the pinnacles are included. Flannery, Julian (2016). Fifty English Steeples: The Finest Medieval Parish Church Towers and Spires in England. New York City, New York, United States: Thames and Hudson. pp. 90–97. .
The church's rector was Edward Everard Blencowe (1806–1895) and in 1847 his sister Agnes Blencowe met the architect George Edmund Street here. Agnes was said to be the "best workwoman in England" and she and George Edmund Street's sister Mary Ann Street founded the Ladies’ Ecclesiastical Embroidery Society in 1854. The church still has a red and a green stole and a white frontal for the altar which were embroidered by Agnes Blencowe.
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