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Swaffham Bulbeck

 
Wikipedia: Swaffham Bulbeck

Coordinates: 52°14′N 0°17′E / 52.23°N 0.28°E / 52.23; 0.28

Swaffham Bulbeck
The Old Abbey, Swaffham Bulbeck - geograph.org.uk - 1181611.jpg
The Old Abbey
Swaffham Bulbeck is located in Cambridgeshire
Swaffham Bulbeck

Red pog.svg Swaffham Bulbeck shown within Cambridgeshire
OS grid reference TL559619
District East Cambridgeshire
Shire county Cambridgeshire
Region East
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town CAMBRIDGE
Postcode district CB5
Dialling code 01223
EU Parliament East of England
List of places: UK • England • Cambridgeshire

Swaffham Bulbeck is a village in East Cambridgeshire, England.

Swaffham Bulbeck is located about 8 miles (13 km) from the city of Cambridge, and 6 miles (10 km) from the famous town of Newmarket. The parish of Swaffham Bulbeck is part of the Ely diocese and the Deanery of Fordham and Quy. The benefice consists of five parishes, Swaffham Bulbeck, Swaffham Prior, Bottisham, Lode and Quy.

Children initially attend primary school in the village and usually then go on to Bottisham Village College.

Contents

Culture and community

Every year the village summer theatre company produces and performs one of Gilbert and Sullivan's operas. Established in 1982 the company has run every year since, first at the Long Barn to the south of the village until its redevelopment in 1988 and then to a much more capacious setting in a barn central to the village by kind permission of the owner. This venue too has now come up for redevelopment and the production is now based at Downing Farm by kind permission of the Turner family.

Church

The west tower of the church was built in the early 1200s and is the most ancient part of a very ancient building. The tower is 12.5 feet (4 m) square with three storeys and is supported by eight buttresses. It is built of locally quarried clunch (from Burwell).

The Nave was constructed in the first half of the 13th century it consists of four uniform bays with six octagonal piers supporting the clearstorey which was added in the 15th century. The north aisle was built in about 1300 and the south aisle a few years later.

Apart from some fragments of 14th and 15th century stained glass in the north aisle, all the 10 windows in the aisles and 8 in the clearstorey are of plain leaded glass. The nave is some 57 feet (17 m) long by 21 feet (6 m) wide and the aisles are 11 feet (3 m) wide. The Church can seat about 200 people at full capacity.

The churchyard contains many interesting gravestones — there are six tomb chests the earliest dating from 1742, and about 35 headstones with shaped tops dating from 1703 onwards.

As regards the vicarage, in the late 1970s it was decided by the parish that the village no longer required a vicarage of its own. It was sold to the public, and now provides bed and breakfast accommodation. It is erroneously now called The Old Rectory.

Trade

The village is located just beyond the end of Swaffham Bulbeck Lode, a man-made waterway which connects with the River Cam. The Hamlet of Commercial End, at the northern edge of the village, was an important inland port from medieval times, although the waterway had been in use since Roman times.[1] Principal buildings include the late 17th century Merchants House, which had a counting house added in the mid 18th century. Workers' cottages and warehouses were added to the street by Thomas Bowyer, after he acquired the house in 1805. River trade declined once the railways reached the area, and the house and contents were sold after 1877. The street retains its 18th and early 19th century character, although the lode is now only navigable as far as Slade Farm, some 2 miles (3.2 km) away.[2]

Notable citizens

Swaffam Bulbeck is the residence of the twice Nobel prize winner Frederick Sanger.

References

  1. ^ The River Great Ouse and tributaries, (2006), Andrew Hunter Blair, Imray Laurie Norie and Wilson, ISBN 978-0-85288-943-5
  2. ^ The Canals of Eastern England, (1977), John Boyes and Ronald Russell, David and Charles, ISBN 978-0715374153

External links


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