HISTON
THE large village of Histon lies north of Cambridge, its built-up area in 1986 being separated
from that of the city only by a narrow belt of
farm land and the Cambridge northern bypass. (fn. 25)
The parish was mainly agricultural until the mid
19th century, when fruit growing and market
gardening developed, further stimulated by the
establishment of the Chivers jam factory in 1874.
The firm's later growth made Histon a centre of
employment for a wide area. Development after
1950 was mostly residential and middle-class,
and from the 1960s Histon was regarded by
some as a suburb of Cambridge. (fn. 26) Over half the
working population had jobs in the city in 1974. (fn. 27)
The factory site and the houses built near it in
the late 19th and early 20th century were partly
in Impington parish, and by 1980 that area and
the two old villages had fused into a single
continuous settlement, still divided between the
two parishes. Much of what follows about the
growth of the settlement from the late 19th
century therefore covers both Histon and
Impington. (fn. 28)
In the Middle Ages there were two parishes
in Histon, St. Etheldreda's being merged into
St. Andrew's during the 17th century. (fn. 29) They
had previously lain interspersed piecemeal
throughout the open fields and in the village. In
the early 17th century St. Etheldreda's was
reckoned to have 607 a. of open-field arable and
St. Andrew's 562 a., with 30 a. unascribed or
paying tithes to Girton. (fn. 30) Histon was also involved with Impington at an early date. In 1492
there was a house 'in Histon in the parish of
Impington' (fn. 31) and the area covered by their
village closes was contiguous. (fn. 32) Much land in
Impington township was held of the Histon
manors from the 13th century (fn. 33) and came to pay
tithes to Histon. Although the parish boundary
was complex and thus eventually forgotten, (fn. 34) the
fields of Histon and Impington were distinct,
divided north of the villages by Mill Lane and
south by a curving field boundary. (fn. 35)
The parishes were inclosed together under an
Act of 1801 and award of 1806, when 379 a. in
Impington fields were declared rated to Histon
and therefore in Histon parish. (fn. 36) The parish
boundary set out by the commissioners followed
a tortuous course in the fields north-east of the
village and both there and to the south put land
formerly in Impington's fields into Histon. It
also left embedded within Impington parish a
number of small detached parts of Histon, which
were amalgamated with Impington in 1883 and
1886. Histon thus covered 2,162 a. in 1891. (fn. 37) An
area of 58 a. near the south end of the parish,
which included the north part of Girton village,
was transferred to Girton in 1934, and in 1954
more land at the west end of the parish was lost,
57 a. to Girton and 158 a. to Oakington, leaving
Histon at 1,889 a. in 1961. (fn. 38) In 1985 a further
11½ a. (4.5 ha.) were transferred to Oakington,
and the boundary with Impington, which since
the mid 19th century had run confusingly
through the built-up area, was straightened to
follow Mill Lane, Water Lane, Cambridge Road,
the railway line, and the brook. Histon thereby
gained 11&frac1/2; a. (4.5 ha.) and lost 69 a. (28 ha.), its
area in 1986 being 737 ha. (1,820 a.). (fn. 39)
Histon's original boundary with Girton, Oakington, and Westwick mostly followed straight
trackways and furlong boundaries; that on the
north mainly drainage ditches, one of which was
determined as the boundary with Cottenham in
1273. (fn. 40) The north part of the parish is in the
upper end of the Beach Ditch hollow and lies
below 8 m. The ground slopes gently up to reach
15 m. in the south. Most of it lies on terraces of
river gravels, parts of which, especially in the
north, are overlaid by gault. (fn. 41) In the 19th century
the soil was thought very fruitful and suited to
a wide range of crops. (fn. 42) Two small brooks flow
north and west through the parish. Beck brook
formed the boundary with Oakington after 1954.
The unnamed eastern brook flows north to the
green by Water Lane, then turns west across the
green and alongside Park Lane and a footpath
to the parish boundary. Much of its course has
been culverted but in the middle of the green it
forms a large ornamental pond overhung by
trees.
