Eynesbury
Eynesbury maps (2 available)
Map of Cambridgeshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Cambridgeshire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Eynesbury books (13 available)
- 3 photos on Eynesbury appear in 3 Frith books - View photos of Eynesbury
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Eynesbury and Cambridgeshire
Eynesbury memories
Eynesbury House
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
Contributed by Jenny Given
Cambridgeshire memories
Eynesbury House
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
Living in Church End
I lived at number 14 for about 11 years and I miss it greatly. My parents moved from Cambridge and I was born at Mill Road in 1968. I remember long summers and playing in the fields just outside the village boundary. Neighbours were Joy and Andrew, Olive and Ray and across the road in the farm opposite was Ricky the Alsation dog. My mother had MS and my parents seperated in about 1978 when my Grandparents bought the cottage to look after my mum. They missed Anglesey too much and in 1979 we left. I still miss the place greatly and try and return for a look around every couple of years. I was in the local cub pack and ...read more here
A memory of Gamlingay contributed by tom knight
Staty Fair.
The Staty Fair is really called 'The Statute Fair' as it is held one night only but the high street is actually blocked off for 48 hours.
My family have lived in Kimbolton for over 500 years, my grandad had the butchers shop in the high street 'Whitemans', and my nan had the 'Saddle' public house. During the war they lived at number 40 and had doctors and nurses staying with them.
All my family return to Kimbolton and are buried in the cemetery.
A memory of Kimbolton contributed by Lisa Wright
Extracts From Eynesbury & Cambridgeshire books
Boys watch the photographer, a woman goes shopping and a delivery is made by horse and cart. The old houses are timber-framed, though the nearest had a brick casing added when the workshop was built next door. The Queen Anne house still has its original windows and door, and is advertising hair cutting and shaving. Around the corner at the Chequers Inn is a quoit ground, where matches with visiting teams were held.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Villages Photographic Memories".
The parish church of St Mary is built of local cobbles, with a fine tower that was rebuilt in 1688 using 13th-century materials. The remains of the original Norman church can be seen in the north arcade of the nave, where the capitals to the piers have a scalloped decoration. The Royalist chaplain to Prince Rupert was rector in 1629-31, followed much later by William Cole, the Cambridgeshire antiquary, from 1768.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Villages Photographic Memories".
Almost exactly the same view as No 39994 (pages 16-17) shows
that little has changed: even the bicycle, albeit a little more
modern in design, seems to form the main method of transport.
A shopping precinct has replaced the building in the right
foreground. On the right, Knowles bakery has become a Chinese
take-away, and the nearest foreground building is occupied
by the St Neots Motor Cycle Company. The fish and chip shop
sporting the Walls ice-cream sign (beyond the bakery) and today
occupied by St Neots Picture Gallery was the home of the Tebbutt
family, who were well known champion Fen ice skaters.
An extract from from"Huntingdon, St Neots and St Ives Photographic Memories".
Crescent. An ambitious programme
of celebrations and entertainments was
undertaken, with pony races and cycle,
athletic, and rural sports. In the evening
dancing on the Market Square ended with
a bonfire and fireworks display.
At the end of the 19th century, a church
service was held ‘to bury the old century
and usher in the new’. St Neots and
Eynesbury people no doubt felt that there
was much from the past on which they
could reflect with pride, and also that they
had good grounds to look forward to the
future with optimism.
An extract from from"St Neots - A History & Celebration".
THE NEW century saw a renewed burst of
building activity. The town, while remaining
essentially small and with only a minimal
growth in population, continued to spread
eastwards. Shaftesbury Avenue was built up
in 1904. On the north side of the Market
Square Barclays Bank, which had taken over
the local bank in 1896, erected an imposing
new building in 1901. William Seward, a
major businessman in the town during the
early years of the century, built a new boot
and shoe shop in the High Street in 1901 and
followed this up with other new premises in
1904. The Royal Oak (now the Halifax Bank)
was rebuilt in 1903. All this, together with
Charles Wren’s new fish shop in 1905, helped
give the town centre a fresher and more
modern face.
Although so many of the old St Neots
family businesses have disappeared, one that
began in the early years of the 20th century
still flourishes. In 1906 Frank Brittain
opened a furniture shop in Eaton Ford.
He moved into the building on St Neots
Market Square that had once been the post
office in April 1914 and subsequently into
the High Street, where the present shop is
still run by members of the family.
An extract from from"St Neots - A History & Celebration".






