WICKEN
Wicken lies about ten miles north-east of
Cambridge, and five south of Ely. (fn. 17) It covers
1,604 ha. (3,965 a.) (fn. 18) in an irregular triangle. (fn. 19)
Its western boundary largely follows the winding course of the river Cam, though taking in
along its southern part a narrow strip, once part
of Wicken's common, along that river's western
bank. (fn. 20) In the south-west corner stands the small
and isolated hamlet of Upware, at a site possibly
so named from the 10th century. (fn. 21) Nearby,
Wicken includes a 12-a. triangular island south
of the junction of Reach Lode with the Cam;
the curved portion of that river that once isolated it dried up by 1978. To the south Wicken
is divided from Burwell by the curving Wicken
Lode, which runs into Reach Lode shortly
before the latter meets the Cam. Wicken Lode's
eastern section was called Monks' Lode by the
17th century. (fn. 22) To the north-east Wicken's
boundary with Soham curves along a fen watercourse.
The south-eastern angle of the parish lies
mainly upon gault, its northern part upon the
Lower Greensand. A long, narrow strip of
boulder clay bends westward and northward
from Wicken's south-eastern angle, over gault
and greensand towards its northern end. Much
of the greensand along the western side is
covered with a block of Upware limestone. In
the far north, and in the surviving Wicken Fen
south-west of the village, are extensive beds of
peat, which in Sedge fen overlay a layer of shell
marl in those places where the marl was not
eliminated by peat digging. (fn. 23) Most of the parish
is virtually level fenland, lying below 10 m. The
ground rises marginally higher only in parts of
the boulder clay ridge, where the names of
Spinney and Thornhall indicate the thorny
scrub once cleared around them, (fn. 24) and in a limestone swell to the west. The ridge provided near
its south-east end a site for Wicken village, the
swell space for arable open fields, cultivated on
a triennial rotation until inclosure in 1840-1.
The remaining once common fen pastures were
gradually taken into several cultivation, partly
in the 13th century, but mainly in the late 17th.
Wicken Sedge fen, having escaped regular cultivation, was preserved in the 20th century by the
National Trust as an example of traditional fen
landscape.
Wicken's fens have yielded scattered traces of
prehistoric activity, both Stone Age flint tools, (fn. 25)
and some Bronze Age weapons. (fn. 26) From Roman
times date coin hoards found, 1878-82, north of
the church, (fn. 27) and from the late Anglo-Saxon
period a few spears and other weapons. (fn. 28)
In 1086 the vill contained 19 peasants and 5
servi. (fn. 29) By 1279 there were c. 45 inhabited messuages. (fn. 30) Only 30 people were taxed in 1327, (fn. 31)
but 157 adults paid the poll tax in 1377, (fn. 32) and
43 people the subsidy in 1524. (fn. 33) In 1603 there
were 200 communicants. (fn. 34) The population had
risen considerably in the late 16th century,
apparently reaching, 1610-40, a high level again
perhaps attained in the 1670s and c. 1700-20. It
sometimes also fell by up to a quarter. (fn. 35) The 85
inhabited dwellings of 1664 had allegedly been
reduced to c. 70 by 1666. (fn. 36) The population,
again growing from the 1750s, (fn. 37) had reached c.
600 by the 1810s, then rose by c. 150 in each of
the two decades before 1831, before reaching
1,054 in 1851. Reduced in 1861, numbers recovered to c. 1,130 by 1871, (fn. 38) before falling by
almost 300 by 1881. Between the 1890s and the
1950s Wicken's population ranged, growing
very slightly after 1900, between c. 665 and c.
