
HUNTINGDON, a borough and market town, having separate
jurisdiction, locally in the hundred of Hurstingstone, county of HUNTINGDON,
59 miles (N. by W.) from London, containing 2806 inhabitants. This place,
called by the Saxons Huntantun, and in the Norman survey Hunters dune, appears
to have derived its name from its situation in a tract of country which was
anciently an extensive forest abounding with deer, and well suited for the
purposes of the chase. A castle was built here by Edward the Elder, in 917,
and afterwards enlarged by David, Earl of Huntingdon, and King of Scotland,
to whom King Stephen gave the borough, but having become a retreat for the
disaffected in the reign of Henry II., it was, by that monarch's order, levelled
with the ground. This fortress, of which there are no remains, is generally
supposed, from the form of its out-works, which may still be traced, to have
been the site of Duroliponte, a station of the Romans. A mint was established
here at a very early period, and coins of Edwy and of his successors until
the time of William Rufus, have been struck and issued from this place. Huntingdon
has been honoured with many royal visits; James I., on his arrival from Scotland,
with all his court, was sumptuously entertained by Sir Oliver Cromwell, uncle
of the Protector, in his princely mansion of Hinchinbrooke, a spacious quadrangular
building in the Elizabethan style, in which also Charles I. frequently partook
of the liberal hospitality of its possessor. Prior to the commencement of
the parliamentary war, that monarch kept his court at Huntingdon, where he
carried on his negotiations with the parliament then sitting in London, and
during the subsequent contests it was frequently the headquarters of his army,
Not long after the breaking out of the war, however, it appears to have fallen
into the hands of the parliament; for it is stated to have been plundered,
in August 1645, by the royalists, commanded by the king in person. In 1646,
the king, on his route from Holmby to Hampton Court, in the care of Cornet
Joyce and the parliamentary commissioners, was lodged at Hinchinbrook House,
then belonging to Colonel Montague, an officer in the army of the parliament,
and afterwards, on his joining Charles II. at the Restoration, created Earl
of Sandwich, from whose lady the captive monarch received every tribute of
sympathising loyalty, and by whose courage he was protected from the insults
of a factious mob. In 1745, the inhabitants, assisted by the surrounding gentry,
came forward to support the reigning dynasty against the claims of the Pretender,
and raised a large sum of money by subscription for that purpose. The town is pleasantly situated on a gentle acclivity on
the northern bank of the river Ouse, over which an ancient stone bridge of
six arches connects it with Godmanchester; it consists of one principal street,
extending a mile in length, and intersected at right angles by several smaller
streets : the houses are in general large, well built and of handsome appearance
the town is well paved, lighted during the winter season, and amply supplied
with water. The environs are pleasant, and from the Castle hill the prospect
is rich, varied, and extensive. Within a quarter of a mile of the town is
a luxuriant meadow, called Portholm, more than two miles in circumference,
and preserving an entire and beautiful level, environed by the river, which
is of considerable breadth, and shaded in its course by ranges of stately
poplars and graceful willows. On this extensive plain, which forms one of
the finest courses in the kingdom, races take place annually, commencing on
the first Tuesday in August, and continuing three days, during which, and
usually for a fortnight after, the theatre, a small edifice erected 1800 is
open. There are three literary institutions or reading-societies, and a public
subscription reading-room; and, in 1821, an horticultural society was established,
the members of which award prizes at their meetings in April and July. Monthly
assemblies are held, during the season, in a suite of rooms in the town-hall
and public balls take place there in the race week. The trade is principally
in wool and corn: there are also two public breweries. The river Ouse is navigable
for small vessels from Lynn, whence the inhabitants are supplied with coal
and timber, and other articles or merchandise, and for barges from this town
to Bedford. The market, on Saturday, is plentifully supplied with corn and
provisions: the fairs are on the Tuesday before Easter, and the second Tuesday
in May, for cattle of all sorts; and there is a statute fair about two weeks
before Michaelmas, on a day fixed by the mayor there are also large cattle
markets on the Saturday before Old Michaelmas-day, and on the third Saturday
in November. The market-place, which is conveniently arranged, occupies a
spacious square in the centre of the town. Huntingdon was first incorporated in 1206, by charter of
King John, confirmed and extended by Henry III. and succeeding sovereigns
until the 6th year of the reign of Charles I., when it was renewed with modifications;
under which charter the government is vested in a mayor, high steward, recorder,
twelve aldermen, and twelve burgesses, assisted by a town clerk, two serjeants
at mace, and subordinate officers. The mayor, recorder, and aldermen, form
the common council. The mayor, who is also coroner and clerk of the market,
the late mayor, the high steward, tile recorder, and the senior alderman,
if he has passed the chair, are justices of the peace. The mayor, assisted
by the recorder, holds quarterly courts of session for the trial of within
the borough; and a court of records, for the recovery of debts to any amount,
is held once in three weeks: the county court is held every fourth Saturday,
and there are courts leet and baron for the manor. The assizes for the county,
and the general quarter sessions of the peace, are also held in this town.
