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The Dewsbury Families of Little Thetford, Cambridgeshire
The Dewsbury Families of Soham, Wilburton, Stretham and Little Thetford, Cambridgeshire. Compiled by Andrew Martin www.familytreeuk.co.uk - updated 21st August 2005. 1. Bartholomew Dewsbury marred Hester 1. Bartholomew Dewsbury (bpt.1696, Stuntney, bur.02/02/1745, Stretham) married Alice (bur.28/06/1759, Stretham) a. Esther Dewsbury (bapt 1721, Stretham) married John Freeman on 10th April 1748 at Stretham, Cambridgeshire. b. Alice Dewsbury (bapt 1723, Stretham, bur.24/11/1725, Stretham) c. William Dewsbury (bapt 1726, Stretham, bur.24/11/1731, Stretham) d. Alice Dewsbury (bapt 1727, Stretham) married John Lowe (of Milton) 11th December 1746 at Stretham, Cambridgeshire. e. Bartholomew Dewsbury (bapt 1730, Stretham, bur.06/11/1737, Stretham) f. Jn Dewsbury (twin) (bapt 1732, Stretham, bur.22/01/1732, Stretham) g. Langford Dewsbury (twin) (bapt 1732, Stretham, bur.22/01/1732, Stretham) h. Langford Dewsbury (bapt 1733, Stretham, bur.27/11/1737, Stretham) i. Mary Dewsbury (bapt.23/03/1739, Stretham, bur 1740, Stretham) 2. Edward Dewsberry (bpt.1700, Stuntney, bur.1770, Little Thetford) married Elisabeth (bur.1762, Little Thetford) a. Edward Dewsbury (bpt.?/09/1734, Little Thetford) b. William Dewsbury (bpt.17/04/1737, Little Thetford) married Elizabeth Cook on 17th April 1769 at Soham, Cambridgeshire. i. Edward Dewsbury (bpt.07/10/1770, bur.18/06/1836, Wilburton) married Sarah (b.c.1771, bur.26/09/1844, Wilburton) 1. William Dewsbury (b.c.1811, Wilburton, d.22/09/1885, Stretham) married Rebecca Lythell (b.c.1820, Stretham, d.1889, Stretham) on 8th December 1840 at ? a. William Dewsbury (b.13/09/1840, d.03/01/1905, Stretham) married Hannah Watson (b.13/04/1845, Witchford, d.22/06/1929, Stretham) i. -
Local Plan Proposed Submission November 2017
East Cambridgeshire Local Plan Proposed Submission November 2017 East Cambridgeshire District Council | Local Plan Proposed Submission Foreword Foreword East Cambridgeshire is characterised by its rural farming and equine landscape, interspersed with the City of Ely, small market towns and a wide range of attractive small and medium villages. Within that landscape are some real gems. The magnificent Ely Cathedral sitting proud as a the ‘ship of the fens’; Wicken Fen, which casts us back to a time before humans dominated the planet; the world famous Newmarket July Racecourse; and Anglesey Abbey, with its beautiful formal and informal grounds attracting visitors from far and wide. It’s no wonder that in 2012, the district scooped top spot in the Halifax’s annual rural areas quality of life survey. But there is so much potential to make East Cambridgeshire an even better place: with quality homes people can afford, easier access to shops, workplaces, services and facilities, and new thriving communities, which are welcoming and safe; where new facilities and infrastructure mean that businesses choose to expand or relocate here, bringing jobs and stimulating investment; to visit, a place where people choose to come to enjoy our nature, our history, our shops, our eateries and attractions, while at the same time significantly contributing to our rural and urban economies. And, fundamentally, we need to get building. We need to build a better East Cambridgeshire. In 2014/15, we only built 163 homes across the whole district, and only slightly higher figures of 181 homes in 2015/16 and 232 homes in 2016/17. -
Cambridgeshire Tydd St
C D To Long Sutton To Sutton Bridge 55 Cambridgeshire Tydd St. Mary 24 24 50 50 Foul Anchor 55 Tydd Passenger Transport Map 2011 Tydd St. Giles Gote 24 50 Newton 1 55 1 24 50 To Kings Lynn Fitton End 55 To Kings Lynn 46 Gorefield 24 010 LINCOLNSHIRE 63 308.X1 24 WHF To Holbeach Drove 390 24 390 Leverington WHF See separate map WHF WHF for service detail in this area Throckenholt 24 Wisbech Parson 24 390.WHF Drove 24 46 WHF 24 390 Bellamys Bridge 24 46 Wisbech 3 64 To Terrington 390 24. St. Mary A B Elm Emneth E 390 Murrow 3 24 308 010 60 X1 56 64 7 Friday Bridge 65 Thorney 46 380 308 X1 To Grantham X1 NORFOLK and the North 390 308 Outwell 308 Thorney