The name Foulsham is of
Anglo-Saxon origin. The village has been the site of major
Bronze Age discoveries, including a
golden torc ploughed-up in 1846 and a hoard of 141 copper-socketed axeheads, discovered in 1953 and now in the care of
Norwich Castle Museum. In the
Domesday Book, Foulsham is listed as a settlement of 103 households in the
hundred of Eynesford. In 1086, the village was part of the
East Anglian estates of
King William I. The worth of Foulsham is recorded as two churches, a mill, twelve cattle, four hundred pigs, fifty goats and 13 sesters of honey. Old Hall Farm was built in the parish in the 16th-Century and was at one time the residence of
Maj-Gen. Philip Skippon, a
Parliamentarian commander at the
Battle of Naseby. In the Seventeenth Century, Foulsham was a thriving market place until a store of gunpowder exploded on the 15 June 1770 which led to a fire that consumed the whole market place.
Foulsham railway station opened in 1882 as a stop on the
Great Eastern Railway line between
Aylsham South and
County School. The station closed in 1964 as part of the
Beeching cuts, with Foulsham's closest railway station today being
Sheringham for
Bittern Line services to
Cromer and
Norwich.
RAF Foulsham opened in 1942 as an air-base for various squadrons of
No. 3 Group and
No. 100 Group RAF throughout the
Second World War. On 28 July 1943, RAF Foulsham was the site of a forced landing by a
B-17 Flying Fortress piloted by
Lt-Col. John C. Morgan after a strategic bombing raid of
Hanover. For his actions, Morgan was awarded the
Medal of Honor. The airbase was retired in 1945 and the
Ministry of Defence eventually sold the land in the 1980s. ==Geography==