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Wolsey's Gate

4 College St, Ipswich IP4 1BF, United Kingdom

Wolsey's Gate
Tourist attraction
3.8
16 reviews
8 comments
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3533+5R Ipswich, United Kingdom
ipswichhistory.com
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Mr Fruitgum
Mr Fruitgum
Apparently it's very famous
PJ Boyles
PJ Boyles
Tudor brickwork gate, the remains of a college founded by Henry VIII's friend Cardinal Wolsey, who was born in Ipswich. The gateway is sadly neglected, and isolated amongst the traffic of the one way system.
Michael Gregory
Michael Gregory
Nice garden centre. A bit overpriced however.
Mark Proctor
Mark Proctor
Historical part of town
Venkata K. C. Tata
Venkata K. C. Tata
parking is bit expensive
Lesley Mortimer
Lesley Mortimer
History of Ipswich
David Clark
David Clark1 year ago
Beautiful piece of history surrounded by modern day busy road. Car park behind this gate would be amazing for an archaeological dig. Shame Time team is no more.
Roy Barclay
Roy Barclay2 years ago
Very historic 16th Century, red-brick Water Gate, to be found near Ipswich Waterfront, backing onto St. Peter's churchyard. (There's a sculpture of Ipswich's favourite son, Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, located within easy walking distance, a little north towards the town centre on the corner of Silent Street). Wolsey's Gate was built in 1528, marking the entrance to his ecclesiastical College for trainees intending to study at Cardinal College & take Holy Orders. It's a site where the Catholic Cardinal visited with personal interest, being his pet project to raise the status of his home town. Considered the most important man in the country, after the king, Wolsey spent a lot of his time in London, returning to Ipswich by sail from the Thames Estuary, & would have entered by the Water Gate from the Orwell. His long-term vision for the site was never realised due to his fall from grace with Henry 8th, when Wolsey failed to obtain the marriage annulment requested from him. Only a year after Wolsey's Gate was erected, the Cardinal lost his important position & was arrested. He died the following year after his health declined rapidly from the shock of his imprisonment. Today, Wolsey's Gate is in an obvious state of neglect & decay, the red-brick pointing having been eroded from the roots of ivy & buddleia. It's now deteriorating yearly from the constant attack from traffic fumes & road salt, to such extent that the carved stone indicating Wolsey's Gateway, is almost illegible. It suffers terribly from having become isolated on the appallingly designed no-mans-land traffic island, inside this section of the town centre 1-way system. From behind, Wolsey's Gate is acting as no more than a wall to keep trespassers out of a disused yard. Amazing how such a venerable curiosity, listed Grade 1, can be so abused as this & just left to decay...
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