Mendlesham is a village with 1407 inhabitants as of the 2011 Census. It lies five miles (8 km) north east of Stowmarket and 73.135 miles (117.699 km)[2] from London.
The place-name Mendlesham is first attested in the Domesday Book of 1086, where it appears as Melnesham and Mundlesham. The name means Myndel's village.
Mendlesham is known for its large street fair which is held on every May Day bank holiday.
Mendlesham has a popular community newsletter, and a primary school. There is one public house in the village called the King's Head. The village has a few shops including Mendlesham Bakery, Mendlesham Fish 'N' Chip Shop and a post office at the back of the King's Head.
Nearby at grid reference TM123640 and close to the A140 is the Mendlesham transmitting station which broadcasts Kiss 105-108 (previously Vibe FM) on 106.4 MHz and the Digital One digital radio multiplex, and which was formerly used for VHF 405 line transmissions of Anglia Television.
The mast stands at the corner of the former WWII airfield, RAF Mendlesham. This was used by the RAF and US Eighth Air Force between 1943 and 1955, and once held a memorial to the US 34th Bomb Group. The memorial has now been moved to the churchyard of St Mary's in Mendlesham. Although some of the land has reverted to agriculture or is an industrial estate, one airstrip is now used by the Suffolk Coastal Floaters Hang Gliding Club.
There are also three churches, including the grand medieval St Mary's, built at a time when the village had a much larger population.
In 1531 the Mendlesham Christian Brethren were a group of Protestant dissenters, and two decades later, Adam Foster became a Marian martyr, after he refused to attend a Roman Catholic mass. He was condemned to be burnt at the stake by John Hopton, the Bishop of Norwich.
Mendlesham had the second station on the Mid-Suffolk Light Railway, which ran from 1904 to 1952.
Mendlesham Manor is an Elizabethan Manor House.
Close to Mendlesham is the hamlet of Mendlesham Green, which contains Mendlesham Green Baptist Church.
The village was struck by an F0/T1 tornado on November 23, 1981, as part of the record-breaking nationwide tornado outbreak on that day.