LCG Practice Name Isle of Ely Soham Isle of Ely St

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

LCG Practice Name Isle of Ely Soham Isle of Ely St Ely and Fens Neighbourhood Teams LCG Practice Name Isle of Ely Soham Isle of Ely St Mary's, Ely Isle of Ely Littleport Isle of Ely Cathedral Medical Centre, Ely Isle of Ely Burwell Isle of Ely Haddenham Isle of Ely Sutton Isle of Ely George Clare, Chatteris Isle of Ely Doddington Isle of Ely Manea Hunts Care Partners Cornerstone Practice, March Hunts Care Partners Riverside Practice, March Hunts Care Partners Mercheford House, March Wisbech North Brink, Wisbech Wisbech Clarkson Surgery, Wisbech Wisbech Trinity Surgery, Wisbech Wisbech Parson Drove Huntingdon Neighbourhood Teams LCG Practice Name Hunts Health Charles Hicks, Huntingdon Hunts Care Partners Alconbury and Brampton Hunts Health Priory Fields, Huntingdon Hunts Health Acorn Surgery, Huntingdon Hunts Care Partners Wellside Surgery, Sawtry Hunts Care Partners Ramsey Health Centre Hunts Health Rainbow Surgery, Ramsey Hunts Health Eaton Socon Hunts Care Partners Cedar House, St Neots Hunts Health Kimbolton Hunts Health Great Staughton Hunts Care Partners Buckden and Little Paxton Hunts Care Partners Almond Road, St Neots Hunts Care Partners St Neots Health Centre Hunts Health Old Exchange Surgery, St Ives Hunts Health Papworth Hunts Care Partners Cromwell Place, St Ives Hunts Care Partners Spinney, St Ives Hunts Care Partners Moat House, Warboys Hunts Care Partners Parkhall Surgery, Somersham Hunts Care Partners Orchard Surgery, St Ives Hunts Care Partners Northcote House, St Ives Hunts Care Partners Church St, Somersham DRAFT Cambridge Neighbourhood Teams LCG Practice Name East Sawston East Linton East Shelford Cam City North Bridge St, Cambridge Cam City North Newnham Walk, Cambridge Cam City North Nuffield Road, Cambridge Cam City North Arbury Road, Cambridge Cam City North East Barnwell, Cambridge Cam City North Cherry Hinton Med Centre South villages Royston Health Centre South villages Barley Surgery South villages Roysia Surgery, Royston South villages Orchard Surgery, Melbourn South villages Harston South villages Bourn South villages Cambourne South villages Comberton North villages Firs House, Histon North villages Milton North villages Willingham North villages Over North villages Waterbeach North villages Cottenham North villages Maple Surgery, Bar Hill Health Centre North villages Swavesey North villages Bottisham Cam City South Lensfield Road, Cambridge Cam City South Cornford House, Cherry Hinton Cam City South Trumpington St, Cambridge Cam City South Queen Edith's, Cambridge Cam City South Woodlands Surgery, Cambridge City Huntingdon Road, Cambridge City York St, Cambridge City Cambridge Access Surgery City 281 Mill Road, Cambridge City Red House, Cambridge City Petersfield, Cambridge Borderline and Peterborough Neighbourhood Teams LCG Practice Name Peterborough Thomas Walker, Peterborough Peterborough North St, Peterborough Peterborough 63 Lincoln Road, Peterborough Peterborough Westgate Surgery, Peterborough Peterborough Park Med Centre, Peterborough Peterborough Minster Practice, Peterborough Peterborough Huntly Grove, Peterborough Borderline Bretton Medical Practice Peterborough Hodgson Medical Centre Peterborough Paston Peterborough Parnwell Medical Centre, Peterborough Peterborough Ailsworth Medical Centre Peterborough Westwood Clinic, Peterborough Peterborough Dogsthorpe Medical Centre, Peterborough Peterborough Thorpe Road Surgery, Peterborough Peterborough Welland Medical Practice, Peterborough Peterborough The Grange Medical Centre, Pbhg Peterborough Thistlemoor Road, Peterborough Peterborough Millfield Medical Centre, Peterborough Borderline Yaxley Borderline Old Fletton Borderline Nene Valley Medical Practice Peterborough Botolph Bridge, Peterborough Borderline Hampton Health Peterborough Orton Bushfield Medical Practice Borderline Oundle Borderline Wansford Borderline Queen St, Whittlesey (+ Stanground) Borderline Jenner Health Centre, Whittlesey Borderline Thorney (+ Eye).
