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Sutton-in-the-Isle

 
Wikipedia: Sutton-in-the-Isle

Coordinates: 52°23′15″N 0°06′58″E / 52.38737°N 0.11600°E / 52.38737; 0.11600

Sutton-in-the-Isle
View of sutton.JPG
Sutton-in-the-Isle is located in Cambridgeshire
Sutton-in-the-Isle

 Sutton-in-the-Isle shown within Cambridgeshire
Population 3,363 (2001 Census)
OS grid reference TL441787
District East Cambridgeshire
Shire county Cambridgeshire
Region East
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town CAMBRIDGE
Postcode district CB6
Dialling code 01353
Police Cambridgeshire
Fire Cambridgeshire
Ambulance East of England
EU Parliament East of England
UK Parliament North East Cambridgeshire
List of places: UK • England • Cambridgeshire
Signpost in Sutton-in-the-Isle
Signpost in Sutton-in-the-Isle

Sutton-in-the-Isle, commonly referred to simply as Sutton, is a parish and village in the county of Cambridgeshire in England, near the city of Ely. The "in-the-Isle" suffix refers to the fact that the village is part of the Isle of Ely, once an island in The Fens and also an administrative county until 1965.

Contents

Timeline

  • 1086 - The village was mentioned in the Domesday Book;
  • 1370 - The Church was built;
  • 1630 - The Fens were ordered to be drained;
  • 1774 - John Wesley, founder of the Methodist movement, visited the village;
  • 1790 - The Methodist Chapel was constructed;
  • 1791 - The Baptist Chapel was built;
  • 1860 - The village school was built;
  • 1866 - Railway opens;
  • 1872 - Second Methodist Chapel built;
  • 1880 - Primitive Methodist Chapel built;
  • 1914 - Third Methodist Chapel built;
  • 1935 - Primitive Methodist Chapel closed;
  • 1938 - Electricity comes to the village;
  • 1941 - Mepal Airfield constructed between the villages of Sutton and Mepal;
  • 1960s - Sutton was host to a one mile section of one of the worlds first air-cushion train tracks. The track was built to test the air suspension and used the linear induction motor of Eric Laithwaite for propulsion.
  • 1964 - Railway closes;
  • 1984 - Bypass opened;
  • 1996 - Cambridge Machinery Sales move to the village;
  • 2000 - Straw burning power station opened;
  • 2002 - Village wins East Cambs, Cambridgeshire and Calor England and Wales Village of the Year awards;

Sutton Church

St. Andrews Church, Sutton.

The Church of the village is dedicated to St. Andrew. It has a distinctively shaped tower that often described as being the shape of a pepperpot.

Sutton Gault (Bury Lane)

Bridge over the Old Bedford River at Sutton Gault

Sutton Gault (Bury Lane) is a part of the parish of Sutton-in-the-Isle. It comprises a few houses and farms and an inn, 'The Anchor'. The Old Bedford River and New Bedford River pass through Sutton Gault and often flood into the land between them. It was also the site of Eric Laithwaite's magnetic levitation train tracks. The name derives from the gault clay that has been extracted from there.

The Americas

The Americas, also known as The America or just America is another part of the parish. It consists of houses and an orchard producing apple juice. Although it is treated as a separate settlement from the village of Sutton-in-the-Isle on some maps, most residents consider it part of the village and the equivalent of a street name. So far the origins of the name remain a mystery. It is known to have had its name since at least 1881 as it is mentioned in the census of that year, although the name could be much older.

See also

External links


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