SWAVESEY
The parish, covering 3,982 a. (1,611 ha.), (fn. 80) lies
on the former Huntingdonshire boundary northwest of Cambridge and extends from the Ouse
in the north to the Cambridge-Huntingdon road
in the south. The western boundary with Fen
Drayton and the south-eastern with Long Stanton follow field boundaries and drainage ditches.
Swavesey drain separates the parish from Over
to the north-east, except at the north-east corner
where the boundary follows what is apparently
an older line of the drain.
The land falls from south-west to north-east.
A ridge of higher ground, 18 m. (60 ft.) at its
south-western end, runs down the centre of the
parish towards the north-east. The ridge and the
southern third of the parish are formed by
Ampthill clay, which is overlaid by a small area
of river gravel at the northern end of the ridge.
The clay land was mainly arable and meadow,
while the gravel formed two islands on which
the core of the village developed. North, east,
and west of the ridge is low-lying alluvium, (fn. 81)
fenland before inclosure 1838-40.
Swavesey was notable in the Middle Ages as
the administrative centre of a large 11th-century
estate, (fn. 82) and for a castle built in the late 11th or
earlier 12th century, (fn. 83) an alien priory founded
in the late 11th century perhaps to replace a preConquest minster, (fn. 84) and a port town fortified c.
1200, with a market from the mid 13th century. (fn. 85)
The fens included Middle and Mow fens
north and west of the ridge, Mare fen to the
north, and Cow fen to the east. Mare fen and
part of Cow fen were inclosed in the early
17th century and the rest, with the open fields,
between 1838 and 1840. (fn. 86) Since the passage of
water from Long Stanton along Swavesey drain
was by the early 17th century allegedly restricted
by Over lode (Chain ditch) and Over bank
between Over and Earith, Swavesey's fens remained flooded longer than those of parishes to
the north-east. (fn. 87) The Ouse at Swavesey lode was
allegedly 'quite stopped up' by the inhabitants
by c. 1620. At that time too the outlet of Chain
ditch was stopped by a bank. (fn. 88) By 1655 the
undertakers of the Bedford Level drainage had
rebuilt and perhaps extended it as Over bank
across the north-east corner of Swavesey parish.
Swavesey drain west of it was to be maintained
by the parish. (fn. 89) The works caused further flooding in Swavesey in the 1660s. (fn. 90) New drains
were laid out at the inclosure of 1838-40, (fn. 91) but
flooding remained a problem. (fn. 92) Owners and
occupiers formed a committee for drainage in
1856; a waterworks contract allotted that year
may have been the result. (fn. 93) Swavesey and Fen
Drayton became a drainage district under an Act
of 1881, with an elected board of local farmers
which took over responsibility for certain watercourses from the parish surveyor. (fn. 94) In 1980 a
new Swavesey internal drainage district was set
up. (fn. 95) In 1983 it was planned to drain Mare and
Cow fens under the Anglian Water Scheme, (fn. 96)
but Mare fen was bought by the county council
in 1985 for a nature reserve. (fn. 97)
The Roman road from Cambridge towards
Huntingdon, turnpiked in 1745 (fn. 98) and disturnpiked in 1874, (fn. 99) runs along the south-western
boundary of the parish. The road running northwards from it along the ridge may have been the
Swavesey highway with a hermit mentioned in
1392. (fn. 1) Its northern part forms the village street;
Swavesey bridge by the church at its north end
existed by 1232. (fn. 2) The part south of the village
was known as Buckingway road by 1838. (fn. 3) The
road ran along a causeway, which existed by
1638, as far as the church, (fn. 4) but beyond that it
continued only as a footpath to Over; the name
of High Causeway bridge on the boundary may
be modern. (fn. 5) At inclosure between 1838 and 1840
the line north of the bridge was straightened to
make a new road to Over, cutting across the
churchyard. (fn. 6) At the same time another lane
running NNW. from the village and then NE.