715, before declining to 613, its lowest point
since 1800, in 1971. In the 1980s it grew by only
30 to 693 in 1991. (fn. 39)

Wicken Before Inclosure c. 1840
The medieval village probably already stood
c. 1 km. (1/2 mile) from the parish's southeastern corner, mainly around an elongated
east-west green, (fn. 40) much reduced in extent by
encroachments; one, including a late medieval
dwelling, occupies its north-east quadrant,
south of the modern Butts Lane which probably
marks the original perimeter. Another large
intake near the green's centre almost severs its
eastern fragment from Pond Green, with the
surviving pond (fn. 41) and the war memorial, a granite
obelisk, to the west. At the east end of the green
another portion south of the modern road
through the village was styled Cross Green in
the 20th century, after the medieval limestone
cross buried upside down until excavated and
reinstated there in 1973. Its broken, chamfered
stem rests on a square base. (fn. 42) What was left of
the green was mostly preserved at inclosure by
allotting it as the 3-a. recreation ground required
under the inclosure Act of 1840. (fn. 43)
At its north-west end the green narrowed into
North Street, mentioned in 1413. (fn. 44) By the mid
17th century (fn. 45) there ran parallel to the green on
the south a narrow backside, (fn. 46) leading at its west
end into Lode Lane; that lane runs southwards
to a small group of cottages at 'Lode', close to
a navigation channel cut north-east from Wicken
Lode. Other lanes led north from the green,
including one which ran through what was probably the part of the village called Northorp in
the 1410s and Northup in 1666 (fn. 47) towards the
former Northup fen. (fn. 48) That lane, perhaps called
Northup lane c. 1740, when dwellings stood only
along its east side, (fn. 49) was known by the mid 19th
century as Drury lane.
A few small settlements existed outside the
village from the Middle Ages. Upware, so
named presumably from a fishing weir on the
river, (fn. 50) was inhabited in the early 13th century (fn. 51)
and the 15th. (fn. 52) Farmsteads, originally monastic,
were established at Spinney and Thornhall in
the 13th century close to the ways running
north-west from the village along the clay
ridge. (fn. 53) Other small groups of dwellings, scattered by the early 19th century over the north
and west of the parish, were probably first
erected after its fens had been divided in the
17th century.
Wicken's relative poverty or isolation has
led to its retaining several late medieval and
early modern timber-framed houses, some still
thatched: one, south of Pond Green, has a 15thcentury hall with an original jettied cross wing
on the east. The originally single-storeyed Butts
Farm, north-east of that green, also has between
its service and parlour ends a hall range of c.
1500, given an upper floor when the parlour end
was rebuilt as a cross wing c. 1600. (fn. 54) Around the
green stand several 17th-century houses and cottages, often with dormers, some wholly or partly
brick-cased. One east of Cross Green still has a
traditional hall plan, others have three bays in
line. (fn. 55)
Of the dwellings reported in 1666-74, 50-55
had only one or two hearths each, and only 5-6
had five or more. (fn. 56) After 1800 the number of
dwellings rose from the 85-90 reported before
1813 to 110 in 1820, 226 in 1851, and a peak of
259 by 1871. (fn. 57) Between the 1850s and the
1880s (fn. 58) 140-50 dwellings lay along the main village street, with another 30 along the lanes to
the north. Many were in subdivided buildings. (fn. 59)
Only 42 houses and 10 cottages had been
reported in the parish in 1842: c. 20 houses then
probably stood each side of the green with 20
more on the northern lanes, while eight buildings at the Lode housed 15 cottagers. Another
15-20 dwellings stood on Lower Drove, the
more northerly road that linked Drury and
Chapel lanes before running north-west, and up
to 15 along Fenside, its northern continuation.