Recommended publications
  • Ely Circular Ely Circular (Extended)
    Ely Circular Ely Circular (extended) 1st walk check 2nd walk check 3rd walk check 1st walk check 2nd walk check 3rd walk check 25th Sept. 2016 12th Sept. 2016 Current status Document last updated Monday, 24th July 2017 This document and information herein are copyrighted to Saturday Walkers’ Club. If you are interested in printing or displaying any of this material, Saturday Walkers’ Club grants permission to use, copy, and distribute this document delivered from this World Wide Web server with the following conditions: The document will not be edited or abridged, and the material will be produced exactly as it appears. Modification of the material or use of it for any other purpose is a violation of our copyright and other proprietary rights. Reproduction of this document is for free distribution and will not be sold. This permission is granted for a one-time distribution. All copies, links, or pages of the documents must carry the following copyright notice and this permission notice: Saturday Walkers’ Club, Copyright © 2016-2017, used with permission. All rights reserved. www.walkingclub.org.uk This walk has been checked as noted above, however the publisher cannot accept responsibility for any problems encountered by readers. Ely Circular Start: Ely station Finish: Ely station Ely station, map reference TL 543 793, is 23 km north east of Cambridge, 102 km north north east of Charing Cross, 5m above sea level, and in East Cambridgeshire. Length: 18.0 km (11.2 mi), of which 4.3 km (2.7 mi) on tarmac or concrete. Cumulative ascent/descent: 108m.
    [Show full text]
  • Oosthuizen, MSR, DB Fenland, 30 Jan 2015
    RE-EVALUATING MAPS OF DOMESDAY POPULATION DENSITIES: A case study from the Cambridgeshire fenland By SUSAN OOSTHUIZEN Abstract Professor Sir Clifford Darby’s county, regional and national maps of a range of data drawn from the Domesday Book revolutionized scholarship on the social and economic history of late Anglo-Saxon England (e.g. 1935, 1936a, 1936b, 1971, 1977). While this paper does not seek to challenge Darby’s general conclusions, a case study re-examination of the inter-relationship between population density and physical geography in the Cambridgeshire fenland in 1086 suggests the regional usefulness of methodological adjustments to his mapping. It indicates that the population density of the peat and silt fens in the late eleventh century may have been significantly higher than that shown in Darby’s original maps, with implications for the contemporary social and economic history of eastern England. Introduction The magnificence of many fenland churches allows even a complete stranger to infer the large numbers of inhabitants in and general prosperity of the region during the middle ages (Illustration 1, Figure 1). Its affluence is confirmed in the lay subsidies of 1327, 1332 and 1334. Settlements on the silt fens (for which there is the most information) were so prosperous that they generated among the highest returns per square mile and per vill in England, as well as some of the highest rates per taxpayer (Campbell and Bartley 2006: Maps 18.3, 18.13). Although only 20% of English settlements paid more than £225 in 1334, that select group includes not only Ely (paying £358), Leverington (paying £360), and Wisbech (paying £410) but almost every other silt fen vill (Glasscock 1973: 181-3; 1975: 28, 107, 168-9).