to Ouse fen in Over was stopped up. (fn. 7) Other old
roads, retained at inclosure, ran west and southwest to Fen Drayton and east to Long Stanton. (fn. 8)
Mill way towards Fen Drayton appears to run
along an artificial causeway and the bridge at the
Fen Drayton boundary is called High Causeway
bridge. (fn. 9)
A navigation drain, perhaps the Swavesey lode
mentioned c. 1620, (fn. 10) ran north-west from the
village to the Ouse; in 1758 Berry Dodson, lessee
of the manor and parsonage, agreed to maintain
it. (fn. 11) A new dock was built west of the church
between 1838 and 1840. (fn. 12)
The Cambridge to St. Ives railway was opened
across the parish in 1847, (fn. 13) with Swavesey station
north-east of the church. The station was closed
to goods traffic in 1966 and to passengers in
1970; (fn. 14) the line survived in 1986 as a single track
for through freight trains. (fn. 15)
The recorded peasant population was 65 in
1086. (fn. 16) There were over 200 holdings in 1279. (fn. 17)
In 1327 altogether 96 people paid the subsidy (fn. 18)
**********
and 379 adults paid poll tax in 1377. (fn. 19)
were 78 families in 1563, (fn. 20) 387 adult inhabitants
in 1676, and 200 families in 1728. (fn. 21) The population increased from 831 in 1801 to 1,385 in
1851, then declined to 899 in 1901. It was 904
in 1911 and 830 in 1921. Thereafter it rose
gradually to 927 in 1951 and 1,150 in 1971, then
more rapidly to 1,584 in 1981 (fn. 22) and an estimated
1,700 in 1986, when expansion to 9,000 was
being considered. (fn. 23)
Roman pottery has been found on a mound
west of the present village. (fn. 24) Until the later 20th
century Swavesey village consisted of a densely
built-up area on an island of river gravel in the
north, with the church and manor house isolated
on a second island north of it beyond the
navigation drain, and a long street running south
along the central ridge. Although it has been
suggested that the original village was in the
south, on a deserted site at Boxworth End, and
that the inhabitants were moved northwards to
a new fortified and planned town in the mid or
late 13th century, (fn. 25) the supposed deserted village
appears rather to have been a system of drainage
channels of unknown date on the former Great
green, (fn. 26) while the name Swavesey, referring to
an island or a hythe, (fn. 27) suggests that the original
settlement was on the fen edge. The more
northerly of the two gravel islands was known
as the Eye by c. 1200; in 1314 it was mostly
demesne meadow. (fn. 28) Pottery found in the churchyard there suggests settlement by c. 1000. (fn. 29) The
church stood there by the later 11th century,
with an alien priory north of it by 1086 (fn. 30) and
the manor house of Swavesey manor east of it
by the later Middle Ages. (fn. 31) Settlement was
otherwise restricted to the southern island, where
a town had probably begun to develop by 1086. (fn. 32)
The original focus was perhaps on the highest
part of the island, where three roads make a Y
junction: Station Road leading to the church,
Taylor's Lane leading towards the causeway to
Fen Drayton and possibly to be identified with
the Barkeleys lane mentioned in 1476, (fn. 33) and High
Street leading south along the ridge towards
Boxworth. The cross mentioned in the late 15th
century (fn. 34) may have stood at the junction. A few
houses south-west and south-east of the junction
were still copyhold of Swavesey manor in the
19th century. (fn. 35) Wallman's Lane east of High
Street, called Back Lane in the 19th century
until renamed after a contemporary property
owner there, may have continued further north,
curving round to join Station Road along the
line of later tenement boundaries. (fn. 36) The castle
was built west of the Y junction probably c. 1070
or in the 1140s; (fn. 37) it appears to have blocked
Taylor's Lane, which was diverted round it.
Swavesey was a port apparently by 1177, with
a dock whose profits were granted to the prior
c. 1200. (fn. 38) The southern island was fortified about
then, while the priory was acquiring land and
houses. (fn. 39) The built-up area of the fortified town
was restricted to High Street, Station Road, and
the adjoining lanes by the presence of the large
closes of the Castle croft and the presumed sites
of the later Topleys and Bennetts manor houses.
