Ramsey
Ramsey maps (2 available)
Map of Cambridgeshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Cambridgeshire
Personalised maps
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Ramsey books (13 available)
- 7 photos on Ramsey appear in 3 Frith books - View photos of Ramsey
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Ramsey and Cambridgeshire
Ramsey memories
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You can also read memories of nearby places in Cambridgeshire below.
Cambridgeshire memories
David and Julie Smith lived in Abbots Ripton 1987-1999.
walky talkys enabling the posse to catch him hidding in a storm drain very wet and cold and very frightend.
Hopefully this ended ...read more here
A memory of Abbots Ripton contributed by David Smith
Growing up in Somersham
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
Graham & Fishers
The building nearest the camera on the right is (was) Graham and Fishers - founded by my great-grandfather Tom. His sons Alg (my grandfather) and Spencer worked in the business all their lives, and my father Douglas worked there until 1966. His cousin Richard also spent some time in 'the Shop' before setting up his own business further along the High Street.
The scene in the photo is actually very much as I remember it in my early childhood in the fifties, but it changed a good deal in the next 10 or fifteen years.
My parents and I had some rooms in the building, courtesy of my gt grandmother, Isabel (Bel), about 1948 - 50, and the window over the ...read more here
A memory of Chatteris contributed by Ian Graham
Extracts From Ramsey & Cambridgeshire books
The Horse and Gate pub (left) has been redeveloped into shops, the Lion Hotel (right) is now flats, and parking is only allowed on the left-hand side of the street. The one constant is the bank, now NatWest, at the junction of Great Whyte and the High Street, built over the Bury Brook.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Living Memories".
Ramsey attained early importance with the foundation of its abbey in 969. It survived for around five hundred years until Henry VIII’s dissolution of the monasteries in the 16th century. These days, Ramsey is one of the smallest towns in England to have its own mayor, and all that remains of the abbey is one gatehouse.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Photographic Memories".
In the middle of Great Whyte stands the 'dummy clock'. Erected by public subscription in memory of Edward Fellowes, first Baron de Ramsey, it has recently been completely refurbished. Few people realise that the culverted Bury Brook runs under the Great Whyte, as the Gas Board recently discovered by accidentally drilling through the roof!
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Living Memories".
Up until just over a hundred years ago, a watercourse, or lode, ran down the centre of this street. Cut from the Old Nene river around two miles away, its purpose was to allow access to boats supplying goods to the town and abbey.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Photographic Memories".
Ramsey in the 1950s was a thriving Fenland town, but it has now declined. Barclays Bank (right) still stands on the corner of Little Whyte, but the other traders have all gone. The last to go was Freeman & Sons, a tobacconist and newsagent's (left), which is now a card shop.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Living Memories".






