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St Neots

Coordinates: 52°13′41″N 0°16′12″W / 52.228°N 0.270°W / 52.228; -0.270
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(Redirected from St. Neots, Huntingdonshire)

St Neots
St Neots is located in Cambridgeshire
St Neots
St Neots
Location within Cambridgeshire
Area8.12 km2 (3.14 sq mi)
Population33,410 (Parish, 2021)[1]
33,265 (Built up area, 2021)[2]
OS grid referenceTL185605
• London49 miles (79 km) S
Civil parish
  • St Neots
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townST NEOTS
Postcode districtPE19
Dialling code01480
PoliceCambridgeshire
FireCambridgeshire
AmbulanceEast of England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Cambridgeshire
52°13′41″N 0°16′12″W / 52.228°N 0.270°W / 52.228; -0.270

St Neots[note 1] is a town and civil parish in the Huntingdonshire district of Cambridgeshire, England. It is 18 miles (29 km) west of Cambridge. The areas of Eynesbury, Eaton Ford, Eaton Socon, and Wintringham form part of the town.

The town centre lies on the eastern bank of the River Great Ouse. The town is close to the A1 road (north-south), as well as the A421 and A428 roads which link Cambridge to Bedford and Milton Keynes. St Neots railway station is on the Great Northern route between London and Peterborough. St Neots had a population of 33,410 in 2021.

Toponymy

[edit]

The town is named after the ninth century monk Saint Neot, whose bones were brought to St Neots Priory from Cornwall in around 980 AD, resulting in pilgrims visiting in large numbers. Before the founding of the priory the area had been part of the parish of Eynesbury. As the town around the priory grew it became a separate parish of St Neots in the twelfth century. The two were administratively reunited in 1876 when Eynesbury was absorbed into St Neots.

History

[edit]

Early history

[edit]

Remains of Iron Age settlement have been found in the town centre; a Roman encampment was located in the town.[citation needed] It became known as Eynesbury, after Ernulf, a local leader.

Neot was a holy man who founded a monastery near the present-day Cornish village of St Neot. When he died, his remains were kept there as holy relics, and many pilgrims visited, making donations. In the later tenth century a priory was established immediately north of the village of Eynesbury in what is now St Neots. The landowners, Leofric and his wife Leoflaed, obtained Neot's remains (leaving an arm in Cornwall), realising that they would attract pilgrims, and their money, to their priory. This was successful, and the priory became rich and famous, and the area became known as St Neots. St Neots subsequently became a separate parish from Eynesbury sometime between 1113 and 1204, with the boundary between them being a stream called Hen Brook.[3][4][5]

About this time, the settlement to the west of the River Ouse was known as Ea-tun, meaning "waterside village".[citation needed] In Norman times, a sub-division of a Baron's area of control was called a "soke" and in French the area was called the Soka de Eton, and later Eaton Socon. Before the river was bridged, people waded across it, and this was called a "ford", from which the immediate area became called Eaton Ford.

The Priory was destroyed during the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 16th century, and the relics of St Neot were lost.

The River Great Ouse was made navigable from St Ives to Bedford, via St Neots, in 1629, increasing river-borne trade in the town.[citation needed]

The boating pond at St Neots

The Second English Civil War began in April 1648. The Parliamentarians under Oliver Cromwell were in control, but King Charles I planned to overthrow them by force of arms. An attempt to seize London by his supporters, the Royalists, failed. A group of them retreated to St Neots and planned to spend the night of 9 July resting in the town. In the small hours of 10 July Parliamentary troops attacked, taking them by surprise, and the battle centred on the market square area. Many Royalists were killed or taken prisoner.[6]

In the 18th and 19th centuries the town enjoyed prosperity through corn milling and brewing, and from stagecoach traffic and from 1850 its railway connection. Eaton Socon was on the Great North Road and had inns used as a staging post and overnight stop for stagecoaches travelling between London and York; some of the routes ran via St Neots instead of Eaton Socon, and intersected with traffic on the east–west route from the Eastern Counties and the Midlands.