The northern half was apparently held mainly
of the prior's manor and the southern half mainly
of Bennetts manor. The plots along Station Road
were probably laid out at or before the time of
fortification. (fn. 40) To the west Black Horse Lane,
making a rectangular block east of the castle,
may date from the same period. It was probably
the Chapel lane mentioned in 1476 (fn. 41) and was
known as Dodson's Lane in 1851. (fn. 42) The church
was rebuilt soon after 1200. (fn. 43)
Alan la Zouche, lord of Swavesey manor,
presumably followed up the grant to him of a
market in 1244 by laying out Market Street,
with a dock at the east end. (fn. 44) The task was
perhaps made easier because the centre part of
Wallman's Lane and its presumed northern
extension, blocked by the new street, was held
by customary tenants of Swavesey manor. (fn. 45)
There were 20 single and 4 double burgages in
the market by 1279. (fn. 46) They presumably stood
on the small plots clearly intruded between the
larger ones facing north towards the prior's dock
and the tenements of Bennetts manor on the
south. Most of those plots were freehold in the
19th century. (fn. 47) The prior may also have had an
interest in the market place, since two tenements
held of the rectory manor apparently faced it in
1476. (fn. 48) One and possibly two copyholds at the
east end of the street (fn. 49) were probably encroachments on the market place after the burgages
were laid out.
Meanwhile a separate settlement had grown
up beside the road running south along the
central ridge. The 10 villaniof 1086 perhaps
lived there, as probably also did the 63 half
yardlanders of Swavesey manor in 1279, (fn. 50) predecessors of the later copyholders of that manor whose houses, except for the plots mentioned
above, lay outside the former town walls in the
19th century. The core of the settlement can be
identified tentatively in Boxworth End, apparently a separate tithing by the 19th century, (fn. 51) as
a row of tofts on the western side of the road
from the south end of the modern village to a
point north of the road to Long Stanton and
perhaps almost to Gibraltar Lane, which ran
across Gibraltar green before inclosure. That
row was still the main area of Swavesey manor
copyhold closes in 1838. (fn. 52) On the east side of
the road was apparently a common green. A
block of houses and crofts, including freeholds,
at the south end appears to be an encroachment
on the green, made perhaps in the 12th or 13th
century. Further north, on Middle Watch, a
name perhaps relating to an otherwise unrecorded area of policing, an isolated block of
settlement, dividing Cow Fen green to the north
from Great green to the south, had been cut out
of the common by the late 13th century when
Ryder's Farm was built there. (fn. 53) Much of the
block was later copyhold and may have included
some of the half yardlanders' houses in 1279.
On the west of the road School Lane, known as
Carter's Lane in 1838, (fn. 54) probably existed by
1476 with Wakefields, later the Priory, at its
western end. (fn. 55) The tofts north of the lane backed
on Thistle green south of the town ditch, defined
as a green by 1476. (fn. 56) The remaining plots along
the west side of Middle Watch between Gibraltar
and School lanes were presumably encroachments on the roadside common, (fn. 57) perhaps after
the Middle Ages. Most of Middle Watch, with
the former fortified town, was apparently regarded as in Church End tithing in 1841. (fn. 58)
Despite the fall in population in the later
Middle Ages no particular area of the village
deserted then can be identified. The expansion
of settlement from the mid 16th to the earlier
19th century, with 127 houses recorded in 1674, (fn. 59)
145 inhabited in 1801, and 217 inhabited in
1831, (fn. 60) apparently took place largely by infilling,
although Hill Farm in the south-east of the
parish existed by 1838. (fn. 61)
Apart from new building, much rebuilding
was occasioned by the fires which swept the
village from the 18th century and presumably
earlier. A fire in 1719 allegedly destroyed property worth £1,755. (fn. 62) Between 1848 and 1889 at
least 37 houses and cottages were destroyed in
at least 12 fires. (fn. 63) A fire which began in Taylor's
Lane in 1913 destroyed at least 28 houses, most
of them in Station Road. (fn. 64) Another destroyed
four in Market Street in 1924. (fn. 65) Few early houses
therefore survived in 1988. Apart from those
mentioned above, no. 31 Station Road, formerly
the Swan inn, (fn. 66) retains the hall and cross wing
of a late medieval house later extended in timber
framing to the north-west and refronted in brick
in the 18th century. No. 36 Boxworth End and
nos. 73-75 Middle Watch are timber-framed
houses of the 17th century or later. Other 17thcentury or earlier houses survived in Wallman's
Lane until the later 20th century, (fn. 67) while the
Old House, Black Horse Lane, is partly 17thcentury, though it and the adjoining Quaker
meeting house were rebuilt after the fire of
1719. (fn. 68) To the north no. 25 Black Horse Lane,
gutted by fire in 1980 and restored in 1983, (fn. 69)
appears to be of 17th-century origin, and individual cottages in Market Street and High Street
apparently retain elements of 17th-century work,
though they were largely rebuilt in brick in the
18th and 19th centuries. Houses of the 18th
century include Mill Farm in Middle Watch,
the White Horse inn in Market Street, and nos.
