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Tostock

Attractions and Places To See around Tostock - Top 20

Best attractions and places to see around Tostock include historical landmarks, natural features, and cultural sites. This traditional Suffolk village, located approximately 8 miles east of Bury St. Edmunds, offers a tranquil experience focused on its historical charm and local community. The area features notable landmarks like the Parish Church of St. Andrew and natural spaces such as The Green and The Leys, providing a glimpse into authentic Suffolk life.

Best attractions and places to see around Tostock

  • The most popular attractions is St Edmundsbury Cathedral, a religious building that originated in the 11th century. It was rebuilt in the 12th and 16th centuries as a parish church, becoming a cathedral in 1914.
  • Another must-see spot is Gravel Track by Livermere Lake, a trail with varied terrain. This route offers different types of terrain to navigate, including forest sections and some obstacles.
  • Visitors also love St Mary's Church, Woolpit, a historical site known for its 15th-century double-hammerbeam angel roof. The church features finely crafted medieval bench ends and a south porch dating to 1430-1455.
  • Tostock is known for its historical sites, religious buildings, and natural features. The area offers a variety of attractions to see and explore, from ancient churches to open grasslands.
  • The attractions around Tostock are appreciated by the komoot community, with 97 upvotes and 48 photos shared by visitors.

Last updated: July 7, 2026

St Edmundsbury Cathedral

Highlight • Religious Site

The church with almost 1000 years of history was part of the abbey and has been extended and rebuilt several times in its history.

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Abbey Gate, Bury St Edmunds

Highlight • Historical Site

The Angel Hotel, a Georgian building on Angel Hill, was used by Charles Dickens while giving readings in the nearby Athenaeum and mentioned in The Pickwick Papers. Angelina Jolie also used the hotel as a base during the filming of Tomb Raider. A coaching inn has stood on this spot since the 15th century.

(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bury_St_Edmunds)

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St Mary's Church, Woolpit

Highlight • Historical Site

15th century double-hammerbeam angel roof

The church of The Blessed Virgin Mary in Woolpit is one of the great medieval churches of Suffolk, a county blessed with some of the finest country churches in England. Like so many other Suffolk villages Woolpit owes its superb church to the wealth of the medieval wool trade, but there was a church on this spot centuries before Suffolk wool merchants gained their wealth.

The earliest record of a church at Woolpit comes from AD 1005 when the Earl of the East Angles gave the church and manor here to the Shrine of St Edmund at Beodricsworth (Bury St Edmunds). The church remained the property of the Abbey until the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The Woolpit church originally sent 10 marks worth of tithes to support the monks of Bury, but at some point in the medieval period this sum claimed by the crown.

The monks of St Edmundsbury Abbey were furious, and determined to seek reparation. Two monks disguised themselves as Scottish pilgrims and without permission left the abbey and made the long journey to Rome, where they sought and obtained a Papal charter affirming their right to the money.

They were attacked and robbed on their return journey, but one of the monks hid the charter in his mug, and so preserved it. The pair's belongings had been stolen, so they had no choice but to beg their way back to the abbey. The Papal charter did the trick, however, and Woolpit's tithe once more went to help maintain sick monks.

Shortly before 1087, a new church was built at the behest of Abbot Baldwin. The only remaining feature of this Norman building is the priest's door in the south wall of the chancel.

The double-hammerbeam angel roof

OUR LADY OF WOOLPIT

Woolpit became a destination for pilgrims during the medieval period, when it held a richly decorated statue of Our Lady in its own chapel. No trace of this chapel now survives but it was probably on the north side of the chancel, where the vestry now stands.

Alternatively, it may have stood at the east end of the south aisle. Pilgrims began arriving at least as early as 1211 when the Bishop of Norwich ordered that their offerings be given to St Edmundsbury Abbey.

The Shrine of Our Lady of Woolpit became extremely popular during the 15th and 16th centuries. Henry VI visited twice, and Queen Elizabeth of York, wife of Henry VII, ordered that a pilgrimage be made on her behalf in 1501. In 1538 Henry VIII ordered that Catholic images be destroyed, and it seems likely that the statue was pulled down at that time. in 1551 the Court of Augmentation ordered that the chapel itself be pulled down and the material sold.