    [Show full text]
  • The Jews of Medieval Cambridge
    The Jews ofmedieval Cambridge R. B. DOBSON As it happens, this presidential address is being delivered more or less seven hundred years to the day since the last persecuted survivors of the once substantial medieval English Jewrywere crossing the Channel into involuntary exile, 'without the hope of ever returning', after their banishment from this country on i Novem? ber 1290.1 Itmay not be quite so important,but it is certainlymuch less dispiriting, to remember that almost a century has elapsed since the foundation of this Society in 1893.2 As we rapidly approach our centenary year, we must all hesitate to think what the present state of Jewish historical studies in this countrywould now be had it not been for the indefatigable labours and enterprise of our founding fathers a hundred years ago. Perhaps a medieval historian might be forgiven formaking the additional point that at the heart of our Society's almost instantaneous scholarly success in the 1890s lay a particular strength inmedieval Jewish studies. At a period when the academic study of history, heavily biased towards English national political and constitutional development, was an extremely young and tender plant within British universities, this Society's earliest members were conducting detailed documentary research of exceptional quality, research whose full value is still perhaps insufficiently appreciated a hundred years later. The enthusiasm for Jewish history unleashed by the great London Anglo-Jewish Historical Exhibition of 1887 created what Professor Robert Stacey has recently termed the 'heroic age' of Jewish historical scholarship in England.3 Above all, this was the heroic age for the study ofmedieval Anglo-Jewry, adorned as that studywas by scholars, often not themselves university-trained, of the calibre of Joseph Jacobs, Lionel Abrahams, Michael Adler, Herbert Loewe and Lucien Wolf, whose 'A Plea for Anglo-Jewish History' filled the first pages of the first volume of the Society's Transactions in 1893-4.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • Registered Food Premises V3 - Addresses Removed
    Registered Food Premises V3 - addresses removed Food Use Business Name, Address Bakeries selling through their own shops F P Lanes & Sons Bakery 20 High Street Burwell Cambridge CB25 Bakers Shops Boswell & Son 5 High Street Passage Ely Cambridgeshir Bakers with no on site retail activity Grain Culture 16 Sedgeway Business Park Witchford C Beekeepers Helen Arnold Beekeepers Ely Queen Bees Beekeepers Michael Grey Brewery Three Blind Mice Brewery Unit 10 Black Bank Business Centre Blac Brewery Vinifera Ltd The Stables Hall Farm 8 London Road Ne Brewery Downham Isle Brewery 1 Matthew Wren Close Little Downham Brewery The Sparkling Sake Brewery Unit 1 Black Bank Business Centre Black Brewery Elysian Fields Vineyard Bedwell Hey Farm Ely Road Little Thetfo Butchers Edis Of Ely Limited 24 High Street Ely Cambridgeshire CB7 4 Butchers Bent & Cornwell Quality Meats 24 Market Place Ely Cambridgeshire CB7 Butchers Carter Street Butchers 125 Carter Street Fordham Ely Cambridg Butchers Jack Hurrell 26 High Street Burwell Cambridge CB5 0 Butchers JM & MA Thompson & Sons 1 Fen Bank Isleham Ely Cambridgeshire Butchers Harnwell And Son Limited 14 High Street Haddenham Ely Cambrid Cafes Beanies Vegan Coffee Hub Richmond House 16 - 18 Broad Street El Cafes Elk Coffee Limited 105 The Causeway Burwell Cambridge C Cafes Marmalade & Jam 27 High Street Ely Cambridgeshire CB7 4 02 July 2021 Page 1 of 39 Food Use Business Name, Address Cafes Gloof 9 Churchgate Street Soham Ely Cambrid Cafes Liz'spresso The Home 3 Saxon Business Park Littlep Cafes Fordham Abbey Cafe
    [Show full text]
  • School Prospectus 2014 - 2015 Learning, Growing and Achieving Together