10-12 High Street. (fn. 70) In the rest of High Street,
as in Middle Watch and Boxworth End, the
older houses are of brick and date mainly from
the 19th century. In Station Road and Taylor's
Lane the fire of 1913 was followed by vigorous
rebuilding, one house being wholly and six more
nearly completed within five months, including
Bottle House, so named after a diamond of nine
bottle bottoms in the west gable. (fn. 71) That and
several other houses in Station Road and one in
Taylor's Lane, all dated 1913 but in a style then
old-fashioned, survived in 1988. Other tofts
rendered vacant by the fire were not again built
on until the later 20th century.
The number of inhabited houses in the parish
increased to a peak of 327 in 1871 and then
fell to 245 in 1901. Most of the increase was
apparently accommodated within the limits of
the earlier village, though the road to Long
Stanton, renamed Ramper Road, had a few
houses by 1871. (fn. 72) Rows of cottages were built
perhaps in the mid 19th century at the back of
tenements, such as those which lay to the south
of Black Horse Lane in 1887. (fn. 73) In 1910 altogether
31 people owned 133 cottages in groups, including 9 pairs and 18 groups of 4 to 8 cottages; one
owner had 12 cottages. (fn. 74)
New farms were built in the fields after 1840.
Trinity College Farm on Utton's Drove existed
by 1841; a barn north-east of it, apparently 16thcentury, may have been brought from elsewhere.
Also by 1841 the New inn had been built on the
turnpike road at its junction with Buckingway
Road. (fn. 75) Thorp's Farm in the south existed prob
ably by 1861, (fn. 76) Freezeland, later Friezland, Farm
in the north-west by 1887, (fn. 77) and Warner's, later
Highfield, Farm on Utton's Drove by 1891. (fn. 78) In
the earlier 20th century there was some infilling
in Boxworth End, where houses of that period
survived in 1988. Trinity College built two sixroomed cottages next to the mission church there
in 1913. (fn. 79) Swavesey rural district council built
eight houses fronting on Carter's (later School)
Lane in 1921 (fn. 80) and others at Boxworth End in
1928. (fn. 81)
After 1945, and particularly after the opening
of a village college in 1958 west of Middle
Watch, (fn. 82) the village expanded beyond its former
limits, chiefly west of the main street. By 1973
the space between Gibraltar and School lanes
had been filled by Carter's Way and Priory
Avenue with 97 houses of c. 1972, while further
south Whitton Close stood between the college
and Middle Watch, with some houses dating
from before 1963 and others from the late
1960s; further houses were being built south of
Gibraltar Lane in 1973. (fn. 83) Between School Lane
and the former town ditch the Thistle Green
estate was under construction from c. 1980. (fn. 84)
East of the main street Ramper Road was built
up apparently in the 1950s and later; a caravan
park lay south of it in 1973. (fn. 85) By 1986 houses
had been built in Greenside Close leading off
Middle Watch. (fn. 86) Building had begun on Hobbledods close by 1968. (fn. 87) In 1988, after the demolition some years earlier of the old houses in
Wallman's Lane, (fn. 88) a new housing estate was
being built there. Further north Chequers Court
on the east side of Station Road was built
between 1984 and 1986. (fn. 89)
There were at least 3 inns in 1765 and 8 in
the early 19th century, and between 1858 and
1900 generally 14-16 inns and beerhouses. The
number declined to 8 in 1912, 4 in 1937, 3 in
1960, and one in the late 1960s. Among the
longer established inns were the White Horse in
Market Street, recorded from 1765 and still open
in 1988; the Rose and Crown on the corner of
Boxworth End and Rose and Crown Road,
recorded from 1765, closed in the 1880s; the