Between 1851 and 1885 George Bower's Vulcan Iron Foundry was a major employer, supplying equipment for gasworks throughout the British Isles and worldwide.[7]

1900 onwards

[edit]

Eaton Ford and Eaton Socon, lying on the west side of the River Great Ouse, were formerly within Bedfordshire, but in 1965 they were incorporated into the urban district of St Neots.[8]

Technology-based industries operate in some of the town's light industrial estates, and there is a gas turbine power station at Little Barford in neighbouring Bedfordshire.

Recent developments in St Neots have expanded the population in the last few years: to the east of the local train station are the developments of Love's Farm, with more then 1,000 houses being built in the late 2010s and early 2020s.[9] There is more to Love's Farm, as the second phase, to the south of phase 1, is Wintringham,[10][11] planned to be a vibrant community with 2,000 homes,[12] and there is a selection of two primary schools: Wintringham Primary Academy[13] and the Roundhouse Community Primary School.[14] Into the east of Love's Farm, there are developments to upgrade Cambridge Road (B1428) between the A428 junction and the Bret Road junction at Wintringham.[15] This will support the eastern expansion of St Neots, and make way for Monkfields,[16] the next development and Phase 3 of Love's Farm. L&Q Estates, the developers of Monkfields, have stated that construction work on site is expected to begin in spring 2024 with roads and infrastructure,[17] hence Cambridge Road, and the first homes expected to be completed in 2026.[16]

Culture and community

[edit]

St Neots Museum is housed in the town's former Victorian Police Station and Magistrates Court. It has local history collections covering the town's rich past including a display about James Toller, the Eynesbury Giant, a resident from the 18th century who measured over 8 ft in height. There is also a gallery with temporary exhibitions by local creatives including fine art, ceramics, sculpture and illustration. The museum organises a variety of specialist and family events from walks, talks, one-day festivals, temporary and touring exhibitions.[18]

St Neots general market is held on the market square every Thursday. A further farmers market is held on the market square every second and fourth Saturday.[19]

Thee theatre community includes the Riverside Theatre Company,[20] who stage productions, run workshops and have groups for all ages; VAMPS formed in 1961 as the St Neots and District Operatic Society and stage popular musicals and variety shows;[21] St Neots Players,[22] formed in the late 1920s as a play-reading group with past members who used to perform the annual Shakespeare, Pantomime and other mid-season productions at the Kings Head Hotel in the Stables Theatre; and Stageworks,[23] a performing arts group offering classes, holiday programmes, workshops and a college offering full-time training to students aged 16 years and over that prepares students for musical theatre and acting, SJ School of Dance,[24] Pocket Productions,[25] and Peppercorns Academy.[26]

The local creative community is served by Neotists,[27] a community interest company for creative professionals with members covering design, illustration, art, photography and IT, which commissions local creatives to collaborate on projects, run workshops and events for the community and provide opportunities and connections for professionals working in the creative industry. In 2023, the Neotists organised the St Neots Festival, a music and performing arts festival in Priory Park.[28]

Governance

[edit]
Priory Centre, on the banks of River Great Ouse

There are three tiers of local government covering St Neots, at civil parish (town), district, and county level: St Neots Town Council, Huntingdonshire District Council and Cambridgeshire County Council. The district and county councils also form part of the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority, led by the Mayor of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough.

The town council is based at the Priory Centre, on the banks of the River Great Ouse. The council consists of 21 elected councillors[29] including a town mayor and a deputy town mayor. With a budget (2020–2021) of £1.8 million, its operations cover cemeteries and "closed" churchyards (those that are full), public conveniences, allotments, play areas, bus shelters in rural locations, and some residual footway lighting (but not street lighting).[30]

Administrative history

[edit]

The historic parish of St Neots was governed by its vestry, in the same way as most rural areas, until 1819 when the more built-up part of the parish was given improvement commissioners.[31] In 1876 the commissioners' district was reconstituted as a local government district run by an elected local board. The district was enlarged at the same time to also include part of the neighbouring parish of Eynesbury, including the old village itself.[32]

Such local government districts were in turn reconstituted as urban districts under the Local Government Act 1894. That act also said that parishes could no longer straddle district boundaries, and so in 1895 the two parishes of St Neots and Eynesbury were both reduced to just cover the parts within the St Neots Urban District. The part of St Neots parish outside the urban district became a parish called St Neots Rural, and the part of Eynesbury outside the urban district became a parish called Eynesbury Hardwicke.[33]