    Isle of Ely Primary School School Prospectus 2014 - 2015 Learning, Growing and Achieving Together Bryony Surtees Executive Head teacher Table of Contents Welcome letter 2 Whole School Aims 3 Who’s Who at Isle of Ely Primary School 4 Governors of Isle of Ely Primary School 5 Organisation of Education 6 Entry to School 7 The School Curriculum 9 Extra Curricular Activities 15 Special Needs, Including Gifted and Talented 16 Pastoral Care and Discipline 18 Uniform 20 Home-school Links 21 Absence 23 School Meals 24 Child Protection 25 Charging, Remissions and Complaints 26 1 An Active Learning Trust Academy Isle of Ely Primary School High Barns, CB7 Tel: 01223 728392 [email protected] Executive Head teacher: Mrs Bryony Surtees _____________________________________________________________________ Dear Parents The governors and staff at Isle of Ely Primary School extend a very warm welcome to you and your child. Isle of Ely Primary School is a fun, caring and stimulating learning environment. Our children are enthusiastic and lively, they enjoy the learning atmosphere of the school, but they are aware that we have high expectations and aspirations for them. We wish to work in partnership with you, to make you feel welcome and part of our team. Our Prospectus will tell you a little about our school, how we learn and develop, and what we are all working to achieve. To arrange a visit please contact Chloe Amory, our School General Assistant, in the school office. Yours faithfully Mrs Bryony Surtees Headteacher 2 Isle of Ely Primary School
    [Show full text]
  • Commemoration of Benefactors 1823
    A FORM FOR TH E COMMEMORATION OF BENEFACTORS, TO BE USED IN THE CHAPEL OF TH E College of S t. Margaret and St. Bernard, COMMONLY CALLED Queens’ College, Cambridge. CAMBRIDGE: PRINTED AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, BY J. SMITH. M.DCCC.XX.III. THE SOCIETY OF QUEENS’ COLLEGE. 1823. President. H enry G odfrey, D. D. ( Vice-Chancellor). Foundation Fellows. J ohn L odge H ubbersty, M. D. G eorge H ew itt, B. D. Charles F arish, B. D. W illiam M andell, B. D. T homas Beevor, B. D. G eorge Cornelius G orham, B. D. John T oplis, B. D. J oseph J ee, M. A. Samuel Carr, M. A. J ohn Baines G raham, M. A. H enry V enn, M. A. J oseph D ewe, M. A. J oshua K ing, M. A. T homas T attershall, M. A. Samuel F ennell, B. A. Edwards’ By-Fellow. John V incent T hompson, M.A., F.A.S. A FORM FOR TH E COMMEMORATION OF BENEFACTORS, TO BE USED IN THE CHAPEL OF TH E College of St. Margaret and St. Bernard, COMMONLY CALLED Queens’ College, Cambridge. LET the whole Society assemble in the College Chapel, on the day after the end of each Term; and let the Commemoration Service be conducted in the following manner; as required by the Statutes, (Chapter 25. ‘ De celebranda memoria Benefactorum’ — ¶ First, the Lesson, E cclesiasticus X L IV , shall be read.—¶ Then, the Sermon shall be preached, by some person a appointed by the President; at the conclusion o f which, the names o f the Foundresses, and of other Benefactors, shall be recited: — I.
    [Show full text]
  • DEVELOPMENT LAND for SALE Chatteris, Cambridgeshire 01480 451578
    DEVELOPMENT LAND FOR SALE Chatteris, Cambridgeshire 01480 451578 A142—Ely www.b A141—March Fenton Way, Chatteris, Cambridgeshire, PE16 6UP Price: Upon application Size: Up to 7.12 ha/17.6 acres Development land Outline Planning Permission High visibility location adjacent to Plots from 1 acre upwards A141 Voted by the Estates Gazette ‘Most Active Regional Agent in Cambridgeshire from 2010 to 2016’ Bury St Edmunds ● Cambridge ● Huntingdon ● Peterborough LOCATION LEGAL COSTS Chatteris is a market town in Cambridgeshire, situated Each party to be responsible for their own legal costs. at the junction of the A141 and the A142. Approximate driving distances: 12 miles north west of VIEWING Ely, 18 miles south east of Peterborough, 20 miles Strictly by appointment with the sole agents:- north of Cambridge, 16 miles to A1 junction 14, 20 miles to M11 junction 31. Barker Storey Matthews 150 High Street To find the premises proceed along Isle of Ely Way Huntingdon (A142) turning left onto Fenton Way whereupon the site is situated along on the left hand side. The site is Cambridgeshire also highly visible from the A141 (Chatteris to March PE29 3YH road). Contact: The owners are willing to consider the sale of Richard Adam development land plots of a smaller size, subject to further investigation as to practical suitability etc. [email protected] (01480) 451578 The owner’s architects have prepared the attached site plans indicating two estate road options within or the site indicating various possible plot sizes. It should be stressed that these are not fixed proposals and are subject to further discussions and possible Bloombridge Development Partners alteration based upon future enquiries.