Black Horse on the corner of High Street and
Black Horse Lane, recorded from 1777, closed
c. 1910; the Swan in Station Road, later the
Swan with Two Necks, recorded from 1777,
closed 1917; the Blue Bell, perhaps the Bell
recorded from 1780, and still open in 1937; and
the George and Dragon, recorded from 1798,
closed between 1900 and 1908. (fn. 90)
A recreation ground was allotted east of
Middle Watch in 1840. (fn. 91) Cricket matches on
private grounds were being held by 1844; (fn. 92) a
cricket club was formed in 1866 (fn. 93) and moved in
1919 to a permanent pitch on the recreation
ground. (fn. 94) The club still existed in 1937 (fn. 95) but
had apparently lapsed by 1986. (fn. 96) There was a
football club by 1920, (fn. 97) apparently playing on
the recreation ground in 1937. (fn. 98) It may have
been the same as Swavesey Institute club, which
survived in 1986. (fn. 99) A hockey club existed in
1922. (fn. 1) Swavesey angling club was founded in
the early 20th century. (fn. 2) Clubs in 1986 included
a bowls club and a road runners' club. (fn. 3)
A skating match between a Fen and a Lancashire team took place at Swavesey in 1827. (fn. 4) A
match was held in 1857 on ice near the church, (fn. 5)
probably in Mare fen, where an ice hockey match
against Earith took place in 1879 (fn. 6) and where
skating championship meetings were held from
1880 until 1933. (fn. 7) When the county council
bought the fen in 1985 it agreed to allow skating
to continue. (fn. 8)
A drum and fife band was formed apparently
in 1880 and had 40 members by 1884; it disbanded in 1895. (fn. 9) A village orchestra competed
in a festival of music at Cambridge in 1930. (fn. 10) A
horticultural society, founded in 1852, was still
flourishing in 1923. (fn. 11)
A young men's reading society, meeting in the
National schoolroom, was established in 1849. (fn. 12)
A mutual improvement society set up in 1897
met at the Quaker meeting house in Black Horse
Lane. (fn. 13) A war memorial hall was opened in High
Street in 1924, (fn. 14) with a billiard table and reading
room used by a village institute (fn. 15) which survived
in 1986. (fn. 16) Weekly film shows were held at the
hall in 1928. (fn. 17)
Between 1813 and 1815 there were 36 people
in friendly societies. (fn. 18) Lodges of the Oddfellows
and Ancient Shepherds were established in 1849
or 1850; that of the Shepherds still existed in
1896. (fn. 19) A benefit society met at the George and
Dragon from 1855; others attached to public
houses existed in 1926. (fn. 20)
The village Feast was held on the Sunday
before Whitsun by 1819. In the later 19th
century it extended to the Monday and Tuesday,
but by the 1980s was apparently restricted to
the Sunday. Events included horse-racing in the
late 19th century and a pleasure fair in Market
Street and barrel rolling in the 1980s, when a
village gala was held in alternate years. (fn. 21)
A post office was established in the 1850s. (fn. 22)
The county education committee opened a
branch library in 1922; from 1923 it was housed
at the National school. (fn. 23) After the village college
opened in 1958 the library was moved there. (fn. 24)
A parish fire engine bought in 1827 was still in
use, ineffectively, in 1913. (fn. 25) A town clock was
erected by subscription in front of the National
school c. 1848. (fn. 26) Waterworks contracted for by
James Stevens of Cambridge in 1856 may have
been for a public supply or for drainage. (fn. 27) By
1914 the East Huntingdonshire Water Co. was
supplying water to Swavesey rural district council under an order of 1896; the supply was
impure (fn. 28) and may have been the same as a dirty
water supply in the village, described as new in
1916. (fn. 29) The pumps of an earlier water supply,
perhaps that of 1856, including a town pump on
