FORDHAM
Fordham, (fn. 36) lying over four miles (7 km.)
north of Newmarket and thirteen north-east of
Cambridge, covered 4,204 a. until Landwade's
127 a. were incorporated in 1953, thereafter
1,753 ha. (4,331 a.)., (fn. 37) within borders that form
an irregular oblong, but with substantial projections to north, west, and south. (fn. 38) The incurving
boundaries to the east and south largely follow
those of former open fields. The western and
northern projections, the former towards
Wicken partly bounded on the south by part of
Burwell's New River, consist of fenland formerly intercommonable with Soham. With
extensive fields and crofts in the north-west of
the parish, that common was formerly subject
to the jurisdiction of a Soham manorial court,
but after its inclosure in the mid 17th century
was held to lie parochially in Fordham. (fn. 39)
Between those two extensions there lay on the
north-west side Clipsall field, mostly in Soham,
but part of which had long been included within
Fordham ecclesiastically. (fn. 40)
The parish lies predominantly upon the
Lower Chalk, overlaid in a few places by the
Middle Chalk, and traversed from south to
north by a strip of alluvium along the gently
winding northward course of the river Snail,
which divides into several channels as it flows
past Fordham village. A wider strip of river gravels touching the river extends from the eastern
boundary towards the site of the village, (fn. 41) placed
almost centrally within the main block of the
parish. The land is virtually level, declining
almost imperceptibly from c. 15 m. along
Fordham's south-eastern side to 5 m. or less
in its north-west. Watercourses bounding
Chippenham and Snailwell fens on their north
and west, which in places form the parish
boundary, drain south of the village into the
Snail, whose courses have occasionally been
adjusted there, altering its distance from the
modern Fordham Abbey, to suit the landscaping
of its park. (fn. 42) North and west of the village other
drainage channels run into the Snail and into
Burwell New River from the former fenland.
From the 1970s the Snail was frequently polluted by outflows from Newmarket's sewage
system: repeated attempts were made in the late
1980s to cleanse and protect the river. (fn. 43)
No ancient woodland survives, although in
the 19th century the narrow Underdown plantation, (fn. 44) 16 a., was laid out by Chippenham fen
along the south-east boundary, while Abbey
wood, 13 a. in 1930, was planted beside the Snail
south of the village and east of the well-timbered
Fordham Abbey park. (fn. 45) Most of the east and
south of the parish, which remains arable farmland, was cultivated until inclosure in the 1810s
under a triennial rotation, while the belt of fen
drained by the 19th century to the north-west
supplied common pasture, part until the 1650s,
the rest until the 1810s. In the late 19th and
early 20th centuries Fordham was notable for
nursery gardens.
Traces have been found in Fordham, in the
form of weapons and tools, both flint and metal,
and pottery, of human activity and probably
settlement, from the Early Bronze Age to the
Iron Age, (fn. 46) also a few burials. (fn. 47) From the Roman
period, besides crop marks, there survive fragments of wall plaster and tiles, suggesting that
villas stood to the south and west near Biggin
and Block Farms in the 2nd to 4th centuries
A.D. (fn. 48) Three 8th- or 9th-century 'book clasps',
possibly shrine ornaments, found near Fordham
may be associated with the religious community
supposedly then at Soham. (fn. 49)
In 1086 Fordham was probably inhabited by
24 peasants and one servus. (fn. 50) By 1279 the village
contained c. 140 houses, occupied by c. 135 manorial tenants. (fn. 51) There were 38 people paying the
fifteenth in 1327. (fn. 52) In 1377 c. 340 paid the poll
tax (fn. 53) and in 1523-4 c. 65 the subsidy. (fn. 54) Numbers
grew rapidly from the 1570s, possibly doubling
by the mid 17th century. (fn. 55) Ministers reported
240 (adult) communicants in 1603 (fn. 56) and still 370
in 1676, (fn. 57) when Fordham had c. 120 dwellings;
barely 15 of them had more than three hearths,
and 55-65 only one. (fn. 58) From a peak c. 1680 the
population may have fallen by a third or more
by the mid 18th century, only recovering from
the 1760s. (fn. 59) By 1801 it had reached 700, and rose
steadily thereafter, most rapidly in the 1820s, to
a fresh peak of 1,584 in 1851, despite some emi
gration. (fn. 60) Numbers had fallen to 1,191 by 1881.