The twisting village street, which in the 19th
century earned the name 'crooked Histon', (fn. 43) was
the main medieval route from Cambridge into
the Isle of Ely. The road from Cambridge forks
400 m. south of the green, with Water Lane
following the brook to the south-east corner of
the green and the more direct Broad Lane (later
called Station Road) skirting the green on the
west. North of the village Gun's Lane represents
the medieval road. At inclosure it was downgraded to a bridle path. (fn. 44) The route from Cambridge to Cottenham followed Water Lane and
continued north past the green along Pig's Lane,
renamed Glebe Way in the 20th century. Cottenham Road links the north end of the village
street with Glebe Way 750 m. north of the green.
The roads to Cambridge and Cottenham and
the Oakington-Girton road, which crossed the
south-west corner of the ancient parish, were
left in their former routes at inclosure, and a
new straight road linking Park Lane and the
Oakington-Girton road replaced the old roads
to Oakington, which followed the brook, and to
Girton, which led across the open fields south
of Park Lane. In the 19th century the lane from
the green to Impington village was often called
Dog Kennel Lane, evidently from kennels belonging to Guy Sindrey of Histon Manor (d.
1761). (fn. 45)
The railway line from Cambridge to St. Ives
was opened in 1847 across the parish, with a
station next to the Impington boundary where
the line crossed the Cambridge road. (fn. 46) The
station closed in 1970 but a single-track freight
line remained in 1986. (fn. 47)
In the early Middle Ages Histon was one
of the biggest villages in the county. Already
populous in 1086, when 75 tenants were recorded, (fn. 48) it grew considerably before the 14th
century to have 189 landholders in 1279 (fn. 49) and
103 taxpayers in 1327. (fn. 50) Numbers were evidently
much reduced by the Black Death and remained
at a low level until the late 18th century: there
were only 54 families in 1563 (fn. 51) and 60 in 1728. (fn. 52) Those figures probably conceal a rise in the 17th
century, when the village had 80-90 houses. (fn. 53) The population grew again to over 500 by 1801,
and nearly doubled to 1,000 by 1851. It stayed
at about that level for the rest of the century,
avoiding the decline experienced by most rural
parishes in the county mainly because of the
Chivers factory. The factory contributed to a
steady growth in population in the early 20th
century, there being 1,700 inhabitants in 1931;
after 1945, when much housing was built for
people who worked in Cambridge, numbers
increased rapidly, and had reached 6,400 in
Histon and Impington together by 1981. (fn. 54)
The street plan suggests that the village grew
from two early focuses, both of which had
probably been laid out by the 11th century in
view of the large population in 1086. One was a
large oval green, of which only the eastern third
remains, defined on the north by the brook
and on the south by the present High Street.
Elongated tofts stretching back from both long
sides of the green survived in 1806. (fn. 55) The other
focus, later called Church End, lay immediately
north-west and included both churches; Church
Street formed its spine, ending in the west at
St. Etheldreda's church and its associated manor
house and winding round St. Andrew's churchyard, perhaps an encroachment on the street,
with St. Andrew's manor house to the south.
Back lanes roughly parallel with Church Street
are represented by Clay Street on the north and
part of Park Lane on the south; on the east the
present Windmill Lane links Church End with
the green.