Cressner House, 12 Huntingdon Street

In 1938 the urban district council bought a large early 19th century house called Cressner (or Cressener) House at 12 Huntingdon Street and converted it to become its offices and meeting place.[34][35] The urban district was enlarged in 1965 to take in part of the parish of Eaton Socon from Bedfordshire, including the old village of Eaton Socon and the Eaton Ford area, which by that time were effectively part of the built-up area of the town.[8]

St Neots Urban District was abolished in 1974, with district-level functions transferring to the new Huntingdon District Council (later renamed Huntingdonshire District Council). A successor parish was created covering the area of the former urban district.[36] The parish council declared the parish to be a town, allowing it to take the style "town council" and appoint a mayor. In 1989 the town council moved to new offices in an extension to the Priory Centre.[37] The parishes of St Neots Rural and Eynesbury Hardwicke were both abolished in 2010 and divided between St Neots and Abbotsley.[38]

Parliamentary constituency

[edit]

St Neots is in the parliamentary constituency of St Neots and Mid Cambridgeshire. The member of parliament is Ian Sollom of the Liberal Democrats.[39] Prior to the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, St Neots was part of Huntingdon constituency.

Housing and town management

[edit]

St Neots experienced considerable growth in the 1960s and later, when much new housing was built to accommodate families from London, as part of the London overspill plan. Further housebuilding followed and in 2010, the Loves Farm development was built, with 1,400 houses to the east of the railway line; further construction is continuing further east in 2020–2023,[40] followed by a further 2,800 houses in 2021 in the nearby Wintringham development.[41] Expansion of light industry facilities was incorporated in the original overspill planning, and has also been continued more recently.

Housebuilding in progress, Wintringham, St Neots

The population of St Neots in 2011 was 31,165; in 2021 it was around 33,000. This figure is expected to rise further still in the coming decade. St Neots' position as a traditional town location, with plentiful industrial sites and good transport facilities encourages this expansion. The Loves Farm estate will be extended eastwards, and the Wintringham Estate is under construction, and will infill a substantial part of the space between Cambridge Road and the by-pass.

The town is to benefit from the Government Future High Streets Fund. Huntingdonshire District Council will manage the expenditure of £12.8 million.[42]

Sport and leisure

[edit]

St Neots has a semi-professional non-League football team, St Neots Town F.C., who play at Rowley Park Stadium. The club are currently members of the Southern Football League Division 1 Central.[citation needed]

The town also has a rugby club St Neots RUFC, a rowing club St Neots Rowing Club, two Dragon Boat teams and a table tennis club, the St Neots Table Tennis club.[citation needed]

Huntingdonshire District Council operates a leisure centre complex in Eynesbury with an indoor swimming pool, gym, squash courts, sports hall, tennis courts, all weather pitches, creche, and cafe.[43] The site is part of the council's 'One Leisure' brand, which has other sites in Huntingdon and St Ives.

The Great Ouse river passes through the centre of the town, through Regatta Meadows and Riverside Park and linking to Eaton Socon providing opportunities for riverside leisure walks, and forms part of the Ouse Valley Way walking route.[44][45]

Riverside Park[46] is close to the town centre and covers 72 acres (29 ha) with a beautiful mile-long waterside frontage. The park has a cafe, parking for 250 cars, a large children's activity area, a skate park,[47][48] and a miniature railway, Riverside Miniature Railway.[49] During the summer concerts are occasionally held on Sunday afternoons in the park.

Barford Road Pocket Park in Eynesbury,[50] hosts weekly parkrun and junior parkrun events.[51][52]

To the north of the town is Paxton Pits Nature Reserve providing walks through its 190 acres (77 ha) of lakes, meadow, grassland, scrub and woodland. The reserve is famous for its nightingales and cormorants and is home to a wide variety of other birds, insects, mammals and flora.

