Roughton is a village and a civil parish in the English county of Norfolk. The village is located 3.7 miles (6.0 km) south of Cromer, 19.6 miles (31.5 km) north of Norwich and 6.5 miles (10.5 km) north-west of North Walsham. The village's name means 'Rough farm/settlement', referring to the character of the ground.
Amenities
Facilities in the village include a primary school, public house, village hall, fish and chip shop, play area, garage, windmill and fishing lake.[2]
In September 1933, Albert Einstein was brought to live in a small hut on Roughton Heath after fleeing Nazi Germany. Commander Oliver Locker-Lampson MP offered Einstein a refuge in Norfolk before he travelled to the United States. While here, he was sculpted by Jacob Epstein.[3] A blue plaque commemorating Einstein's stay can be found at the entrance of the New Inn public house in the village.[4] On 7 October 1933, he set sail from Southampton for a new life in the United States and never returned to Europe.
Einstein's visit inspired Mark Burgess’s radio play Einstein in Cromer.[5] The story behind Einstein's visit to Roughton has been told in a book - Saving Einstein. When Norfolk Hid a Genius. The Double Life of Oliver Locker-Lampson.[6] A NetflixdocudramaEinstein and the Bomb described Einstein's visit using Einstein’s own words.[7]
Disappearance of April Fabb
The schoolgirl April Fabb was cycling from Metton nearby to visit her sister in Roughton when she disappeared without trace on 8 April 1969.[8]