X1 7 Toll Guyhirn Coldham Upwell For details of bus services To in this area see Peterborough City Council Ring’s End 60 Stamford and 7 publicity or call: 01733 747474 60 2 46 3 64 Leicester Eye www.travelchoice.org 010 2 X1 65 390 56 60.64 3.15.24.31.33.46 To 308 7 380 Three Holes Stamford 203.205.206.390.405 33 46 407.415.701.X1.X4 Chainbridge To Downham Market 33 65 65 181 X4 Peterborough 206 701 24 Lot’s Bridge Wansford 308 350 Coates See separate map Iron Bridge To Leicester for service detail Whittlesey 33 701 in this area X4 Eastrea March Christchurch 65 181 206 701 33 24 15 31 46 Tips End 203 65 F Chesterton Hampton 205 Farcet X4 350 9 405 3 31 35 010 Welney 115 To Elton 24 206 X4 407 56 Kings Lynn 430 415 7 56 Gold Hill Haddon 203.205 X8 X4 350.405 Black Horse 24.181 407.430 Yaxley 3.7.430 Wimblington Boots Drove To Oundle 430 Pondersbridge 206.X4 Morborne Bridge 129 430 56 Doddington Hundred Foot Bank 15 115 203 56 46. -
Littleport Scrapbook 1897-1990 by Mike Petty
Littleport Scrapbook 1897-1990 by Mike Petty Littleport Scrapbook 1897-1990 Extracts from ‘A Cambridgeshire Scrapbook’, compiled by Mike Petty 16 Nov 2016 Introduction Each evening from March 1997 to March 2015 I compiled a ‘Looking Back’ column in the Cambridge News in which I feature snippets from issues of 100, 75, 50 and 25 years ago. I sought out unusual items relating to villages and areas of Cambridge not usually featured These stories are from issues of the Cambridge Daily/Evening/Weekly News of 1897-1990 I can supply actual copies of many of these articles – please contact me. The full set of articles, numbering over 3,000 pages is available at bit.ly/CambsCollection The newspapers are held in the Cambridgeshire Collection together with other Cambridge titles back to 1762. They have a variety of indexes including a record of stories for every village in Cambridgeshire between 1770-1900 and newspaper cuttings files on 750 topics from 1958 to date. I initiated much of the indexing and have many indexes of my own. Please feel free to contact me for advice and assistance. For more details of newspapers and other sources for Cambridgeshire history see my website www.mikepetty.org.uk This index was produced as a part of my personal research resources and would benefit by editing. If you can make any of it work for you I am delighted. But remember you should always check everything! Please make what use of it you may. Please remember who it came from Mike Petty. Mike Petty – www.mikepetty.org.uk bit.ly/CambsCollection Littleport Scrapbook 1897-1990 by Mike Petty Littleport Scrapbook 1897-1990 1897 02 26 The clerk to the Ely Guardians applied for the removal of Tabitha Camm, an eccentric old woman aged 72 years who is living in a tumbled-down old hovel in Littleport fen. -
Electoral Changes) Order 2002
STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS 2002 No. 2596 LOCAL GOVERNMENT, ENGLAND The District of East Cambridgeshire (Electoral Changes) Order 2002 Made - - - - - 12th October 2002 Coming into force in accordance with article 1(2) Whereas the Boundary Committee for England(a), acting pursuant to section 15(4) of the Local Government Act 1992(b), has submitted to the Electoral Commission(c) a report dated April 2002 on its review of the district of East Cambridgeshire together with its recommendations: And whereas a period of not less than six weeks has expired since the receipt of those recommendations: And whereas the Electoral Commission have decided to give eVect to those recommendations: Now, therefore, the Electoral Commission, in exercise of the powers conferred on them by sections 17(d) and 26(e) of the Local Government Act 1992, and of all other powers enabling them in that behalf, hereby make the following Order: Citation and commencement 1.—(1) This Order may be cited as the District of East Cambridgeshire (Electoral Changes) Order 2002. (2) This Order shall come into force— (a) for the purpose of proceedings preliminary or relating to any election to be held on 1st May 2003, on the day after that on which it is made; (b) for all other purposes, on 1st May 2003. Interpretation 2. In this Order— “district” means the district of East Cambridgeshire; “existing”, in relation to a ward, means the ward as it exists on the date this Order is made; and (a) The Boundary Committee for England is a committee of the Electoral Commission, established by the Electoral Commission in accordance with section 14 of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 (c. -