Then, however, a sluggish growth resumed, the
population rising to 1,326 by 1901 and 1,475 by
1931. Partly through new building it reached
1,667 by 1951 and, growing fastest in the 1960s
and 1980s, 1,969 in 1971 and 2,204 by 1991. (fn. 61)

Fordham Before Inclosure c. 1800

Fordham Village c. 1800
Until the 19th century settlement in the parish
was concentrated along a main street, (fn. 62) whose
eastern part was called from the 14th century to
the early 17th the 'hey' (fn. 63) or 'high' street', (fn. 64) still
its name in the 1850s. (fn. 65) It forms part of a road
running west from Mildenhall (Suff.) through
Soham towards Ely, and lies west of the point
where that road crossed one southward from
Isleham, possibly called c. 1400 Moor street. (fn. 66)
By the 20th century that eastern section of the
main street was renamed Church Street after the
village church, which stood south-west of that
crossroads. As it led west the street ran slightly
north-westwards to cross the Snail by a bridge
called the Stone bridge by the 17th century, as
c. 1800. (fn. 67) The street then bent a little southwestward before curving more sharply north-west
to form a road towards Soham. That western
part beyond the bridge was called by 1400
Carter Street, (fn. 68) and the 2 ½-a. green along its
north-eastern side by 1800 Carter Street green. (fn. 69)
The larger Feast green, in 1656 part of Pool Fen
common's 15 a. and covering until inclosure 7
a., lay south of Carter Street's eastern part. (fn. 70)
Ancient closes around the village, covering in
the 1810s c. 225 a., and its crofts (fn. 71) stretched
some way south from the main street as far as a
back lane. They were bounded on the east by
the modern Collin Hill (fn. 72) and Peachey Street,
then still uninhabited, whereas there were
already dwellings along Mill lane, so named by
the 1740s, (fn. 73) possibly the Dam street recorded c.
1380-1550. (fn. 74) Mill lane runs parallel to the Snail,
there called the Dam in 1656, and links the main
street to the back lane and a water mill on the
Snail beyond. The back lane, probably the
Paddock street mentioned c. 1550-1800, (fn. 75) was
also styled Mill lane c. 1820, (fn. 76) but River Lane
by 1870. (fn. 77) It extended west, crossing the Snail
by a bridge called by 1530 Paddock bridge,
rebuilt in the 1840s, to a small group of houses
standing by the 1650s by White lane, around the
small Market Street green, (fn. 78) from which a road
led south-west toward Burwell. Those houses
lay at the south end of Market Street, which ran
north-west to form a back way for the crofts
west of Carter Street, to which it was linked only
by minor lanes, such as Sharmans lane, mentioned c. 1820. (fn. 79) Market street itself had been so
named by 1440, (fn. 80) probably not from a trading
function, but from its leading into Newmarket
way, (fn. 81) which ran south past Fordham priory,
later the site of Fordham Abbey, through
Exning towards Newmarket. The village plan
thus eventually formed a quadrilateral of streets
and lanes, though before the 19th century only
its northern edge was well populated. The half
of the land inclosed by those streets that lay west
of the river was by 1800 traversed by the New
Path, once Gunnings lane, leading stepwise
south-west from the bend of Carter Street to
Market Street green. (fn. 82)
Few of the timber-framed houses that once
lined Fordham's streets have survived the fires
that sometimes ravaged the village. One in 1601
destroyed 13 dwellings from the high street to
Market Street. Another in 1712 burnt many
more between Mill lane and the old vicarage. (fn. 83)
The 19th century still saw fires destroying many
farmhouses, especially in the 1840s, (fn. 84) and cottages: twelve cottages were lost in one fire in
1853, six more in 1858-61. (fn. 85) Among the few
houses remaining from before 1750 is a late
16th-century timber-framed one under a queenpost roof standing south of Carter Street, brickcased in the early 19th century and given four
sash windows below dormers with a central
doorway, later pedimented. One room retains
17th-century panelling. A late 16th-century
timber-framed barn and warehouse, weatherboarded under pantiles, of six bays with mullioned windows in its west wall, survives by the
bridge west of that house. The once threebayed, possibly 17th-century Chequers public
house, where Carter Street turns north-west,
was also brick-cased over its timber frame and
extended to east and west c. 1830, when its street
front was sashed under segmental brick arches.