A curious scene took place at Woolpit during the tumult of the English Civil War. The incumbent rector was John Watson, and when he was ordered to accept the new Puritan style of worship he refused. He was removed from his living, and the Earl of Manchester sent armed men to enforce the order. The village split into two factions, and a furious melee broke out in the church. The rector was removed, and retired to Norfolk where he died shortly after.

St Mary's is worth visiting for its superb double-hammerbeam roof, decorated with carved figures of angels. Iconoclast William Dowsing did his best to destroy the angels in 1644. His deputy found 80 'superstitious Pictures' some of which he destroyed and others he ordered to be taken down. Many of the angel's heads were defaced but these were sensitively restored in the 19th century.

Other highlights include beautifully carved medieval bench ends decorated with a wide variety of carved figures. These figures probably survived because the Puritans considered them heraldic symbols rather than religious. Eye-catching figures include griffins and a very mournful looking dog.

Another highlight is a finely crafted south porch dating to 1430-1455. Over the porch arch is a parvise, a small chamber possibly used for storing important documents. The porch roof is vaulted with exceptionally detailed lierne vaulting and decorated bosses.

The eagle lectern is a rare early Tudor relic, made around 1520 and one of just 20 surviving examples made to accept a chained Bible. A local tradition suggests that Elizabeth I gave the lectern to the church, though there is no proof of this. The queen did visit nearby Haughley Park in 1600 and sent one of her knights to visit Woolpit on her behalf. It is certainly possible that he gave the parishioners money that was used to buy the lectern.

The screen is 15th century, though the gates are Jacobean. The screen is painted and gilded and retains the medieval beam made to hold the rood, or crucifix. The base of the screen is painted with figures of saints including St Withburga, St Edmund, St Etheldreda, and St Felix. The face of St Felix is actually a portrait of Henry Page, the serving rector at the time of the Victorian restoration. Over the arch is a beautifully vaulted painted dedication board, decorated with figures of angels.

The large east window is a beautiful example of Decorated Gothic style, with reassembled fragments of medieval glass in the upper lights.

Each end of the chancel choir stalls has a bench end with an intricate figure of a Green Man. Set against the wall is a fascinating carving of a woodwose, a wild man of the woods figure found throughout East Anglia.

Most of the building is Perpendicular Gothic, dating from the mid-15th century but the chancel and south aisle are 14th century. The tower and spire were added in the 1850s by architect Richard Phipson after the medieval originals were damaged by lightning. This is actually the third tower; the first was damaged in a thunderstorm in 1602 and the second was blown down in a hurricane in 1703.

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Not 100% sure the cut through from Ampton to Gt Livermere is a legit cycle trail. I was chased off by a very grumpy gamekeeper who told me it was a footpath not a bridleway.

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St. Saviour's Hospital, Bury St Edmunds

Highlight • Historical Site

The hospital of St. Saviour, without the north gate, was begun by Abbot Samson about the year 1184, but it was not finished nor fully endowed until the time of King John. It was originally founded for a warden, twelve chaplain priests, six clerks, twelve poor men, and twelve poor women. 

Abbot Samson and the convent granted to the hospital the place upon which the buildings stood; £13 in silver of their village of Icklingham; two portions of their church of Melford; portions of certain tithes; eight acres of corn in Cockfield; and their houses at 'Telefort,' saving to the monastery an annual service of 2s., and to the canons 12d. This grant was confirmed on 16 July, 1206, by John de Gray, bishop of Norwich. 

The annual value of this hospital in 1291 is set down at the round sum of £10. 

A charter of Abbot John, 1292, relative to this hospital, lays down that the inmates henceforth must be poor; that 6s. 8d. was to be allowed to clerks and laymen, and 5s. to sisters; and that the warden was to be a man of prudence and discretion. The endowment was at the same time augmented by 10 acres of land and two of meadow near the south gate, and by 22d. rent in the town. 

In the time of Edward I, there were only seven chaplains, and it was decided to dismiss the poor sisters and in their place to receive and maintain old and infirm priests. 

In 1336 the abbey successfully resisted the crown's custom of imposing pensioners on the hospital funds; securing a grant that after the death of John de Broughton the hospital should not again be called upon to provide corrodies out of its revenues. 