Witches and Witchcraft in Ely
Witches and Witchcraft in Ely A HISTORY Francis Young Printed for the author by Cambridge Print Solutions Cambridge, 2013 Published by Francis Young © Francis Young 2013 Francis Young has asserted his moral right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the author of this work. francisyoung.wordpress.com ISBN 978-0-9926404-0-8 Table of Contents Introduction 1 1. Hereward and the Witch 3 2. A Necromancer in the Lady Chapel 5 3. Witchcraft and the Reformation 9 4. Witchfinders in Ely 11 5. Witchcraft in Ely in Modern Times 15 Notes 20 Introduction The Cambridgeshire Fens are one of the last places in England where traditional belief in witchcraft was widespread. Until as late as the mid-twentieth century, Fenland communities were isolated, and their inhabitants were more vulnerable to environmental illnesses, such as malaria, than the rest of the population. A hard life, geographical isolation, close-knit communities and mistrust of outsiders may all have contributed to the Fenlanders’ abiding belief in the power of witchcraft. Ely’s place in the history of English witchcraft is a special one. As the cathedral city at the heart of the Fens, under the independent jurisdiction of the Bishop, Ely was the place where anyone locally accused of witchcraft would be brought to trial. The city was the hub from which John Stearne completed the last stage of Matthew Hopkins’s infamous witch-hunt in the 1640s, and Ely was the scene for the (quite literal) downfall of the first ‘witch’ to appear in English history. -
2020 Dec ISSUE.Pdf
2 PRIEST in CHARGE – Revd Dr Naomi Wormell, The Rectory, 132 High Street, Cheveley, CB8 9DG 01638 730857 [email protected] AUTHORISED LAY MINISTERS (ALM) Tracy Grimster, 6 Walton Close, Fordham (Pastoral for Children, Families & Baptism) 01638 721150 READER-IN-TRAINING Dr Tony White, Wayside, Fordham Rd, Newmarket CB8 7AQ 01638 662044 CHURCHWARDENS Ashley with Silverley Mrs Sam Bowker-Laing 17, the Green Ashley CB8 9EB 07483 959722 [email protected] Mrs Michelle Boss 16 Silverley Way, Ashley CB8 9DY 07908 421918 [email protected] Cheveley Mr James Hadlow, St Swithins, Church Lane, Cheveley, CB8 9DJ 07908 224866 [email protected] Mrs Celia Bruce 34 Newmarket Road Cheveley CB8 9EQ 01638 731601 Kirtling with Upend Lord Fairhaven, Kirtling Tower, Kirtling CB8 9PA (pa) 01638 732250 Mrs Veronica Aspland, 35 The Street, Kirtling, CB8 9PB 01638 730405 Woodditton and Saxon Street Mrs Sheila Bailey, 3 Park Cottage, Kirtling Road, Woodditton 01638 730815 Mrs Gillian White, Wayside, Fordham Rd. Newmarket CB8 7AQ 01638 662044 ORGANIST - Vacancy GROUP WEB PAGE: www.cheveleygroup.org Items for inclusion in 'THE LINK' should be emailed to; [email protected] by the tenth (10th) day of the month before the month of publication. ~ ~ ~ Whilst every effort is made to exclude unsuitable material from this, a parish magazine, responsibility for content remains with the author of any submissions published This magazine is printed and published monthly by; THE LINK – Cheveley Group of Parish churches: Ashley, Cheveley, Kirtling and Woodditton Page updated Oct 20 3 The LINK Contents: December 2020 2 Group Contacts 3 Index 4 From the Rectory 5 Praying in Our Community 5 Advent Calendar Walk 7 Cheveley 200 Club Merry 9 Cheveley PC 15 Matilda 16 Shoebox Record Christmas 17 A Page of Prayer 19 Uncle Eustace to all our 21 CWI, Charities 22 Service Diary and Readings readers 24 Opening our Churches 25 What’s On (maybe) 28 Ashley Events Safeguarding 30 Woodditton & Saxon Street in our Group. -
Tokens Found in Haddenham, Cambridgeshire, and a Seventeenth-Century Issuer
