A Cambridgeshire Scrapbook

compiled by

Mike Petty

A compendium of cuttings relating to

Cambridge, Ely, Huntingdon, Newmarket, Royston

and the surrounding villages

Thousands of Fascinating Snippets of Cambridgeshire Life

featured in my Cambridge News

‘Looking Back’ columns

Published online 25 March 2015

Snippets relating to Welney

www.mikepetty.org.uk

01353 648106


MIKE PETTY.

Looking Back – a Cambridgeshire scrapbook 1897-1989

revised 2015 08 05

Introduction

For the last 50 years I have helped thousands of people research Cambridge and its county.

This index is my way of saying ‘Thank You’ for all they have taught me

Each evening from March 1997 to April 2015 I compiled a ‘Looking Back’ column in the Cambridge News in which I featured snippets from issues of 100, 75, 50 and 25 years ago. I sought out unusual items relating to villages and areas of Cambridge not usually featured

These stories are from issues of the Cambridge Daily/Evening/Weekly News or Cambridge Independent Press between March 1897 and December 1989

There are some gaps: the years 1915-1921, 1940 to 1946 and 1965 to 1971 have yet to be scanned.

But it includes the ‘Cambridge Independent Press ‘From Our Old Files’ stories 1915-1920, 1940-45

Many entries include the date of the original story in the form YY/MM/DD - thus 33 01 29 means 29th January 1933. Other dates are those on which the article appeared in my columns. I have notes of the precise dates and pages in which the original appeared

I can supply actual copies of many of these articles and have ‘Looking Back’ compilations for a number of topics as listed below. If you would like any of these please let me know.

The newspapers are held in the Cambridgeshire Collection together with other Cambridge titles back to 1762. They have newspaper cuttings files on 750 topics from 1958 to date together with a variety of indexes including a record of stories for every village in Cambridgeshire between 1770-1900.

I initiated much of the indexing and have many indexes of my own. Please feel free to contact me for advice and assistance.

For more details of newspapers and other sources for Cambridgeshire history see my website www.mikepetty.org.uk

This index was produced as a working part of my personal research resources and would benefit by editing. If you can make any of it work for you I am delighted. But remember you should always check everything!

Please make what use of it you may. Please remember who it came from

Mike Petty, 13a Reads Street, Stretham, Cambs CB6 3JT

01353 648106

www.mikepetty.org.uk


Welney Looking Back

1900

For the first time the British Amateur Skating Championship has been decided at Littleport. At no venue in Great Britain are the arrangements so to up-to-date. All Cambridge sportsmen will welcome Albert Tebbit’s success. He has had to wait five years to have his third race for the championship which has always been held by a man from Welney – the little hamlet known as the metropolis of speed skating # c.38 : skating

1909 10 27

George ‘Fish’ Smart, the prettiest and fastest skater Britain has ever produced, has from injuries sustained in an accident at the new dock which is being constructed at Hull. He was the most famous of the three famous ‘Welney Division’ of fen skaters founded by the renowned ‘Turkey’ Smart. He started skating as a boy and beat his all-conquering cousin, George See in 1878. But he retired when beaten by his younger brother James. ‘Fish’, who was 51, had been completely lost sight of in sporting circles in recent years.

1911 02 17

The great scientist Alfred Russell Watson once accepted a challenge to prove that the earth was round and, after consultation with Prof Newton, selected six miles of the Old Bedford Canal as the scene of his experiment. But he did not satisfy all the parties concerned in the challenge. So H. Yule Oldham carried out a similar experiment by placing a mark 15 foot above the water between two bridges between Denver and Welney. A long-distance photograph showed it to be considerably above the line of sight. But an elderly lock-keeper who appeared in the photograph shown at New Chesterton Institute was still firmly convinced that the earth was flat 11 02 17c

1924 11 25 c

The Isle of Ely County Council had been in communication with Norfolk in regard to the reconstruction, repair and maintenance of Welney suspension bridge, which was in a very bad state. Councillor Peake said “I always fell the bally bridge will go down when I am going over it”. The bridge belonged to the Ouse Drainage Board and if nothing were down they would do temporary repairs and make the bridge fit for traffic for 600 years and the tolls would remain.