    [Show full text]
  • First Notice. First Notice. First Notice. First* Notice
    & idler's or Keepers, oi their Deputies, bf the said iYiforiei' in tlie 'Goal for tlie Borough & 'Goals or Prisons. GREAT YARMOUTH. "Set at Large frorti rind surrendered, 'or ten­ , , r First Notice. John Crow,, formerly of Lutton in the County of Lincoln^ dered to be surrendered, to the KING'S late of Great Yarmouth in the County of Norfolk, Far- BENCH Prison in the Coanty of Surry. .. mer. .,....••'.. ' - First Notice. Prisoners in the Goal for the City of -John Moore, formerly and lite of Tottenham-court in the County of Middlesex, Cordwainer. WORCESTER. Samuel Wallis, formerly and late of Cheapstead in the County First Notice. Kent, Taylor. Thomas Knott, la.te of the Parish of St. Swithin in the City George Pennick, formerly a'nd late of Cornhill in the City of ; of Worcester, Fislimonger. London, Coffeeman. Joseph Watton, late of the Pariih of St. Peter in the City of "William Price, foimerly of Warwick-lane in the City of Lon­ Worcester, Labourer. don, Victualler, late of Hemel Hempstead in the County of Hertsoid, Innholder. • Benjamin Corfield, formeily of Lower Thames-street in the Prisoners in His Majestv's Goal in and for City of Lmdon, late of Saint Paul's Shadwell in the County the County of WORCESTER. of Middlesex, Victualler. Peter Bicknell, formerly of Little Prescot-street, lateof Well­ First Notice. close-square, both in the County of Middlesex, Taylor. John Asliwood, formerly of Broseley in the County of Sa'op, John Lear, formerly of Fleet-street in the City of London, late of the Parisli of St.
    [Show full text]
  • Isle of Ely and Wisbech September 2015
    System Transformation Programme Engagement Fact Pack: Isle of Ely and Wisbech September 2015 This pack contains data published for different geographical areas. The closest match to the area served by the Isle of Ely and Wisbech Local Commissioning Groups has been used throughout. Depending on the data source, this may be the locality, the local authorities of East Cambridgeshire and Fenland, the county of Cambridgeshire or the CCG catchment area. Population • The total resident population of East Cambridgeshire and Fenland was 181,100 in 2013 and is forecast to rise by 14% to 2023, reaching a total of 206,800. • The population aged 65 and over is forecast to rise by 28% by 2023. The number of people aged 90 or over will almost double in this time. • The number of children and young people aged 18 and under is forecast to rise by 14% to 2023. Source: Cambridgeshire County Council Research Group 2013-based population forecasts Primary Care Local context • There are 14 GP practices Isle of Ely and Wisbech Local Commissioning Groups, which make up the locality. Together these serve a registered population of 145,000. List sizes vary from 2,100 to 20,200, with an average list size of 10,400 compared to a CCG average of 8,700. • If practice populations increase in line with expected population growth, average list size will rise to 11,900 in 2023 (an increase of 14%). National GP pressures (source: Nuffield Trust Election Briefing 2015 - http://www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/blog/facts-figures-and-views-health- and-social-care-resource-reporters-2015-general-election) • 90% of NHS contacts take place in primary care ( HSCIC survey 2012/13) • Spending on core GP services fell by over 2% in real terms during the 2010-2015 parliament • The number of people saying they had failed to get an appointment rose from 9% to 11% from 2011/12 to 2013/14 • Consultations at GP surgeries rose by 11% from 2010 to 2014, though most of the increase was in nurse consultations and consultations with ‘others’ (e.g.