TOKENS FOUND IN HADDENHAM, CAMBRIDGESHIRE, AND A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY ISSUER M.J. BONSER AND R.H. THOMPSON, with contributions by C.F. BESTER THE Revd. William Cole, the Cambridge antiquary (1714-82), owned extensive property in Haddenham in the south-west of the Isle of Ely, and two tokens found there are illustrated and described in vol. 32 of his manuscript collections.1 A. Garden of William Symonds, -1768. The first 'was dug up in a Garden belonging to me at Hadenham in the Isle of Ely, & given to me by my Tenant Wm Symonds in January 1768'. The second was 'found at Hadenham & given me as above 1768'. The wording in both cases leaves the date of finding open to doubt, but if not actually in 1768 it was presumably not long before. Cole's father had purchased several hundred acres including five tenements, to which the antiquary himself added two closes;- and the location of William Symonds's garden must remain uncertain, although it was probably in the hamlet of Aldreth, adjoinjng Ewell Fen in which Cole's farm Frog Hall was situated (a farmhouse and several cottages in Aldreth were associated with Frog Hall Farm until about 1944). 1. Nuremberg Rechenmeister jetton or Schulpfennig; second half of the sixteenth century. Similar to No. 20 below, but alphabet with G reversed and no additional letters; not illustrated. 2. Seventeenth-century token; c. 1660. Obv. IAMES PARTRICH OF around a mitre; surname appears as 'RICH'. Rev. ROOYSTON VINTNER around letter P above IC. Williamson,3 Hertfordshire 165 or 166; probably 165, on which a flaw developed across the first part of the surname; not illustrated. -
Local Government Boundary Commission - Review of Cambridgeshire County Council
Local Government Boundary Commission - Review of Cambridgeshire County Council East Cambridgeshire - Conservative Party Response from South East Cambridgeshire Conservative Association (SECCA) Summary 1. We believe that single Member Divisions provide for the most effective local government in East Cambridgeshire, giving greater clarity to the electorate and to City, Town and Parish Councils and other local organisations. 2. Our preferred scenario (scenario 1) is based on 63 Members, meaning that 9 will be in East Cambridgeshire. This proposed scenario allows for provision of single Member Divisions, achieves good electoral equality, provides for convenient and effective local government and offers the best solution, by some margin, in terms of reflecting community interests and identity. 2.1. We strongly believe that the Boundary Commission’s proposal for two 2 Member Divisions (within the 61 Member scenario) has made serious compromises to both community interests and identity and to convenient and effective local government, markedly so for the proposed Littleport West Division (Division 16). The geographical size and marked difference in service needs of different parts of this Division could cause conflict in Members’ ability to represent the whole of the Division effectively. 2.2. Sutton, and particularly the villages to the south of Sutton (Wentworth, Witchford, Haddenham, Aldreth, Wilburton, Stretham and Little Thetford) are totally remote from Littleport - geographically (residents of those areas look to Ely and Cambridge and do not use or travel to Littleport), culturally (residents of those areas do not link themselves in any way to Littleport), demographically and in terms of service need (educational, economic and health and wellbeing needs are markedly different). -
ELY ZIPPER Bus Time Schedule & Line Route
ELY ZIPPER bus time schedule & line map ELY ZIPPER Ely View In Website Mode The ELY ZIPPER bus line (Ely) has 3 routes. For regular weekdays, their operation hours are: (1) Ely: 6:45 AM - 12:30 PM (2) Ely: 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM (3) Witcham: 6:25 PM Use the Moovit App to ƒnd the closest ELY ZIPPER bus station near you and ƒnd out when is the next ELY ZIPPER bus arriving. Direction: Ely ELY ZIPPER bus Time Schedule 28 stops Ely Route Timetable: VIEW LINE SCHEDULE Sunday Not Operational Monday 6:45 AM - 12:30 PM Market Street, Ely 39-41 Market Street, Ely Tuesday 6:45 AM - 12:30 PM King's School, Ely Wednesday 6:45 AM - 12:30 PM Tesco, Ely Thursday 6:45 AM - 12:30 PM The Dock, Ely Friday 6:45 AM - 12:30 PM Cambridge Commodities, Ely