A few other farmhouses in the fen had 2-3 cottages next to them, with 4-8 at Padney. The
hamlet at Upware had 10-12 dwellings. After
1871 the number of inhabited houses shrank
sharply: 25 were empty by 1881 and 45 by 1891,
and from 1901 to the 1920s only 180-90 were
occupied, (fn. 60) including 36 houses and c. 85
cottages in and around the village in 1910, but
only 13 dwellings towards the Lode and 10 at
Upware. (fn. 61)
The late 19th and early 20th centuries saw
some new building in brick, including Kitchener
terrace of 1916 on Chapel Lane. There were still
only 221 houses in 1961, 243 in 1981, less than
a fifth being council housing, and 269 by 1991. (fn. 62)
A line of council houses begun in the 1940s
north of the road running east from the green
almost joined the village to the church and Hall
Farm. (fn. 63) Another group of ten semi-detached
council houses along a new crescent, originally
begun c. 1950, on the south side of North Street
were replaced in 1983-4. (fn. 64) New building in the
late 20th century was largely confined to infilling
within the ancient bounds of the village; some
new dwellings also went up, mostly from the
1970s, west of the lanes leading north from the
main street. (fn. 65) From the 1950s several large new
houses, five by 1958, were built on a new road
at Upware. (fn. 66) Mains water reached the village in
1947, (fn. 67) but mains sewerage only in 1975. (fn. 68)
Until the 20th century Wicken's only road
connection with the outside world was through
its south-east corner. Within the parish the village was linked to its northern fens by two parallel causeways running north-west along the
ridge, one recorded from the 13th century to
the early 15th, (fn. 69) past the sites of Spinney
and Thornhall. One of those ways was called
Afterway by the early 17th century, (fn. 70) the other
on the north-east Lower Drove by 1757. (fn. 71)
Starting a little north-east of Spinney another
way linked those two ways, then curved southwest towards Upware. (fn. 72)
At inclosure the fieldways were mostly left to
follow their former courses. Another road then
set out to run westward over the fields led to a
private ferry, still apparently operating after
1900, across the Cam to Dimmocks Cote, (fn. 73)
recorded by the 1630s. There were still dwellings there in the 20th century, as in the 1650s; (fn. 74)
one was used as a public house c. 1775-1803. (fn. 75)
Only in 1928 did a bridge built across the river
just south of that point, replacing a military pontoon erected 1914 × 1918, link Wicken permanently by land, along the improved Dimmocks
Cote road, to the fenland villages to its northwest. (fn. 76) Further south a chain ferry was still in
use at Upware in the 1910s. (fn. 77)
From the 19th century onwards the village's
main public house has been the Maid's Head, (fn. 78)
near the north-east side of the green, so named
from the late 1760s. (fn. 79) It occupied a timberframed, 15th-century hall house, later brickcased, which had a crossing added to the west
in the 16th century. A two-storeyed greybrick
block, built to the west in 1852, (fn. 80) probably provided a clubroom serving both local benefit
societies (fn. 81) and a Conservative club started in
1895. (fn. 82) The still thatched east part, gutted by
fire in 1983, was swiftly rebuilt in 1984-5 to its
former design. (fn. 83) It was still open in 1995. The
Red Lion, recorded from the 1770s, at the western end of the green (fn. 84) had closed in the early
1930s, and the Black Horse off Lode lane by the
1950s. (fn. 85)
By the 1760s Upware had its own public
house serving the river traffic, originally called
the (Black) Swan, but renamed from 1806 after
Lord Nelson (fn. 86) and popularly called from c. 1850
the 'Five Miles from Anywhere: No Hurry'. (fn. 87)
Rebuilt in 1811 and remodelled c. 1850, the
whitewalled, thatched inn accommodated c.
1851-6 a convivial association called the Upware
Republic, numbering up to 300, of Cambridge
undergraduates, devoted themselves there to
fishing, boating, shooting, and skating. A
rumbustious Cambridge man, R. R. Fielder (d.
1886), lived there in the 1860s as 'king of
Upware', drinking hard and fighting the barge
x
men. Closed by the 1950s and demolished after
a fire in 1955-6, (fn. 88) the inn was again rebuilt on
a large scale c. 1980. (fn. 89) It was open in 1995, serving recreational boating along the river.