In 1390 William the abbot, with the consent of Adam de la Kyndneth, guest-master, granted to Edward Merssh of Ickworth a corrody in this hospital for his life. In the following year Robert Rymer was granted a corrody by the same abbot in St. Saviour's, through the vacancy caused by the death of Edward Merssh. In the year 1392 John Reve, of Pakenham, was admitted an inmate on the following terms: he was to have board and lodging in the hospital for life, and to receive annually a gown, a pair of stockings, and a pair of shoes. It is added in a memorandum that John Reve in consideration of this grant was to pay to the master of the hospital, towards the new fabric of the hospital, the large sum of 26 marks by the hand of Robert Ashfield. The hospital was also used from time to time as a refuge for worn-out priests. Abbot John of Northwold, when founding the charnel house, laid down that its two chaplains, when they became infirm, were to be admitted to St. Saviour's Hospital, save if they were suffering from any contagious disease, when they were to be sent to the hospital of St. Peter or that of St. Nicholas. 

Among the town muniments are five rolls of accounts of this hospital for the years 1353-4, 1374-5, 1385-6, 1386-7, and 1438-9. Mention is made in the accounts for 1386-7 (when the receipts were £106 2s. 9½d. and the expenses £234 3s. 6¾d.), among the ornaments of the chapel of St. Thomas in the infirmary church, of 12s. for a silver box placed beneath the feet of an image, and a base (corbel stone) bought of Simon, the abbey mason, at 5s., for the image to stand on at the right corner of the altar. Also three books with the services of the passion and translation of St. Thomas, 13s. 4d. Sixpence was paid to a messenger going to Clare to get a doctor in theology to preach on St. Thomas's Day, and then on to Sudbury for tiles for the pavement of St. Thomas's Chapel. A suffragan bishop received a gift this year, as well as his chaplain and servant; he probably attended to consecrate the chapel or altar of St. Thomas.

St. Saviour's Hospital was by far the largest and most important institution of its kind in the town. It suffered much at the hands of the rioters of 1327, both in stock and goods; the loss was valued at £21 9s. 6d., including horses, cows, and pigs, as well as smaller articles, such as six silver spoons worth 7s. 6d., and a maser worth a mark.

The accounts of this hospital are not entered separately from those of the abbey in the Valor of 1535. There are eight entries of dues payable to the hospital from certain abbey properties, amounting to £6 2s. 3d. This intermingling of the accounts of the hospital with those of the abbey arose from the fact that in 1528 Pope Clement issued a bull whereby the profits of this hospital were annexed to the abbey and specially assigned for the exercise of hospitality at the abbot's table. 

The hospital site and buildings (save the lead) were granted on its suppression by Henry VIII to Sir John Williams and Anthony Stringer in February, 1542-3, but they almost immediately received licence to alienate to Nicholas Bacon and Henry Ashfield. 

Wardens of the Hospital of St. Saviour, Bury St. Edmunds

Peter de Shenedon, occurs 1318
Nicholas Snytterton, occurs 1374
Walter de Totyngtone, occurs 1385
John Power,  occurs 1390
Adam de Lakyngheth,  1406

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Tips from the Community

Neil Sneade
March 31, 2025, St Edmundsbury Cathedral

The present building is a cathedral. The abbey that preceded it was shut down after the reformation and only its ruins remain.

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Site of BCQ202 from British Cycle Quest

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Lots of different types of terrain to learn, pay attention to some of the forest turns not all are obvious, few lift your bike over log sections, one built for short people section but fun, watch your head;-). Beware of a couple of very bust main road crossings!!! This time of year give yourself time, lights and toes and fingers need warmth. Shout out to 'Wolf Way' for the route;-)

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Old Church

Translated by Google

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OS shows it as a footpath.

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This beautiful cathedral was originally built as a church in the early 13th century and became a cathedral for the newly established Diocese of St Edmundsbury and Ipswich in 1914. It has some beautiful characteristics including a large rose window, detailed stone carvings, fantastic gardens and the notable Abbey Gate.

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Would have been amazing in its day but now it’s just a bit of ruined masonry on a busy road into Bury, opposite a Ford garage and next to a Tesco warehouse. Sic transit gloria.

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Occupies the site of the old abbey with a very scenic set-paved road taking you past the front.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What historical landmarks can I explore around Tostock?