The Crown inn, at the far east end of the main
street, occupies another two-storeyed, timberframed house, probably 16th-century. Though
refaced after 1800, it has inside clunch fireplaces
with arched openings on two floors. (fn. 86)
From the late 18th century some wealthier
villagers built themselves new houses, usually of
grey brick, of two storeys with three-or fourbayed fronts, moulded classical doorcases, and,
eventually, 16-paned sash windows. Two such,
Moston and Washington Houses, both slateroofed, survive south of Church Street. (fn. 87) On
Mill lane, whose west side was already well built
up at inclosure, are several similar early 19thcentury houses, one with a porch on Ionic columns. Off New Path, Walton House, also early
19th-century, on an L-plan, has a five-bayed
front in which four segmental-arched windows
flank a central round-headed one. The late 18thcentury, partly timber-framed, Biggin Farm in
other old inclosures south of the Abbey, built
and thatched, as a cottage orné, has Gothick
windows and doors in its wings. West of the
Newmarket road stands the 19th-century
Fordham House, originally built to a standard
three-bayed design in brick with segmentalarched windows on its south front. Near it
stands a (presumably moved) late 17th-century
timber-framed barn of six bays. A few other
farmhouses, some with dependent cottages,
were similarly built out on the former open fields
after inclosure, as at Slate, later Leechmere,
Farm to the east, and Lark Hall Farm to the
west. (fn. 88) At Block Farm, amidst 17th-century
inclosures in Fordham's western projection,
there was already a farmstead c. 1800. (fn. 89)
Most of the other houses along the older village streets are of 19th-century brick, including
a few terraces of cottages: by the 1850s local
farmers and builders had put up 10-12 together
in 'yards' along the streets, originally named
after them. (fn. 90) The number of inhabited houses
in the parish grew from 186, many subdivided,
in 1831, when rates were levied on 106 houses
and 210 cottages, to 336 by 1851. (fn. 91) In the mid
19th century most inhabitants still dwelt within
the traditional bounds of the village. There
were, apart from the dwellings around Fordham
Abbey, only a few groups of cottages, 10-12 at
most, at farmhouses outside the village, mostly
in the former fen to the west. In the 1860s there
were 110-120 dwellings along the main northern
street, with another 60-80 mostly humbler ones
on the lanes to its south, of which only Mill
Lane with 25-35 was heavily built up. The
number of houses on Market Street declined
from a peak of c. 80 in 1861 to 55-65 in the
1870s. In 1871 c. 625 people, almost half the
parish population, lived along the northern
street, c. 275 others on the adjoining lanes, and
as many on Market Street. (fn. 92) By the 1870s the
reduced population had left 25-30 houses
empty, compared with c. 300-5 inhabited ones. (fn. 93)
Some late 19th-century cottages went up east of
Mill Lane, where one house is dated 1901. In
1910 there stood on the village streets and lanes
c. 80 houses and c. 235 cottages, almost all
rented. Some 160 of those dwellings were on
Church and Carter Streets, almost 40 on Mill
Lane, whose previously empty east side was
built up in the late 19th century, and c. 45 on
Market Street; (fn. 94) on its eastern side Fordham's
prosperous nurserymen were building themselves substantial, sometimes redbrick, houses,
one dated 1893, including the Townsends'
Shrubland House. (fn. 95) Subsequent growth, after
absorbing unoccupied houses or their sites, 94
houses being built 1892-1922, had by the 1920s
raised the number of dwellings to 380-400, and
by 1951 to over 500. (fn. 96)
Few new houses were built beyond the confines of the ancient village before the 1930s. By
1950 some ribbon building had occurred along
the north side of the Mildenhall road, and later
facing Fordham Abbey's park west of the
Newmarket road. (fn. 97) Some bungalows put up by
1960 south of Murfitts Road, which connects the
northward prolongations of Carter and Market
Streets, still formed in the 1990s the northwestern edge of the built area, though there was
a caravan park to its north-west from 1970. The
largest new development (fn. 98) was the building in
the 1950s and 1960s, near the parish's eastern
boundary, each side of the Mildenhall road, of
a large council estate, (fn. 99) mostly of semi-detached
houses, still separated from the village by a small
gap in the 1990s. A similar council estate was
put up from the 1950s along Sharmans Road,
followed by closes each side; that on the south,
partly of bungalows for old people, was built c.