the corner of Black Horse Lane and High Street,
were handed over by the district council to
the parish council when the newer supply was
installed. (fn. 30) Paraffin street lamps, paid for by
subscription, were installed in the winter of
1885-6. (fn. 31) A new system of public street lamps
was apparently installed in 1907. (fn. 32) The parish
council installed new lamps at Top Leys Corner
(presumably in Taylor's Lane) and Gibraltar
Lane in 1912, (fn. 33) but during and after the First
World War, to keep down the rates, it refused
to light street lamps. (fn. 34) Mains electricity was
supplied to the village in 1936. (fn. 35)
During the revolt of 1381 a John Cook led a
'conventicle' of peasants assembled at Swavesey
into Huntingdonshire. (fn. 36) George Dyer (1755-
1841), miscellaneous author, lived at Swavesey
1779-92. (fn. 37)
CASTLE AND TOWN DEFENCES. No
mention of Swavesey castle has been found
before 1476, when William Copley held Castle
croft of the rectory manor for boonworks and
suit of court, (fn. 38) services characteristic of tenures
on that manor in 1279. (fn. 39) It is therefore unlikely
that the castle was built by the Zouches in the
13th century. (fn. 40) It was not mentioned among the
priory's original endowments and was more
probably one of its acquisitions c. 1200. (fn. 41) It was
presumably derelict by c. 1200 when the croft,
later known as Castle close, an enclosure c.
114 m. (375 ft.) square, was incorporated into
the town defences. It may date, like Burwell
castle, from the 1140s (fn. 42) or may have been built
during the campaign against Ely in 1070-1. (fn. 43)
The town defences enclosed the whole of the
gravel island south and west of the navigation
drain. (fn. 44) The north-western sector was still marked in 1988 by a ditch and a hedged earth
rampart west of Castle close and west and north
of Topleys close, where it took in the ridge and
furrow of former open field at the north end of
the close. (fn. 45) On the north-east an irregular bank
can be traced across the former Church green;
on the south-east the ditch presumably ran close
to the line of the modern drainage ditch and
included Hobbledods close south of Market
Street. West of Turnbridge, a name suggesting
a medieval drawbridge over the ditch, (fn. 46) the town
ditch ran north of a modern drain and the
present Thistle Green estate. That part of the
fortifications and presumably the rest were
constructed c. 1200. (fn. 47) What may have been
an extension (fn. 48) ran further west to include the
approximately rectangular Chantry close, (fn. 49)
probably returning eastwards to join the
surviving rampart at the south end of Castle
close.
Since the town ditch, which was perhaps
intended mainly as a flood defence, was built
during the period when the lords of Swavesey
manor were foreigners or short-term grantees, (fn. 50)
it was presumably promoted by the lesser landowners, particularly the lord of the later Bennetts
manor and the prior. The area enclosed included
the presumed sites of Hobbledods and Topleys
manor houses, while the copyhold houses of
the rectory and Hobbledods manors lay wholly
within the enclosure, the former group mainly
along the present Station Road and the latter
along the south end of High Street and in
Wallman's Lane. (fn. 51) Some tenements on the rectory manor, including Castle croft, were called
garizonabilisin 1476, (fn. 52) and the crofts on the
north side of Station Road west of Swavesey
bridge, at least some of which were held of the
rectory manor, (fn. 53) curved round to back on the
town ditch, perhaps so that each householder
could maintain part of it. (fn. 54) The southern part of
the town ditch was kept cleared in the later
Middle Ages but was filled in with the adjoining
rampart c. 1500. (fn. 55)