| LITTLEPORT
is a parish and large village, in a fenny part of the Isle of Ely
and on the banks of the navigable river Ouse, with a station on
the Ely and Lynn section of the London and North Eastern railway,
5 miles north from Ely, 78 from London, in the hundred of Witchford,
union, petty sessional division, county court district and rural
deanery of Ely, archdeaconry of Wisbech and diocese of Ely. A wrought
iron bridge, with one clear opening of 105 feet, was built across
the Ouse at this point in 1873, at a cost of £3,700, and there is
another iron bridge at Sandhill. The place is lighted with gas from
works erected in 1867 by a limited company, on a site given by the
Earl of Hardwicke. The church of St. George, an edifice of stone,
is a fine example of the Early English style, consisting of chancel,
naves, aisles, north and south porches and a lofty embattled western
tower containing, a clock and 8 bells hung in 1891: in 1920 a new
clock was added, with Cambridge chimes, in memory of the men of
the parish who fell in the Great War, 1914-1918; the tower, a conspicuous
object throughout the surrounding fen district, is remarkable for
the beauty of its outline: the church. was enlarged in 1857 by the
addition of a second nave and aisle on the north side: the chancel
was restored by Clare College in 1877, a carved stone reredos presented
by the Rev. H. J. Carter M.A. curate of Littleport 1860-5 and rector
of Duxford 1865-1904: on the north side is a memorial window erected
by his widow to the Rev. Andrew Gatenby B.A, for more than 21 years
curate in sole charge here and rector of Mepal 1871-6, who died
in 1876, in 1891 a new organ and a stained east window were erected
as memorials to the Rev. William Bonner Hopkins D.D. hon. canon
of Ely, and vicar here 1866-90: in 1895 a stained window was erected
and the organ enlarged as a memorial to Mr. William Cutlack, a former
churchwarden; it was again enlarged in 1903 at a cost of £350: an
inscribed brass has been placed as a memorial to the Rev. Samuel
Edgar Perry M.A. vicar 1890-7; in 1898 and 1903 two stained Windows
were presented as memorials to William Luddington esq., and his
wife, and there is another to Mrs. John Little, of Westlands: a
window in the south aisle was presented in 1911 in memory of Mrs.
T. J. Mott by T. J. Mott Esq. J.P. and one in the north aisle was
given in 1927 in memory of J. Gibson esq. by his widow: a new oak
screen was erected in 1904: there are panels, the gift of the Rev.
N. W. Shelton M.A. (present vicar) inscribed with the names of the
men of this parish who fell in the Great War, 1914-18: there appears
to have been formerly a footway from north to south through the
tower, used before the drainage of the fens, when the ordinary roads
were impassable for foot passengers: there are 872 sittings. The
register dates from the year 1606. The living is a vicarage, net
yearly value £1,205, with residence, and including 1 acre of glebe,
in the gift of the Bishop of Ely, and held since 1916 by the Rev.
Norman Wilfrid Shelton M.A. of Trinity College, Dublin, and surrogate.
A new vicarage house was erected on the old site in 1892.. About
3,000 acres on the north-east side of the parish were separated
from Littleport parish and added to the ecclesiastical district
of Little Ouse, Norfolk, Nov. 13, 1866 (full particulars of which
will be found in Kelly's Directory of Norfolk). |
|
Littleport
St. Matthew is an ecclesiastical parish, formed out of the old parish
of Littleport, St. Mary arid Holy Trinity Ely, and Downham in the
Isle. July 2, 1878. The church, erected, in 1878 at a cost, including
fittings, of about £1,665, from the designs of Mr. W. Bassett Smith,
architect, of London, is a structure of brick in the Early English
style, consisting of chancel, nave, transepts, south porch and a
western turret containing one bell: there are 230 sittings. The
register dates from the year 1878. The living is a vicarage, net
yearly value £312, with residence arid including 2 acres of glebe
and a charge of £20 yearly on the, rectory of Downham, in the gift
of the Bishop of Ely, and held since I1925 by the Rev. Frank D'Ynza
Bruce. The school church. at Littleport Fen, built in 1869, will
seat 120 persons; divine service is held here once every Sunday.
The mission room at Ten Mile Bank was erected in 1894, and will
seat 120 persons. The Wesleyan chapel, in High street, was erected
in 1890 at a cost of £1,700, the old chapel being now used as a
Sunday school; there are also Independent, Baptist and Primitive
Methodist chapels arid Salvation Army barracks at Littleport, and
Wesleyan Methodist chapels at Black Horse Drove, Mildenhall road
and Dairy Houses. A cemetery of 5 acres, with mortuary chapel, was
formed in 1902, and is under the control of the Littleport Parish
Council.
The
Town Hall and two Gift Houses adjoining were built in 1879 by the
Trustees of the Town Lands Charity, in accordance with the provisions
of a scheme framed under an Order of the Charity Commissioners for
England and Wales, dated 12th November, 1875. The Alexandra Institute,
in Victoria street, erected by Messrs. Hope Brothers Limited for
the use of their workpeople, will hold 250; attached is a lending
library of about 1,200 volumes, three lawn tennis courts and a garden.
The Public Hall, in Hitches street, will hold 500 persons. The Constitutional
Hall, in Victoria street, comprises club rooms and a hall holding
about 500 persons; the club has over 100 members. The shirt factory
of Messrs. Hope Brothers Limited, situated here, was considerably
enlarged in 1888, and now employs about 300 hands. A steam fire
engine is maintained in the town at the station on Punts hill; the
brigade numbers 13.The local charities, of which the Town Lands
Charity is the principal, produce a sum of about £200 net yearly,
which is distributed in coals and other articles to the poor during
the winter. From these charities about 160 acres of land have been
appropriated, and let in allotments to parishioners. A large acreage
belonging to the County Council and private owners is let out in
small holdings. Mrs. J. Spearing and Mrs. W. L. Raynes are ladies
of the manor. There are, several landowners. The soil is fen, and
subsoil clay; the fen land has been rendered of great value by skilful
draining, and also by the system of claying now generally adopted
chief crops are sugar beet, wheat, beans, barley, oats, and potatoes.
The area is 17,208 acres of land and inland water; the population
of the civil parish in 1921 was 4,467, and of the ecclesiastical
parishes: - St. George, 3,290 ; St. Matthew, 604.
By
the Divided Parishes Act, a portion Hilgay, on the left bank of
the river Little Ouse, was amalgamated with this parish in 1885,
all the remainder, on the right bank of the river, the property
of the late William Luddington esq., going to Southery parish.
[Kelly's
Directory - Cambridgeshire - 1929]
|
|
Littleport,
Victoria Street, early 20th century |

Littleport,
Great Flood 1928 |

Littleport,
Hope Brothers Factory |
|
Littleport,
Hospital Sunday Parade 26th July 1908 |

Littleport
Railway Station |

Littleport,Sandhill
Bridge 1927 |
|
Littleport
TGWU Convalescent Home 1938 |

Littleport
TGWU Convalescent Home 1936 |

TGWU Convalescent
Home 1934 |
|