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The new road bridges the railway line and the River Gipping.
The River Gipping runs through the village.
The Gipping Valley River Path moves to the west bank at the bridge.
It is watered by the River Gipping.
It was named after the River Gipping and administered from Needham Market.
For the river, see River Gipping.
The countryside around Claydon is set among low-lying hills and lies next to the River Gipping.
In the 18th century the Gipping was made navigable between Stowmarket and Ipswich by a series of locks.
The Tyrells of Gipping, for instance, were closely related to the Darcies and through them with other members of the court group.
The Gipping Valley River Path runs along the eastern bank of the river, which is flanked by industrial buildings.
Its source is near the village of Rattlesden, and is the major tributary of the River Gipping.
It continues in the same general direction, passing Great Gipping Wood and Old Newton Hall, both on the north bank.
Gipping is a village and civil parish in the Mid Suffolk district of Suffolk in eastern England.
It is crossed by the River Gipping which becomes the River Orwell at Ipswich on becoming an estuary.
His most important retainer was Sir James Tyrell of Gipping (Suff.), although Gloucester employed him mainly elsewhere.
The river splits into two just to the north of the B1078 bridge, with the River Gipping to the east and the Old River to the west.
The town did not recover for nearly two hundred years, with the canalisation of the River Gipping in the late 18th Century and the introduction of the railway.
Alton Reservoir was opened in 1987 and is fed from the River Gipping and bore holes on the north side of the River Orwell.
Under the Roman empire, the area around Ipswich formed an important route inland to rural towns and settlements via the Orwell and River Gipping.
The Gipping Way reverts to the east bank at the lock, and nearby is a nineteenth-century house called Gipping Weir.
The River Gipping (the source of the River Orwell), runs at the bottom of the village and was a busy navigable waterway during the 19th century.
It is a fertile district with undulating terrain and watered by streams which rise within its limits and feeding the rivers Thet, Gipping, Lark and Brett.
Now passing through Ipswich, the river also forks, with the eastern branch being the River Gipping, and the western branch forming the start of the River Orwell.
Butler was the eldest son of John Butler of Watton at Stone and his second wife Dorothy, a daughter of William Tyrrell of Gipping, Suffolk.
The railway comes close to the river, and the Gipping Valley River Path briefly leaves the river, to run alongside the railway, but rejoins the towpath at Baylham Mill.