About 1800 the manorial estate included a
1/2-a. Camping close near the village. (fn. 90) The village youth still kept up bibulous Plough Monday
customs in the 1850s. (fn. 91) In the 1890s the green
outside the Maid's Head still accommodated the
traditional village feast, held with showmen's
stalls, roundabouts, and sometimes a travelling
theatre; it then lasted for two or three days in
mid May, apparently starting on 'Old May Day'
(13 May). (fn. 92) It survived in the early 1920s. (fn. 93) The
village normally used the church Mission Hall
of 1887, (fn. 94) close to the Red Lion, as its main
social centre (fn. 95) into the late 20th century. (fn. 96) A
silver band, founded in 1911, was still flourishing in the 1990s, (fn. 97) but a British Legion branch
of 1921 expired in 1984 for lack of members. (fn. 98)
The village also had in the 1980s a football club (fn. 99)
and from 1963 a youth club, (fn. 1) and held flower
shows, 1978-90. (fn. 2)
Close to the river at Upware was an earthwork, 75 ft. square, still visible in the 1930s but
largely ploughed out in the 1960s, which lay in
the middle of one side of a larger rectangular
enclosure. The smaller earthwork was surrounded by a moat 40 ft. wide, now dry, materials dug from which raised the level of its
interior, in which brickwork has been found. It
was linked by a dried-up channel to a former
wharf on the river, partly revetted in brick and
stone, (fn. 3) and has been identified as a fortification
of the 1640s. From the mid 17th century there
was a sluice south of Upware, where Reach Lode
enters the Cam near the present lock. The
Bedford Level Commissioners paid to maintain
it from the 1710s to the 1780s and again, after
prolonged abandonment, in 1830-4. Soon after,
a windpump there (fn. 4) was replaced by a brick
pumping station that survived into the mid 20th
century, with a tall chimney for the disused
steam pumping engine. (fn. 5)
Until the late 19th century those possessing
the doles in Wicken Fen south of the village (fn. 6)
exploited it in the traditional manner by cutting
sedge, without completely draining it. Moreover
the sluice at Upware kept that fen's water level
higher than in the surrounding farmland, while
the massive banks around its northern and western sides helped retain floodwater from the
upland to the south-east. Though usually dry in
summer, the fen still flooded in winter into the
1940s. (fn. 7) About 1850 it still had a great variety of
fenland plants and creatures, especially insects
and some birds, that were lost from neighbouring fens then recently brought under cultivation.
Mainly from the 1850s it attracted naturalists,
the first reported visit being in 1833, for whom
villagers profitably provided lodgings. (fn. 8)
In the 1890s, when the fen was thought to be
at risk of being drained, after a fall in sedge
prices reduced the value of doles there, some
entomologists bought up individual strips. (fn. 9) One,
the Conservative politician, G. H. Verrall, (fn. 10)
active at Wicken from the 1890s, (fn. 11) had by 1910
acquired 206 a. At his death in 1911 he left 239 a.
of the fen to the National Trust, which already
owned another 10 a. (fn. 12) By the early 1930s the
Trust had obtained by other gifts (fn. 13) almost all
the 320 a. of Sedge fen, besides most, 45 a., of
Edmunds fen to its east. It cut new wet droves
east-west across the middle of Sedge fen. To
preserve biological diversity the Trust continued the traditional sedge cutting over successive areas, but only every third year. (fn. 14) Much of
Sedge fen, and most of Edmunds fen, came to
be covered with fen carr, and some rare species,
including the swallowtail butterfly and fen
orchids and violets, for which Wicken had once
been famous, were lost. By 1980 the area of carr
in Sedge fen had increased since the 1930s from
145 a. to 250 a., while that consisting purely of
sedge had declined from 147 a. to only 26 a. (fn. 15)
In 1956 the Trust restored and installed at the
northern corner of Sedge fen a timber-framed
pumping windmill of 1892, brought from
Burwell Adventurers' Fen. (fn. 16) In 1969 it opened
a visitors' centre with a laboratory at the
entrance to the fen from Lode lane, (fn. 17) and in
1988-90 restored a small, timber-framed, 17thcentury cottage off that lane as an example of a
fenman's dwelling of the 1930s. (fn. 18) By the 1980s
Wicken Fen was visited by c. 400,000 people
each year. (fn. 19)