Saturday 6:45 AM - 12:30 PM Wellington Road, Ely Civil Parish Church Road, Wentworth Haddenham Road, Witcham Toll ELY ZIPPER bus Info Direction: Ely Manor Farm, Witcham Stops: 28 Martins Lane, Witcham Civil Parish Trip Duration: 55 min Line Summary: Market Street, Ely, King's School, Ely, Northumbria Close, Haddenham Tesco, Ely, Cambridge Commodities, Ely, Church Road, Wentworth, Haddenham Road, Witcham Toll, Hop Row, Haddenham Manor Farm, Witcham, Northumbria Close, Bull Lane, Haddenham Haddenham, Hop Row, Haddenham, Linden End, Haddenham, Linden Way, Haddenham, The Borough, Linden End, Haddenham Aldreth, Linden Way, Haddenham, Cherry Orchard, Haddenham, Orchard Way, Haddenham, High Street, Linden Way, Haddenham Wilburton, Carpond Lane, Wilburton, Station Road, Wilburton, Millƒeld Place, Wilburton, Short Road, The -
STRETHAM Conservation Area DRAFT Supplementary Planning Document MARCH 2009 1 Introduction
EAST CAMBRIDGESHIRE DISTRICT COUNCIL Local Development Framework STRETHAM Conservation Area DRAFT Supplementary Planning Document MARCH 2009 1 Introduction 1.1 Stretham Conservation Area was designated on 21st September 1973. No comprehensive review or appraisal has taken place of the Conservation Area since. 1.2 The village’s lies just off the A10 from Ely to Cambridge. Originally the main road ran through the village but in modern times a by-pass was constructed. 1.3 The centre of the village is a pleasant triangle of land with the church, the pub and the post office clustered around the Cross. The Cross, High Street 2 Public Consultation 2.1 The public consultation will be carried out to comply with the Council’s adopted Statement of Community Involvement’ (17/10/06). 3 What are Conservation Areas? 3.1 Conservation Areas were introduced in the Civic Amenity Act 1967 and have evolved through a number of subsequent acts ending in the present Planning (Listed Building and Conservation Area) Act 1990 with adopted government guidance set out in Planning Policy Guidance note 15. 3.2 Stretham Conservation Area was designated in 1973. The definition of a Conservation Area is an 'area of special architectural or historic interest, the character or appearance of which it is desirable to preserve or enhance' (Planning (Listed Building and Conservation Area) Act 1990. 3.3 The Local Planning Authority has a duty to determine which parts of their district are areas of special architectural or historic interest. Having established a Conservation Area they are also required to carry out a periodic review of the designation and boundaries of the area. -
Cambridgeshire Green Infrastructure Strategy
Cambridgeshire Green Infrastructure Strategy Page 1 of 176 June 2011 Contributors The Strategy has been shaped and informed by many partners including: The Green Infrastructure Forum Anglian Water Cambridge City Council Cambridge Past, Present and Future (formerly Cambridge Preservation Society) Cambridge Sports Lake Trust Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Biodiversity Partnership Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Environmental Record Centre Cambridgeshire County Council Cambridgeshire Horizons East Cambridgeshire District Council East of England Development Agency (EEDA) English Heritage The Environment Agency Fenland District Council Forestry Commission Farming and Wildlife Advisory Group GO-East Huntingdonshire District Council Natural England NHS Cambridgeshire Peterborough Environment City Trust Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) South Cambridgeshire District Council The National Trust The Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire & Peterborough The Woodland Trust Project Group To manage the review and report to the Green Infrastructure Forum. Cambridge City Council Cambridgeshire County Council Cambridgeshire Horizons East Cambridgeshire District Council Environment Agency Fenland District Council Huntingdonshire District Council Natural England South Cambridgeshire District Council The Wildlife Trust Consultants: LDA Design Page 2 of 176 Contents 1 Executive Summary ................................................................................11 2 Background