Swaffham is a market town and civil parish in the Breckland District and English county of Norfolk. It is situated 12 miles east of King’s Lynn and 31 miles west of Norwich. The name of the town derives from the Old English Swaffhām “the homestead of the Swabians”; some of them presumably came with the Angles and Saxons. By the 14th and 15th centuries Swaffham had an emerging sheep and wool industry. As a result of this prosperity, the town has a large market place. The market cross here was built by George Walpole, 3rd Earl of Orford and presented to the town in 1783.On the top is the statue of Ceres, the Roman goddess of the harvest. About 8 km to the north of Swaffham can be found the ruins of the formerly important Castle Acre Priory and Castle Acre Castle. On the west side of Swaffham Market Place are several old buildings which for many years housed the historic Hamond’s Grammar School, as a plaque on the wall of the main building explains. The Hamond’s Grammar School building latterly came to serve as the sixth form for the Hamond’s High School, but that use has since ceased. Harry Carter, the grammar school’s art teacher of the 1960s, was responsible for a great number of the carved village signs that are now found in many of Norfolk’s towns and villages, including Swaffham’s own sign commemorating the legendary Pedlar of Swaffham, which is in the corner of the market place just opposite the old school’s gates. Carter was a distant cousin of the archaeologist and egyptologist Howard Carter who spent much of his childhood in the town. The Swaffham Museum contains an exhibition on local history and local geology as well as an Egyptology room charting the life of Howard Carter. Swaffham was struck by an F1/T2 tornado on 23 November 1981, as part of the record-breaking nationwide tornado outbreak on that day.