“Ten Miles from Ely”: Stories, Lives and Landscapes of the Fen Country
A collection of oral histories and memories from villages surrounding Ely, capturing life, work, customs and landscape across the Cambridgeshire Fens in the early twentieth century.
Exhibition: “Ten Miles from Ely”
This exhibition brings together voices and memories from across the Fenland villages surrounding Ely, offering a richly detailed picture of life in the early twentieth century.
Compiled from oral history recordings held Lorna Delanoy, it captures:
- Everyday life
- Work and farming
- Village customs
- War and social change
- The distinctive landscape of the Fens
The title reflects both geography and identity: a network of communities connected by Ely as their centre (see map on page 2).
1. Ely and its surrounding world
A map early in the booklet shows Ely at the centre of a web of villages:
- Haddenham
- Sutton
- Witchford
- Stretham
- Wilburton
- Littleport
- Prickwillow
This “ten mile” radius defines a shared world of:
- Work
- Trade
- Family connections
- Social life
(see page 2 diagram)
2. Life shaped by work and poverty
The introduction reflects on the hard realities of Fenland life:
- Agricultural labour
- Poverty and hardship
- Strong resilience
Yet the tone is not only one of difficulty, but also of:
“affection and little regret”
suggesting pride in a way of life now largely gone (page 2).
3. Village customs and traditions
Memories from Haddenham and surrounding villages describe:
- Gooding Day – charity for widows
- Plough Monday traditions
- Mayladying celebrations
These customs reinforced:
- Community responsibility
- Seasonal rhythms
- Shared identity
(see pages 3–4)
4. Childhood and recreation
Recollections of childhood emphasise:
- Outdoor play
- Physical activities such as boxing, wrestling and cock-fighting games
- Informal sports and competitions
Life for children was often:
- Physically demanding
- Highly social
- Closely tied to the village environment
(see pages 4–5)
5. Mobility and travel
Despite the apparent isolation of the Fens, people moved widely.
One account describes travelling across:
- Suffolk
- Norfolk
- Lincolnshire
Often by foot or simple means, staying overnight wherever possible.
This mobility reflects a wider rural network beyond individual villages (page 5).
6. Money, trade and survival
Economic life was precarious.
Examples include:
- Working for very small wages
- Receiving food instead of money
- Sharing resources within the community
Farmers sometimes paid labourers in:
- Potatoes
- Cabbage
- Basic provisions
(see page 5)
7. Conflict: the Haddenham Riot
One of the most dramatic episodes described is the Haddenham Riot of 1921.
This arose from:
- Disputes over agricultural levies
- Tension between farmers and authorities
The account includes:
- Armed local resistance
- Confrontation with officials
- Violence and intimidation
The episode highlights:
- Economic pressure
- Strong local solidarity
- Resistance to external control
(see pages 6–7)
8. Faith, belief and community
Religious life played an important role.
Reflections include:
- Methodist influence in the villages
- Personal faith shaped by hardship
- Church as a centre of community life
Faith is described as:
- Evolving
- Personal
- Closely tied to lived experience
(see pages 7–8)
9. War and its impact
The Second World War brought dramatic change.
Accounts include:
- Bombing of Soham railway
- Damage to mills and infrastructure
- The constant threat of air raids
One vivid description recalls:
- Watching bombs fall in sequence
- Entire trains destroyed
- Villages affected by nearby explosions
(see pages 8–9)
10. Farming and working life
Daily work in the Fens was demanding.
Examples include:
- Long working hours (up to 15-hour days)
- Heavy manual labour
- Reliance on horses and early machinery
Agriculture shaped:
- Time
- Family life
- Physical environment
11. Everyday hardship and ingenuity
Life required constant adaptation.
Accounts describe:
- No heating in winter
- Primitive transport
- Early motor vehicles and repairs
One memory describes:
- Letting water drain at night to prevent freezing
- Starting vehicles with hand cranks in cold conditions
(see pages 10–11)
12. Women’s lives and domestic experience
Mabel Demaine’s recollections provide detailed insight into:
- Cooking in farmhouse kitchens
- Cleaning routines
- Managing households without modern conveniences
Descriptions include:
- Open fires
- Manual food preparation
- Intensive domestic labour
(see page 12)
13. Flooding and the Fen landscape
The Fens were always shaped by water.
A striking photograph shows:
- A flooded cottage with a bed raised above water level
- The impact of the 1947 floods
Another account describes:
- Sudden rising water
- Evacuation
- Damage to homes and livelihoods
(see pages 15 & 14)
14. Objects, work and memory
Photographs throughout the booklet connect stories to objects:
- Horse-drawn carts
- Agricultural machinery
- Butter churns
- Steam engines
These images show:
- The transition from manual to mechanised farming
- The central role of tools in everyday life
(see pages 16–18)
15. Industry and change
Later sections describe:
- Local factories (such as the Ely beet factory)
- Changing agricultural practices
- Increasing mechanisation
These developments mark the transition from:
- Traditional rural life
to
- Modern industrial agriculture
(see page 13)