• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Folk Features HomepageFolk Features

Uplifting stories for Norfolk and Suffolk

  • Home
  • Events 2026
  • Columnists
  • About
  • Key Partnerships
  • Contact
Home » YOUR YEAR » Twenty Stories to celebrate twenty years of VisitNorwich

Twenty Stories to celebrate twenty years of VisitNorwich

March 13, 2026 Leave a Comment

Daisy Henwood

VisitNorwich is celebrating twenty years of championing the city by launching of ‘Twenty Stories. One City. The City of Stories’, with local poet Daisy Henwood telling the story of Emma De Gauder at the start of English Tourism Week. Some of those involved explain more

To mark twenty years of championing the city, VisitNorwich is launching an ambitious year-long cultural celebration: Twenty Stories. One City. The City of Stories. Beginning today, on the first day of English Tourism Week, the anniversary series shares twenty extraordinary stories spanning 1,000 years of Norwich history – told by twenty invited guest authors from across the city’s creative and cultural community.

From medieval rebels and mystics to pioneering reformers, artists, entrepreneurs and unsung heroes, these are the people who shaped Norwich – and whose legacy can still be discovered across the city today.

At the heart of the project is a simple invitation: Step Into The Story. Each published story on visitnorwich.co.uk will be paired with curated ways to explore that person’s Norwich in real life – from plaques and museums to walking tours, book benches, exhibitions, pubs, performances and lots of free public spaces.

Visitors can:

  • In the Royal Arcade view exquisite Art Nouveau design by architect George Skipper– ‘the Gaudi of Norwich’. Free.
  • On Elm Hill see the former residence of Margaret Paston who’s surviving 100 private family letters describe the chaotic impact of the Wars of the Roses in medieval England. Free.
  • Take a Carrow House tour and learn about Caroline Colman a welfare champion introducing measures for Colman’s Mustard employees over half a century before others.
  • Take a moment at the Upper St Giles Book Bench where 50-million bestselling author of Black Beauty Anna Sewell is commemorated. Free.
  • Book a ticket to the annual City of Literature Harriet Martineau Lecture – a pioneer known as the first woman sociologist and England’s first female journalist who unrelentingly lobbied for women’s freedom and campaigned against slavery.
  • Pay respects at the grave of Edith Cavell, England’s heroic nurse who saved countless lives by helping Allied soldiers to escape Belgium via neutral Holland during WW1. Free.
  • Have a pint in The Rumsey Wells the former location of T. Wells & Son where the charismatic Rumsey Wells sold his Edwardian caps ‘as the most expensive in the world’!

By connecting storytelling with physical exploration, VisitNorwich is using its role as the city’s Destination Marketing Organisation to turn heritage into lived experience – encouraging residents and visitors alike to rediscover Norwich, spend time here, and see the city through fresh eyes.

The series opened today (Friday March 13) with a live poetry performance, ‘In 1075 Emma de Gauder held this castle against the king’,  by local poet Daisy Henwood at the Norwich Book Bench on Gentlemans Walk. Her commissioned piece tells the story of Emma De Gauder, the 16-year-old noblewoman who defended Norwich Castle against the King’s army in 1075.

Emma De Gauder (credit Norfolk Castle Museum and Gallery
16-year-old noblewoman Emma De Gauder defended Norwich Castle against the King’s army in 1075 (image credit Norfolk Castle Museum and Art Gallery)

Daisy Henwood explains why storytelling through poetry is important: “Poems are such a unique opportunity for storytelling: they’re small vehicles for big ideas, allowing us to convey huge amounts of information in a really small space. I also love the imaginative licence you have — even with just a scrap of a story, you have space to fill in the gaps, and there’s always room in a poem for the strange and unexpected.”

Emma is just one of the twenty figures featured, alongside names including: Julian of Norwich, Elizabeth Fry, Harriet Martineau, Pablo Fanque, Edith Cavell, Robert Kett, Caroline Colman, Margaret Fountaine and Sir Thomas Browne.

Stories will be released monthly through to 31 October, many timed to anniversaries or significant cultural dates during the National Year of Reading.

Mel March, Senior PR & Marketing Manager, VisitNorwich, said: “Twenty Stories is our way of celebrating 20 years of promoting Norwich – by celebrating the people who made it remarkable in the first place.

“As a Destination Marketing Organisation, our role is not just to tell people that Norwich is special – it’s to give them reasons to come here, explore, stay longer and connect with the city.

“Step Into The Story’ transforms history into something active and accessible. You don’t just read about these people – you can stand where they stood, walk their streets, visit the places that shaped them.

“By contributing a story, response or activation, our partners become part of a year-long celebration that connects Norwich’s past to its present – and brings people into the city to experience it for themselves.”

Molly Taylor, Marketing Manager, Norfolk Museums Service said: “We are delighted to participate in Twenty Stories, with Daisy Henwood’s poem featured in the project and Daisy being part of the launch event on the first day of English Tourism Week. It’s also brilliantly timed for the National Lottery’s Open Week when anyone presenting a National Lottery ticket, an Instant Win Game or scratch card can enjoy free entry to Norwich Castle on 13 and 14 March.”

Peggy Hughes, CEO, National Centre for Writing described: “I was so pleased to be asked to write a piece about Harriet Martineau. Not only was Harriet a woman ahead of her time, but she was also quite the character and a very positive role model for change. Our annual Harriet Martineau Lecture during the City of Literature Weekend as part of Norfolk & Norwich Festival is a sell out every year- so don’t hesitate to get a ticket if you want to ‘step into the story’. I can highly recommend it!”

Launching during English Tourism Week and the National Year of Reading, Twenty Stories reinforces Norwich’s established identity as a City of Stories – not as a slogan, but as a lived reality.

With tourism contributing over £801m annually to the local Norwich economy, VisitNorwich continues to position culture, creativity and heritage as drivers of sustainable visitor growth, community pride and city-centre vitality

Visit Twenty Stories. One City. The City of Stories. – Visit Norwich

Featured image of Daisy Henwood by Rosie Mills-Smith

Filed Under: YOUR YEAR

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Support Folk Features

By subscribing to our newsletter and donating when you are able, you help ensure we can continue to bring you good news stories without the annoying ads.

Subscribe
Donate

Primary Sidebar

Join Folk like you

Get good news stories delivered to your inbox

Categories

Recent Posts

  • A new key partnership to focus on May 1, 2026
  • Supporting a ‘motley crew’ on 2000-mile row challenge April 30, 2026
  • Wymondham’s first ever Print Festival comes to town April 29, 2026
  • Jessie Buckley becomes Norfolk Screen’s latest Patron April 28, 2026
  • Celebrating 125 years of Cromer Pier April 27, 2026

Archives

Support Folk Features

By subscribing to our newsletter and donating when you are able, you help ensure we can continue to bring you good news stories without the ads.

Subscribe
Donate

Footer

  • About Folk Features
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

KEY PARTNERS:

Swank Interiors

Copyright © 2026 · Folk Features · All Rights Reserved