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Somersham

Somersham photos (16 available)

Old photo of Somersham

Somersham maps (2 available)

Old map of Somersham

Somersham books (9 available)

Somersham memories

holiday visits

In the early to mid 1950s I spent holiday time in Somersham - it was fascinating for a child from London, especially the little ditches and the wildflowers.  I stayed with "auntie" (Emma Goodchild), a relative of some kind through my maternal grandmother's family (surnames Duller and Dellow).  Auntie lived in the last house in Somersham High Street, it was amazing - no electricity and a pump for water in the kitchen (I especially liked taking a candle to bed).  Not so pleasant were the sanitary arrangements.  The name of the butcher also interested me and of course as a small child the sweet shop was a favourite.  In my memories the sun always shone and visiting auntie Gwen and auntie ...read more here
Contributed by jacqueline peachey

Growing up in Somersham

Somersham, High Street c1965

I was born in Somersham in 1940, in my grandmother's house, which was 1 West End.
My own house was known then as 6 Trinity Terrace, since changed to 90 High Street. Until the mid 1950s a lot of the houses were quite primitive, no indoor sanitation, the Terrace had a pump for the 6 houses.  The only heating was a fire in the living room, the bedrooms were always freezing.  My memories are of a friendly village although as youngsters, our only plan was to get out. I started infant school in what is now the library, and the junior school was closer to 'The Cross'.  Life, in retrospect, was simple and fun, we, as children, could be absent from ...read more here
Contributed by Frances Marshallsay

Cambridgeshire memories

Growing up in Somersham

Somersham, High Street c1965

I was born in Somersham in 1940, in my grandmother's house, which was 1 West End.
My own house was known then as 6 Trinity Terrace, since changed to 90 High Street. Until the mid 1950s a lot of the houses were quite primitive, no indoor sanitation, the Terrace had a pump for the 6 houses.  The only heating was a fire in the living room, the bedrooms were always freezing.  My memories are of a friendly village although as youngsters, our only plan was to get out. I started infant school in what is now the library, and the junior school was closer to 'The Cross'.  Life, in retrospect, was simple and fun, we, as children, could be absent from ...read more here
A memory of Somersham contributed by Frances Marshallsay

holiday visits

In the early to mid 1950s I spent holiday time in Somersham - it was fascinating for a child from London, especially the little ditches and the wildflowers.  I stayed with "auntie" (Emma Goodchild), a relative of some kind through my maternal grandmother's family (surnames Duller and Dellow).  Auntie lived in the last house in Somersham High Street, it was amazing - no electricity and a pump for water in the kitchen (I especially liked taking a candle to bed).  Not so pleasant were the sanitary arrangements.  The name of the butcher also interested me and of course as a small child the sweet shop was a favourite.  In my memories the sun always shone and visiting auntie Gwen and auntie ...read more here
A memory of Somersham contributed by jacqueline peachey

Extracts From Somersham & Cambridgeshire books

Somersham, from the Church Tower c1960

Looking west towards Pidley cum Fenton, we see Somersham before the start of the building programme which has brought an industrial estate and several large housing developments. Fortunately the allotments in the foreground and the town football pitch have survived unscathed.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Living Memories".

Somersham, Church Street c1955

The Millennium Stone, a natural stone boulder underneath which lie two time capsules from the local school and the Baptist chapel, was placed on the left-hand side of the street to mark both the millennium and the Greenwich Meridian, which runs through Somersham.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Living Memories".

Somersham, the Cross c1955

Somersham stretches for about a mile along a kink in the road between St Ives and Chatteris. The village was once celebrated for its mineral spa.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Photographic Memories".

Somersham, Bank Houses c1960

We are looking down the Chatteris road, where very little has changed in the past 40 years. The busy railway station situated just behind the photographer closed after the Beeching cuts of the 1960s, and this part of Somersham quietly faded into obscurity with no new development after the pre-war housing on the left.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Living Memories".

Somersham, the Cross c1955

This view was taken standing against the old Butter Cross looking down the St Ives road. Bonnetts the bakers continue to trade from the same shop on the right-hand side of the road, down from the Rose and Crown - it is here that the local councillor, Miss Hettie Skeggs, used to send her dog with a basket to collect her bread; he would return with the bread and her change!
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Living Memories".