    [Show full text]
  • The London Gazette, 23 December, 1919 K893
    THE LONDON GAZETTE, 23 DECEMBER, 1919 K893 DISEASES OF ANIMALS ACTS, 1894 TO 1914 RETURN of OUTBREAKS of SWINE FEVER for the Week ended 20th December, 1919. Swine Swine slaughtered slaughtered as diseased as diseased Counties (including all Outbreaks or as having Counties (including all Outbreaks or as having Boroughs therein*), i, Confirmed. been ex- Boroughs therein*). Confirmed. been ex- posed to ! • • p:>3ed to . infection. infection ENGLAND. Nr. Mo. ENGLAND. (No. No. Buckingham 1 Northampton ... 1 • » » Cambridge 2 'i • Soke of Peterborough 1 Isle of Ely 3 ... Notts 1 ... Derby 1 •••• Oxford 2 2 Dorset 1 • •• Somerset 1 • • • Durham I • • * Suffolk 2 ... Gloucester 1 1 Warwick 1 . »j- Lincoln, Parts of Holland 1 ... York, East Riding 1 . .. „ „ Kesteven 1 ... „ North „ 2 ... „ " „ Lindscy 1 1 „ West ,, '1 ... Norfolk 6 . 3 TOTAL _ 33 8 V * For convenience Berwick-upon-Tweed- is considered to be in Northumberland, Dudley in Worcestershire, Stockport in Cheshire, and the city of London in the county of London. NOTE.—The term, "administrative county " used in the following descriptions of Areas is the district for which a county council is elected under the Local Government Act, 1888, am? includes all boroughs in it which are not county boroughs. The following Areas are now " Infected Areas " for the purposes of the Swine-Fever (Regulation of Movement) Order of 1908: — Huntingdon.—An Area, in the administrative Nottingham.—An Area in the administrative county of Huntingdon, comprising the county of Nottingham, comprising the petty sessional division of Ramsey (excluding borough of Mansfield, and the parishes of its detached part) (24 November, 1919.) Mansfield Woodhouse, Sutton-in-Ashfield, Isle of Ely.—An Area comprising the borough Kirkby-in-Ashfield, Fulwood, Hucknall- of Wisbech, the petty sessional divisions of under-Huthwaite, Teversall, and Skegby Whittlesley, and Wisbech (except the (2 July, 1919).
    [Show full text]
  • Celebrating Pioneers of Lifelong Learning
    Cambridgeshire's Village Colleges- Celebrating Pioneers of Lifelong Learning at the Heart of Rural Communities Oral History Interview Transcription Interview with Mrs Lorna Delanoy by Bradley Anker and Caydn Perez-Bent (Students at Witchford Villlage College). 6th February 2020 This is Caydn Perez-Bent and Bradley Anker and we are interviewing on 6th February 2020. What is your full name and what is your maiden name? My full name is Lorna Delanoy and it was Freeman. And I’m very local because I was born at Haddenham- just down the road. When were you born? 1940- an easy year, a ‘nought year’ you see! Special year this year…I’ll be 80 Where did you go to Primary School? I went to Haddenham Primary School and then in 1951 we sat the Eleven Plus so I went through to Ely High. But all my friends came to Witchford ‘Sec Mod’ ‘cause it was then opening in 1951. When was your first contact with a Village College? Let me see, in 1959 I came as a student teacher for the summer term when it was still a Secondary Modern School and the head in those days was Dobson who has been sent here from Primary teaching in Ely. What did the role of Student Teacher mean for you? It was very hard-going. I was very young and the children here, you see, were 15..14/15 and I was the ‘ripe old age’ of 19, so I wasn’t much older. And it was very hard-going yes. But easier here than at a teaching practice in London where I had been in the previous year.
    [Show full text]