1939 12 20

Three men were sent for trial charged with stealing a wooden tool box containing various tools, a grease gun, a copper funnel, a crowbar, two tins of grease, a pair of gauntlet gloves and a five gallon drum of paraffin oil, the property of Messes Masters & Co at Upwell. The box was found in long grass down the embankment near the Suspension Bridge on the Littleport-Welney Road. They were further charged with stealing seven bags of potatoes, the property of Levi Goose 39 12 20

1939 01 13

Floods.—Ouse Catchment Board men have (in view of the existing floods) reinforced the bank running alongside the road on the Cambridge side of the bridge over the Old West River (at Stretham). When a Pressman visited the district, he saw flood water lapping menacingly against the sandbags. The Old West River, which runs from Earith to just below Ely, is at this point narrow but now it has risen above its low banks, and is covering the washes which extend from the normal water's edge to higher banks running parallel. Willow trees alongside the normal river, which in summer time afford adequate protection from the sun to the many anglers who sit along the banks, are now half under water. Four large barges are tethered to these trees. They were brought up from Ely loaded with gault to mend the banks in the vicinity. With the continuance of fine weather, the flood water should soon be drained off. A little more snow or rain, however, would bring it over the main Ely to Cambridge Road, and many adjoining fields would be flooded. The Ouse at Holywell is over its banks, and water is within six feet of the Ferry public house. But it has to rise several more inches before it reaches the level of the house. . . . The flood position at Welney yesterday showed little improvement, for there is still 3ft. 6in of water over the road across the wash between Welney and the Suspension Bridge at Oxlode. The flood waters from the Old Bedford River have risen slightly at Earith but there is at present no anxiety. Flooding is most severe at Brandon Creek and in the Hilgay area. # c.29

1979 02 02 c

The National Skating Association commemorated a hundred years of organised speed skating with a professional match at Bury Fen, Earith watched by 300 people. It was a Cambridge journalist, James Drake Digby, who set up the Association after he had covered the skating at Mepal during the great frost of 1878. He was so impressed by the achievements of the champion of the day, ‘Fish’ Smart of Welney that he determined to get rid of the cheating caused by heavy betting. He arranged a meeting in Cambridge Guildhall which led to the formation of the NSA with the Mayor as chairman and himself as secretary

1983 11 10

Josh Scott, one of the last marsh shepherds, has hung up his gun and binoculars and said goodbye to the life-style that has supported his family for more than 100 years. It was Josh who first introduced the practice of rounding up cattle on a scrambler motorcycle and jumping the ditches in the fen area around Welney. In 1967 his life changed dramatically when instead of shooting for a living he joined forces with Sir Peter Scott and set up the Wild Fowl Trust Refuge in Welney where he has been warden 83 11 10 p21

1986 02 26

Josh Scott was the most successful predator of wild birds on the Welney Washes, killing 25 wigeon at one time with his punt gun. The birds were bagged in a potato sack and put on the train to London markets. If he could not find an injured duck he called at local pensioners’ houses and told them where they might find it for their own pot. But in 1967 when Sir Peter Scott set up his bird sanctuary Josh accepted the job of warden and has become a legendary figure, feeding thousands of rare swans and geese in the evening shadows of deepest winter 86 02 26b & c

1986 04 04

Ernie James is a real fen tiger and a marvellous storyteller. His remarkable memory is capable of making any fireside chat an enthralling yarn. Now he has set down his “Memoirs of a Fen Tiger”. The book describes his varied life as ferryman, mole catcher, wildfowler, eel catcher and ice skater in the tiny village of Welney where he lives with his wife in a little white-washed cottage overlooking the Ouse washes. He’s in demand by film makers and people who want to know about country crafts 86 04 04b

1987 01 12

It was pitch dark at 3am one Sunday morning as a Newmarket lorry driver was making his way north of Littleport towards Welney. He was talking to his wife on CD radio when suddenly a bright green light appeared in the sky. It was heading down to earth at tremendous speed, then changed direction and zipped across the road before disappearing. His experiences follow that of two Burwell women who saw huge orange lights above the fields near Swaffham Prior. These are the first unidentified flying objects reported locally for six years. 87 01 12