1967, (fn. 1) another on the north, 1975-80. (fn. 2) The
council also from 1957 converted for housing
old people a large 19th-century house, The
Grove, once the Townsends', off Carter Street,
but closed it in 1992. (fn. 3) By 1970 the south part of
the former Church crofts was covered by a private development called Trinity Close. (fn. 4) Other
small privately developed estates, some with
houses closely set, were put up on the edges of
the village, one in the 1990s built by the local
housing association, Hereward Housing. (fn. 5) The
total number of dwellings in the parish grew by
c. 125 in the 1960s, and in the 1980s by c. 165
to 894 in 1991; a fifth of them, compared with
almost a third in 1981, were council houses, but
two thirds were owner-occupied. (fn. 6) In the 1980s
and 1990s several individually designed larger
houses were erected north-east of Carter Street, (fn. 7)
and others along Market Street, including the
20 houses of Feast Close. (fn. 8) In the early 1970s
planners proposed also to build over the western
half of the village quadrilateral, around New
Path and Ironbridge Path, the latter named from
a 19th-century footbridge across the Snail,
renewed in 1970-1 (fn. 9) with wrought-iron railings.
Building there was thwarted, however, by the
villagers' opposition, which preserved that well
timbered area for their recreations. (fn. 10) A Fordham
Society, founded in 1974 to help protect such
local amenities, (fn. 11) remained active into the
1990s. (fn. 12)
Before inclosure Fordham was linked to
neighbouring villages by ways, (fn. 13) some, such as
those east and south-east towards Chippenham
and Freckenham (Suff.), following gently curving parallel courses, called 'upper' and 'nether'
or 'lower' ways, through the open fields. South
of the village Landwade, Exning, and Newmarket ways diverged to lead to those places.
The King's path, already so named by 1410,
near which James I dined after hunting the hare
in Fordham's fields in 1605, (fn. 14) ran eastwards
'under down', parallel to the Chippenham
boundary. At inclosure one of each pair of parallel ways was selected for retention on a straightened line to provide the roads thereafter in use.
Only the two alternative routes north-west
towards Soham were both left unaltered. (fn. 15)
When the Great Eastern Railway's Newmarket-Ely line was opened in 1879, (fn. 16) it
included a section running through Fordham
west of the village, for which a station was then
built, ½ mile along the road to Burwell, soon
called Station Road. (fn. 17) That station was shortly
afterwards linked by a junction to its south with
the line running north-east from Cambridge to
Mildenhall opened in 1884, (fn. 18) which entered
Fordham by a cutting in its southern end and
curved north-east across its former fen and
moor. Despite extension in 1891 to handle growing traffic, Fordham station was again congested
by 1905, but competition from motor transport
halved passenger numbers in the late 1920s (fn. 19) and
overall traffic was declining by the 1950s. The
connecting lines to Cambridge and Mildenhall
were closed in 1962-4 and shortly abandoned,
and Fordham station was closed for passengers
in 1965 and for freight in 1966, being soon sold
and demolished. (fn. 20) The Ely line continued in use
into the 1990s. (fn. 21) By the 1960s Fordham's streets
were becoming crowded with fast and heavy
traffic. (fn. 22) Market Street became especially busy
as part of a main route north to Ely, carrying by
1984 7,000 vehicles each weekday, including c.
800 lorries. (fn. 23)
Fordham's chief inns from the 1760s, the
Chequers and Crown at each end of the main
street, and the Green Dragon, formerly the Bull,
on Market Street green, (fn. 24) remained the most
important public houses between the 1850s and
1930s, when there were also 4-6 beerhouses; c.
1910 three beerhouses stood on Carter Street,
two each on Market and Church Streets, and
one on Mill Lane. (fn. 25) By 1807 the Green Dragon
had a clubroom, (fn. 26) which soon accommodated
the Ancient Shepherds friendly society founded
in 1846 with 30-40 members, (fn. 27) succeeding one
with 30-60, recorded 1814-15. (fn. 28) In 1890 the
Fordham Shepherds re-established their lodge,
for a time absorbed in Newmarket's. In 1910
they owned 7 a. in Block field. (fn. 29) The Green
Dragon had closed by the 1960s, (fn. 30) while the last
beerhouse to survive closed in 1996, (fn. 31) leaving
open only the Chequers and Crown, extended
in 1973, (fn. 32) and a newly built public house by the
junction of Market Street and Station Road.