The town-hall is a handsome modern building of brick, coated with stucco,
erected in 1745, by voluntary subscription, on the site of the old court-house,
and surrounded with piazzas, under which the market for eggs, poultry, meat,
and butter, is kept: the ground-floor contains the courts for criminal and
civil causes, each accommodated with a gallery, and a room in which the grand
jury assemble, and the borough magistrates sit weekly, for the dispatch of
business: above these is a suite of assembly-rooms, handsomely fitted up;
the ball-room, sixty-three feet in length, and twenty-four in width, is ornamented
with portraits of George II. and George III., and with those of their queens.
by Sir Joshua Reynolds; also of John, Earl of Sandwich, by Gainsborough. A
new prison bas been erected on the western side of the great north road, combining
a common gaol and house of correction for the county, and comprising eight
wards for the classification of prisoners, with the same number of day-rooms
and airing-yards (in one of which is a treadwheel for supplying the prison
with water), and fifty-one separate cells. The old gaol with the yards and
appurtenances, has been surrendered to the use of the corporation, and the
county bridewell has been purchased to be converted into a workhouse. Huntingdon was formerly much more extensive than it is at
present, and contained fifteen parish churches, the greater number of which
had fallen into decay before Leland's time, when only four were remaining,
and two of these were destroyed during the parliamentary war. The borough
at present comprises the parishes of All Saints, St. Benedict, St. John the
Baptist, and St. Mary, all in the archdeaconry of Huntingdon, and diocese
of Lincoln. The living of All Saints' is a rectory, united with that of St.
John the Baptist, the former rated in the king's books at £6.11.10½.,
and the latter at £ 6.7.6., and in the patronage of the Crown: the church
of All Saints is a venerable and handsome structure, partly in the early,
and partly in the later, style of English architecture, with a fine square
embattled tower in the later style, strengthened with buttresses, ornamented
with niches, and crowned with pinnacles; the sides of the tower are enriched
with foliage, flowers, heads, and other devices, among which are the Tudor
rose and portcullis; the chancel is in the early English style, and has a
remarkably fine doorway, now walled up; the nave is separated from the chancel
by a lofty and finely-pointed arch, and from the aisles by pointed arches
resting upon clustered columns; the oak roof is richly carved, and decorated
with full-length figures, with various musical instruments: there are several
ancient monuments, among which are some to the ancestors of Oliver Cromwell,
who were interred in the church. The living of St. Benedict's is a rectory,
united with the discharged rectory of St. Mary's, rated in the king's books
at £10.0.5., endowed with £400 royal bounty, and £1200 parliamentary grant,
and in the patronage of the Crown. The church of St. Mary was rebuilt in 1620;
it is a handsome structure in the later style of English architecture, with
a fine square embattled tower, strengthened with buttresses, and profusely
ornamented with niches and sculpture; the nave is separated from the aisles
by finely-pointed arches and octangular and circular columns alternately;
the font is of an octagonal form, and supported on a column encircled by small
pillars: in the chancel are several handsome monuments, and in other parts
of the church are some mural tablets highly finished, together with several
marble slabs, from which the brasses were torn away by the parliamentary soldiers.