Tostock and its surroundings are rich in history. You can visit the impressive St Edmundsbury Cathedral, which originated in the 11th century and has been rebuilt multiple times. Another significant historical site is St Mary's Church, Woolpit, known for its 15th-century double-hammerbeam angel roof and finely crafted medieval bench ends. Within Tostock itself, the Parish Church of St. Andrew, dating from the 12th century, and Tostock House, an early 19th-century Grade II listed building, offer further glimpses into the area's past.

Are there any natural features or green spaces to enjoy in Tostock?

Yes, Tostock offers several tranquil natural spaces. The village features The Green, a central natural area within a conservation zone, perfect for a leisurely stroll. On the south side of the village, you'll find The Leys, an open grassland area that includes the village pond. For a more varied outdoor experience, consider the Gravel Track by Livermere Lake, which offers different types of terrain, including forest sections.

What kind of outdoor activities can I do near Tostock?

The area around Tostock is excellent for various outdoor activities, especially cycling. You can find numerous routes for gravel biking, road cycling, and general touring. For gravel biking, explore routes like the 'Gravel Track by Livermere Lake – Livermere Gravel Track loop'. Road cyclists can enjoy easy routes such as 'Church of St Mary, Rougham – St Ethelbert's Church loop'. For touring, consider the 'Drinkstone Windmill – The Checkers Free House loop'. You can find more details and specific routes on the Gravel biking around Tostock, Road Cycling Routes around Tostock, and Cycling around Tostock guide pages.

Are there family-friendly attractions in the Tostock area?

Yes, several attractions cater to families. St Edmundsbury Cathedral and St Mary's Church, Woolpit are both listed as family-friendly historical sites. Additionally, Tostock Animal Parks offers a hands-on experience with various animals like alpacas, sheep, and peacocks, known for its community-driven ethos and accessible pricing.

What is the best time of year to visit Tostock for outdoor activities?

While Tostock can be enjoyed year-round, the spring and summer months generally offer the most pleasant weather for outdoor activities like walking and cycling. However, the historical sites and churches are accessible throughout the year. For specific weather conditions or seasonal events, it's advisable to check local forecasts closer to your visit.

Can I find places to eat or drink in Tostock?

Yes, Tostock has local establishments where you can enjoy refreshments. The Gardener's Arms public house, located next to The Green, is a local landmark and a good spot for a drink. While the Maglia Rosso Cycle Shop & Café is permanently closed, there are other cafes and pubs in the broader Suffolk area that can be found along various cycling and walking routes.

Are there any unique cultural events or points of interest in Tostock?

Tostock has a vibrant local community with cultural points of interest. The village hosts an Annual Art Show, which is well-attended by both artists and the public. The active Village Hall also hosts regular events, reflecting the community spirit of Tostock. These events offer a chance to experience authentic Suffolk village life.

What do visitors enjoy most about the attractions around Tostock?

Visitors particularly appreciate the rich history and architectural beauty of the religious sites, such as the nearly 1000-year history of St Edmundsbury Cathedral and the stunning 15th-century double-hammerbeam angel roof at St Mary's Church, Woolpit. The varied terrain and forest sections of trails like the Gravel Track by Livermere Lake are also highly rated for outdoor enthusiasts.

Is there public transport available to Tostock attractions?

Tostock is a traditional Suffolk village, and while specific public transport links directly to every attraction might be limited, it is located approximately eight miles east of Bury St. Edmunds, which serves as a larger transport hub. For detailed public transport information to Tostock or specific attractions, it's recommended to check local bus schedules or plan your journey from Bury St. Edmunds.

Are there any historical ruins or lesser-known historical sites to visit?

Beyond the prominent churches, you can explore the historical remains of St. Saviour's Hospital, Bury St Edmunds. This site, though now just ruined masonry, was originally founded around 1184 and served as a significant institution for the poor and infirm. It offers a glimpse into medieval charitable practices and the area's past.

Can I find cycling routes suitable for different difficulty levels near Tostock?

Yes, the cycling routes around Tostock cater to various skill levels. For easy road cycling, you can find routes like the 'Church of St Mary, Rougham – St Ethelbert's Church loop'. Moderate gravel biking options include the 'Gravel Track by Livermere Lake – Livermere Gravel Track loop'. More challenging routes, such as the 'Abbey Gate, Bury St Edmunds – Knettishall Heath Ponies loop', are available for experienced gravel bikers. Explore the dedicated cycling guides for more options and details on difficulty levels.

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