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Offord Cluny

Offord Cluny photos (3 available)

Old photo of Offord Cluny

Offord Cluny maps (2 available)

Old map of Offord Cluny

Offord Cluny books (9 available)

Offord Cluny memories

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You can also read memories of nearby places in Cambridgeshire below.

Cambridgeshire memories

The Cromwell Museum

Huntingdon, the Old Grammar School c1955

Better known today as The Cromwell Museum!!
A memory of Huntingdon contributed by Korina Morris

Michells Boutique

My first job as a 15year old was a sales assistant in a newly opened boutique just off Market Place. The shop was 'Michelles' and it had one foot in the fashion world where corsets abounded and the other in the exciting mini skirted fashion trend. There were two side windows that were often 'dressed' to appeal to holidaymakers walking up from the boat moorings. Roger and Pauline Wilkinson were the owners and the shop was opposite the Electricity Board Showrooms. I used to bike from Little Paxton to get to work, across the common. I would love to know what happened to the Wilkinsons as I lost touch when I moved from the area I ...read more here
A memory of St Neots contributed by Marilyn Messenger

My Parents Lived there

Hemingford Grey, the River c1960

My sister and her husband Mr. & Mrs. E. Parkinson built a bungalow and shop on the corner of the main street and Pound Road.  They kept it for many years and during that period my Mother and Father moved there and lived in Pound Road for a number of years before returning to Wales.  My wife and I visited a number of times and we sometimes went out on the river in the punts that were moored at the Boat House. There was a small restaraunt in the Boat House.  A very nice village on the side of the Ely river. We often walked to the adjacent village of Hemmingford Abbots, Houghton Mill and into Ely town. The Church is ...read more here
A memory of Hemingford Grey contributed by Roy Newton

Eynesbury House

Eynesbury, St Mary Street c1965

My first husband, David Beames, and I, moved into Eynesbury House in July, 1968, and our first son, Andrew, was born at Mill Road Hospital, Cambridge, a few weeks later. William was born in 1971, also at Mill Road. Both boys went to St. Mary's Primary School, Eynesbury. (They are now both married and living in America. I have two lovely grand-daughters, Mary and Catherine (Andy's children). Will married a nice girl called Janna two years ago, but so far no sign of children.) I joined the St. Neots Musicmakers a short time after Andrew's birth. We all found St. Neots a very friendly place, and were happy there. Unfortunately my husband had to move North when his office closed, and ...read more here
A memory of Eynesbury contributed by Jenny Given

Extracts From Offord Cluny & Cambridgeshire books

Offord Cluny, the Village 1906

A builder balances on a plank across two ladders (centre right) to carry out a meticulous repair to the stone balls on the gate to the Manor. So successful was his work that the balls survive today. On the other side of the road, at the junction to Station Road, a farmer`s trap waits for the Swan public house to open. Little has changed at this junction; even the wrought iron railings on the left have avoided various wartime scrap iron drives and are still in place. Station Road, on the left, leads over the railway and across the Great Ouse to the mill.
An extract from from"Huntingdon, St Neots and St Ives Photographic Memories".

Offord Cluny, the Mill 1906

Along Station Lane, westwards out of Offord Cluny, the mill is silhouetted against the skyline. We are looking across the complex of locks and weirs on the Great Ouse, and little has changed today. The chimney has been demolished, and during the past few years the mill has been renovated and restored by Campbell Melhuish. Today it comprises blocks of executive apartments overlooking the pleasure craft moored in Buckden Marina. However, surviving almost unchanged are the Mill House and on the right Mill Cottage, built in 1851.
An extract from from"Huntingdon, St Neots and St Ives Photographic Memories".

Hemingford Grey, the Manor c1955

Built around 1130, the Manor is supposed to be the oldest continuously inhabited house in Britain. Lucy Maria Wood Boston, born in December 1892, bought the building in 1939 and spent two years restoring it. During the Second World War she kept open house for the RAF officers stationed at the nearby airfield at Wyton, and arranged musical and literary evenings. She used the Manor as an inspiration for her series of six children`s stories known as the Green Knowe books.
An extract from from"Huntingdon, St Neots and St Ives Photographic Memories".

St Ives, Market Hill c1955

On non-market days, the centre of St Ives was a quiet and unhurried place. There are few cars other than those parked between the Cromwell statue and the war memorial, and people are able to pass the time of day in the middle of the road. J W Angood, the cycle and motor- cycle repairer (right), seems to have been busy: seven or eight of his customer`s machines await collection. Before he took over, the shop had been owned by Rowell & Sons, tailors. Next door is Senescall`s animal and petfood store - today the site is occupied by a Help the Aged shop.
An extract from from"Huntingdon, St Neots and St Ives Photographic Memories".

St Ives, Cromwell Statue 1901

Shortly before this photograph was taken, the Town Council approved an expenditure of £850 to be paid to Frederick Pomeroy RA for the design and execution of a statue of the Lord Protector. It had originally been envisaged that it should stand in Huntingdon, but the town had always had Royalist inclinations and there was little interest from the people. Cromwell had lived at St Ives from 1631 to 1635, and the townsfolk took the project to heart. The globes in the photograph were made of copper, and were part of the original design. They were removed in the 1970s and never replaced.
An extract from from"Huntingdon, St Neots and St Ives Photographic Memories".