There are places of worship for Baptists; the Society of Friends, Independents,
and Wesleyan Methodists The free grammar school, which is of uncertain origin,
is endowed with part of the revenue of the ancient hospital of St. John, in
the chapel of which it is kept: the number of scholars is not limited, and
they are instructed on the Eton plan. There is a scholarship for a boy from
this school at Peter House, Cambridge, founded by Thomas Miller, who gave
for that purpose land now producing £20 per annum, tenable from admission
until obtaining the degree of M.A.: there is also a scholarship founded in
Christ's College, Cambridge, for a native of Huntingdon. A charity school
is supported partly by the surplus benefactions of Mr. Richard Fishborn, Mr.
Lionel Walden, and Mr. Gabriel Newton, and by subscription, for the maintenance,
clothing, and education of thirty boys, of whom six go out every year, receiving
£10 as an apprentice fee: twelve girls are also clothed and instructed from
the proceeds of Mr. Fishborn's charity. National schools, under the patronage
of the Bishop of the diocese, were established in 1818, and are supported
by subscription: the boys' school-room, in which one hundred boys are instructed,
is a neat building at the northern extremity or the town; opposite to which
is that for the girls, of whom about seventy are taught. Mr. Richard Fishborn,
in 1625, gave £2000 in trust to the Company of Mercers, in London, for the
maintenance of a lecture, a grammar school and an almshouse, in this town;
which sum, together with £4560 arising from other donations, was, in 1630,
vested in the purchase of the manor of Chalgrave, in the county of Bedford,
now producing £700 per annum, of which £60 is paid to a lecturer, £175 per
annum to the corporation for charitable uses, of which £35 per annum is appropriated
to the clothing and education of twelve poor girls, £90 per annum for apprenticing
six poor children of the charity school, and £5 each to ten aged men or women:
there are various other charitable bequests for distribution among the poor.
Of the monastic establishments which formerly existed here, was a priory of
Black canons, dedicated to St Mary, founded prior to the year 973, and removed
by Eustace do Lovetot in the reign of Stephen, or that of Henry II., to the
eastern part of the town, the revenue of which, at the dissolution, was £282.7.;
there are no remains. A priory for nuns of the Benedictine order was removed
from Eltesley, in the county of Cambridge, to this town, the revenue of which,
at the dissolution, was £19.9.2.: the site was granted by Henry VIII. to Sir
Richard Cromwell, who erected tile mansion of Hinchinbrook house with part
of the materials. A convent of Augustine friars was founded in the parish
of St. John in, the reign of Edward l.; which subsisted until the Reformation,
and in the later part or the sixteenth, century, the site of the friary belonged
to Robert Cromwell, whose son Oliver became Lord Protector of England. Here
was an Hospital dedicated to St. Margaret, for a master and leprous brethren
to which Malcolm, Earl of Huntingdon, and King of Scotland, was a benefactor
and which was, in 1445, annexed to Trinity Hall, Cambridge by letters patent
of Henry VI.; besides an Hospital dedicated to St John the Baptist, founded
in reign of Henry II., by David Earl of Huntingdon, the revenue of which,
at the dissolution, was £9.4.: the chapel, which is all that remains of the
ancient building, is appropriated to the use of the free grammar school. A
stone coffin containing a human skeleton, was dug up on the castle hills,
about twenty years since. The learned Henry of Huntingdon author of a History
of England continued to the reign of Stephen; and the noted Oliver Cromwell;
were natives of this town. Huntingdon gives the title of earl to the family
of Rawdon-Hastings.

The Bridge Hotel, Huntingdon

The George, Huntingdon

Huntingdon
County Hospital Mid 20th Century
Ward
within the Hospital

A
Nurse from the Hospital
Huntingdon
Railway Station turn of 20th Century
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Last Updated
on: 28 September 2004
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