The Rowley Arts Centre was opened in May 2014 and includes a six-screen cinema operated by Cineworld and a complex with three restaurants and a gym. [citation needed] It was named after Peter Rowley, an American playwright, author and critic who was Lord of the Manor of St Neots and who donated £1 million towards the development from the profit he made from selling the land on which the Love's Farm development was built.[citation needed] The complex was subsequently purchased as an investment by Huntingdonshire District Council for £7.6 million in 2019.[53]

St Neots has a ten pin bowling centre with 16 lanes, which was built on part of the site of the outdoor swimming pool that closed in 2003. Originally the intention for the remainder of the site was to build a new outdoor pool,[54] but these plans were not realised. Discussions are ongoing about the creation of a splash park on the remaining part of the site[55]

There are two golf courses: St Neots Golf Club[56] and Wyboston Lakes.[57]

Parish church

[edit]
St Neots Parish Church

St Neots parish church is dedicated to St Mary.[note 2]

The late 12th-century parish church was almost completely rebuilt in the 15th century, making it one of the largest and grandest medieval churches in modern Cambridgeshire. In the 19th century, it was provided with a high quality set of stained glass windows depicting the life of Jesus Christ. It is considered to be a very fine building, and has been called the Cathedral of Huntingdonshire.[58]

Writing originally in 1958 before the enlargement of the town and the reconstruction of the bridge, John Betjeman said:

The good small market community has a medieval bridge over the Ouse and a well-proportioned Market Square, but the church is tucked away on the fringe of the town. It is almost everything a good town church should be: a luxurious Perpendicular building with perhaps the finest tower in the county, faced in ironstone and pebbles with ashlar dressings – an agreeable contrast in colour and texture. The roof is almost flat – although not over-elaborate it is very English and most satisfying. There are several Perpendicular screens.[58]

Media

[edit]

Regional local news and television programmes are provided by BBC East and ITV Anglia. Television signals are received from the Sandy Heath TV transmitter.[59]

Local radio stations are BBC Radio Cambridgeshire, Heart East, Greatest Hits Radio East, Star Radio, HCR FM and Black Cat Radio, a community based radio station.[60]

The Hunts Post is the town's local weekly newspaper.[61]

Transport

[edit]

Rail

[edit]
St Neots Railway Station

St Neots railway station is served by generally half-hourly trains north to Peterborough and south to Horsham via London St Pancras and Gatwick Airport, with additional peak time commuter services in the mornings and evenings to and from London King's Cross. Journeys are typically around 45 minutes to London King's Cross, 55 minutes to St Pancras, and a little under two hours to Gatwick Airport.

St Neots was the 423rd busiest station in the UK in 2018–19 (out of 2560) with 1.3 million journeys beginning or ending there.[62][needs update]

St Neots station footbridge has access to the car park and taxi rank on the west side, and the district of Love's Farm on the east side. There are lifts to the platforms.[63]

East West Rail is a plan to establish a railway between Oxford and Cambridge. As of 2023 Construction is underway on the western section between Oxford and Bedford. The company's preferred route between Bedford and Cambridge has been announced, which includes a station at Tempsford south of St Neots, where the new line and the existing East Coast Main Line will intersect.[64][65]

Road

[edit]
St Neots market square on a sunny Sunday

St Neots lies adjacent to the A1 trunk road which links the town by road with London and the northeast of England and Scotland. The town is also linked with Cambridge to the east by the A428 road and Bedford and Milton Keynes by the A421 road at Black Cat Roundabout on the A1 just south of the town.

Six miles to the north the A14 trunk road provides westward and eastward access to the Midlands and East Anglia respectively.

Historically the Great North road which forms the A1 passed through Eaton Socon until new alignment of the A1 road, forming a bypass, opened in 1971.

The A45 road between Bedford and Cambridge passed through the town centre until the 3-mile (4.8 km) St Neots Bypass opened in December 1985 (subsequently re-designated as the A428). There is major scheme for a new road connecting the Black Cat Roundabout and the A428 at Caxton Gibbet, avoiding St Neots completely. A £507 million contract has been awarded to Skanska for the construction.[66]

Bus

[edit]

St Neots is served by the Stagecoach 905 service which operates between Bedford Bus Station and Cambridge Parkside on a typically half-hourly basis.[67]

Whippet Bus Company operates a 61/63 circular service between the town centre, Eaton Ford, Eaton Socon, Eynesbury, and the railway station, on a typically hourly frequency with some additional journeys, six days a week.[68] As of October 2022, Whippet Bus Company operate a 66 bus service between St Neots and Huntingdon, Godmanchester and Fenstanton.

Air

[edit]

St Neots is within an hour's drive from London Luton Airport and London Stansted Airport, and has a direct train service to London Gatwick Airport.

