Changes in government policy have discontinued management of coastal erosion in North Norfolk.[4]
Village amenities
Kelling is a small village (pop 177 in 2011), which had a reputation for smuggling.[5] The village has a reading room, which is now a book shop, gallery and tea-room. There is a small Victorian school house built in 1876 and opened October 1877,[6] still in use as a primary school today on the coastal side of the A149 just opposite the reading room. Today it is attended by 90[7] children from the surrounding area. The postal addresses for Kelling are unusual as only 10 of the 37 properties have a number; the rest are known only by the house name[8] the postcode for the village is NR25 7EL.
Around Kelling are Kelling Heath and Muckleburgh Hill, two raised areas of outstanding natural beauty. The heaths contain a network of paths, nature trail and views of the surrounding area. Kelling village is 1 km from the coast which is accessed via a road used as a public path (RUPP). The coastline at Kelling along with Weybourne and Salthouse was of part the strategic defence during the Second World War.
Images
The street circa 1911
The Street
The Street
The Old Reading Room
The Old Reading Room
Kelling Village School
Kelling War Memorial
Poppies in field near Kelling June 2002
World War II Type 22 Pillbox on the shingle beach at Kelling
^Weybourne, Peaceful mirror of a turbulent past: by Peter Brooks, Published by Poppyland Publishing: Page 16, Smugglers and Volunteers: ISBN0-946148-05-8