The village feast, traditionally celebrated for
one day about St. Peter's feast (29 June) with
showmen's stalls, swings, and dancing, was still
being held, though with declining vigour, in the
1860s and 1870s, latterly near the Green
Dragon. (fn. 33) It was not recorded later. The vicar,
however, from 1896 arranged a St. Peter's day
procession to the church, including the village
brass band, started by 1886, the fire brigade, and
the Shepherds, (fn. 34) which was continued by annual
'hospital parades' into the 1940s. (fn. 35) The feast was
briefly revived, 1978-83, as a village midsummer gala, expiring again in 1984. (fn. 36)
The 4-a. Camping close, still used for drilling
in 1861, was in private ownership by 1700. (fn. 37)
From the 1830s Fordham had a cricket club, (fn. 38)
successfully reorganized in 1876. (fn. 39) In 1920 Mrs.
Angelina Dunn Gardner gave 4½ a. north of
Church Street for a recreation ground; (fn. 40) it was
enlarged in 1928 with 4 a. given by Viscount St.
Davids, a Fordham landowner in the 1930s. (fn. 41)
The village cricket and football clubs used it in
the 1920s, (fn. 42) as into the late 20th century, (fn. 43) when
it also contained courts for the tennis club, and
for the bowls club (fn. 44) a green laid out by 1924. (fn. 45)
A pavilion erected in 1927 (fn. 46) was improved in
1972-3 (fn. 47) and another for cricketers built in
1975. (fn. 48) By its entrance stands the village war
memorial, erected in 1921 with a small figure of
St. George in bronze from Sir George
Frampton's studio surmounting a Portland
stone Tuscan column designed by Lutyens. (fn. 49)
The statue stolen in 1991 for its metal (fn. 50) was
replaced in 1992 with a close replica in fibre
glass. (fn. 51)
From 1853 to 1860 the squire, curate, and farmers sponsored a mutual improvement society,
with 120 members by 1855, providing winter
evening discussions at the National school. (fn. 52) A
village amateur dramatic society which performed at Christmas was started by 1866. Plays
were written for it, and music for one supplied
in 1877, by the local poet James Reynolds
Withers (fn. 53) (d. 1892). Born at Weston Colville in
1812, he worked at Fordham as labourer and
shoemaker from the 1830s, composing poems,
often on rural life, from his youth onwards. He
published two volumes, 1854-8, the first sponsored by his employer R. D. Fyson's wife, and
three more in the 1860s, and for a time achieved
nationwide notice. (fn. 54) The 18th-century 'Poet's
Cottage', of clunch, single-storeyed with
Gothick windows, his home from the 1850s,
survives near the bridge over the Snail. (fn. 55)
A village Conservative club started c. 1886
had 173 members by 1887, and was still active
in the 1890s. (fn. 56) A village institute founded in
1884, with 180 members, held its meetings, like
other village entertainments since the 1860s, at
the school. (fn. 57) In 1892 the Revd. Tansley Hall
gave two cottages on Mill Lane with £500 to
house and maintain the Institute. (fn. 58) The parish
soon sold them, using the whole money to meet
the £1,200 cost of building in 1897 north of
Church Street the Victoria Hall and Hayward
Institute, named from Hall's father-in-law and
opened in 1898. Built of red brick, with a stone
Gothic doorway flanked by Arts and Crafts floral
panels in terracotta, the Hall contained a large
hall 56 ft. long, thenceforth used for most village
events, (fn. 59) which contained a stage until renovations in 1975. (fn. 60) In the late 20th century
Fordham's numerous associations, catering for
all ages and sexes, included, besides a horticultural society, (fn. 61) a Women's Institute started c.
1923, (fn. 62) a British Legion branch, occupying a
pebble-dashed building of 1929 near the
Victoria Hall, (fn. 63) and intermittently a youth
club. (fn. 64) About 1991 the Fordham scouts were
putting up an expensive new headquarters on
Station Road. (fn. 65)
Fordham, which suffered outbreaks of cholera
in 1853-4 (fn. 66) and of diphtheria in 1879, (fn. 67) had a
resident doctor c. 1920-40. (fn. 68) By the 1970s it
depended on medical facilities at Soham. (fn. 69)