Cycling

[edit]

St Neots is on Route 12 of the Sustrans national cycle route that connects Colchester and Oxford via Harwich, Felixstowe, Ipswich, Bury St Edmunds, Cambridge, Huntingdon, Sandy, Bedford and Milton Keynes.

Detail of tree-lined lake with swans in the Riverside Park

A foot and cycle bridge across the River Great Ouse was opened in 2011,[69] linking Eaton Socon and Eynesbury, enabling pupils attending Ernulf Academy to avoid cycling through the town centre and improving connections to existing cycle paths. The scheme was a Sustrans Connect2 project, and supported by Cambridgeshire County Council and Huntingdonshire District Council.

Geography

[edit]

St Neots is just over 49 miles north of Charing Cross, London. It is close to the south-western boundary of Huntingdonshire District, and the northern boundary of Bedfordshire. Both the city of Cambridge – about 18 miles (29 km) east – and Bedford – about 13 miles (21 km) southwest) are nearby. The city of Milton Keynes is 31 miles (50 km) to the west and Peterborough is 29 miles (47 km) to the north. The A428 road makes the boundary with Little Barford and Northern Bedfordshire,[70] and the Paxton Bridge makes it impeccably easy driving to Little Paxton and makes the shortest separation from the 2 parishes,[71] apart from the very busy A1.[72]

St Neots lies in the valley of the River Great Ouse, partly on the flood plain and partly on slightly higher ground a little further from the water. The Great Ouse is a mature river, once wide and shallow but now controlled by weirs and sluices and usually constrained in a well-defined channel.

River Great Ouse, St Neots

Tributaries entering the Great Ouse in the town are the River Kym, Hen Brook, Duloe Brook and Colmworth Brook. The area is generally low-lying. Riverside Park, an amenity adjacent to St Neots Bridge, remains set aside as a flood-meadow, subject to flood, protecting dwellings and commercial property from a swollen reach.

St Neots developed at the site of a ford where overland routes converged. This was replaced by a medieval bridge, and today there are two further crossings just outside the town, one to the north and another to the south.

The soil is mainly light, overlying gravel beds – gravel extraction is a local industry. Older disused gravel pits, such as the nearby Paxton Pits and Wyboston Leisure Park, have been converted to nature reserves and amenity areas. Away from the river, the higher land is mainly a heavy clay soil with few large settlements. Much of the land is used for arable farming.

Climate

[edit]

The climate in the United Kingdom is defined as a temperate oceanic climate, a classification it shares with most of northwest Europe.[73] Eastern areas of the United Kingdom, such as East Anglia, are drier, cooler, less windy and also experience the greatest daily and seasonal temperature variations. Protected from the cool onshore coastal breezes, Cambridgeshire is warm in summer and cold and frosty in winter.

Highest daytime temperature in 2020 was 22 °C[citation needed] and lowest 5 °C; corresponding night-time temperatures were 15 °C and −1 °C. Rainfall in 2020 varied between 21 and 41 mm per month, with more rain in the summer months; there was some snowfall in December 2020 and January and April 2021.[74]

International relations

[edit]

St Neots is twinned with Faches-Thumesnil, Nord, Hauts-de-France[citation needed]

Notable residents

[edit]
John Bellingham
The St Neots Quads

The only person to assassinate a British Prime Minister, John Bellingham, was born in St Neots. Bellingham killed Spencer Perceval at the House of Commons on 11 May 1812.[75] He was hanged for murder a week later.

Winifred Crossley Fair, aviator and one of the First Eight women pilots to join the Air Transport Auxiliary in 1940 during the Second World War, was the first woman to fly a Hurricane fighter.[76]

The St Neots Quads are nicknamed for their place of birth; they were the first British quadruplets to survive more than a few days and as of 2021 were the oldest quadruplets in the world.[77] Multiple World short course swimming champion Mark Foster lives in St Neots.[78]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Pronunciation of the town name: /sɛnʔ ˈnəts/ Most commonly, but variations that saint is said as in most English non-georeferencing speech, the t is by a small minority of the British pronounced and higher traces of /ɒ/ in the final syllable of the town's name are common.
  2. ^ Eynesbury and Eaton Socon also have churches dedicated to St Mary.

References

[edit]
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