The position of the churches and manor
houses blocked any extension to the west, and
settlement was very gradually drawn towards
the green, the west part of which may have been
colonized at an early date. The disuse and partial
demolition of St. Etheldreda's church in the late
16th century both reflected and hastened the
change. The east end of Church Street nevertheless remained built up and there was early
development with regular tofts on the north side
of Clay Street, where a 14th-century hall house
survives at the core of Stone Corner Cottage. (fn. 56)
The most densely built-up part of the village
nevertheless became High Street and the green,
where the more substantial 16th- and 17thcentury houses were located. The Olde House
immediately south of the green on Station Road
is a large L-shaped timber-framed house cased
in red brick, built in the early 16th and the 17th
century but with later additions. (fn. 57) Another 16thcentury timber-framed house, of lobby-entry
plan, stands in Bell Hill south of Church Street
The boundary between Histon and Impington is that between the field systems
and there are several 17th-century farmhouses
facing the green and in High Street. By the
1630s Histon had 84 houses and cottages, 9 of
them newly built. (fn. 58) In 1674 there were 88, of
which 67 had one or two hearths, 14 had three,
and 5 had four or five, besides the two larger
manor houses. (fn. 59) New building was probably
extending the village, especially south of the
green along Water Lane and Broad Lane: by
1517 there was at least one house at Little
Green, (fn. 60) evidently where the two roads converge. (fn. 61) There were also dwellings north of the
green in the lanes behind its infilled western
part. In the mid 18th century eight houses in
that area were taken down. (fn. 62) The total number
of houses was slightly reduced between the 17th
century and 1801, when there were 76, (fn. 63) tightly
packed around the green and on the south side
of High Street, slightly less so in Church Street
and adjoining lanes, and scattered thinly along
Broad Lane, Water Lane, Clay Street, and the
lanes between the village and Cottenham Road. (fn. 64)
New building had raised the number to over 200
by 1851 but the village was still very scattered. (fn. 65)
Most new building was south of the village.
Water Lane and Broad Lane already had 23
houses and Chequer Lane in Impington probably over 20 in 1841 and more were built after
the railway station was opened in 1847 and
especially after the Chivers factory was established next to it in 1874. (fn. 66) Building land was for
sale just north of Little Green in 1867 (fn. 67) and in
Cambridge Road in 1887. (fn. 68) The built-up area
was greatly extended between 1901 and 1939.
Saffron close west of Station Road was sold for
building in the 1890s, (fn. 69) land in Narrow Lane
and Mill Lane north of the village in the 1900s, (fn. 70)
and Home close south of High Street in 1916, (fn. 71)
among others. By 1939 houses had gone up in
all those areas, as well as in a small estate partly
in Impington south of the station and in the
former park of Histon Manor south of Park
Lane. Much of the east side of Cambridge
Road between Little Green and the station, in
Impington parish, was also built over before
1939. (fn. 72) The number of dwellings in Histon and
Impington doubled between 1901 and 1931, (fn. 73) and the pace of growth increased after the Second
World War, especially after 1957, when Histon
and Impington were one of the six settlements
ringing Cambridge chosen to take the major part
of the city's projected growth. (fn. 74) The number of
houses in both parishes together doubled again
from 1,200 in 1951 to almost 2,400 in 1981. (fn. 75) By
1986 almost the entire area between Cottenham
Road, the railway, and Impington Park was built
over, with ribbon development extending further
north, south, and east on the roads to Cottenham,
Cambridge, and Milton.

Figure 6:
Histon and Impington 1801
The boundary between Histon and Impington is that between the feild system
Most of the new houses built after 1918 were
on private estates, there being only 250 council
houses in Histon and 200 in Impington in 1981. (fn. 76)
Chivers put up a small number of model houses
shortly after 1900, (fn. 77) and John Chivers sponsored
the Histon Co-operative Homes Society, which
built the estate south of the railway in the
1920s and 1930s and enabled many of Chivers'
employees to buy houses there. (fn. 78)
Increased road traffic after the Second World
War made the level crossing at Histon station a
bottleneck, and a bypass road bridging the railway to the east was opened in 1963. (fn. 79) The new
road, entirely in Impington parish, together with
the Cambridge northern bypass opened in 1978 (fn. 80)
drew all but local traffic away from the older
parts of Histon. In the 1980s Station Road had
a 19th-century appearance, dominated by the
Chivers factory until its demolition in 1986, by
the large Baptist chapel built by John Chivers,
and by Victorian houses and cottages, many
turned into shops. In contrast the area around
the church kept the atmosphere of a small village,
with crooked lanes and timber-framed buildings,
closed off on the west by the park-like grounds
of Histon Manor and Abbey Farm.
From the 13th century or earlier until 1934
houses at the north end of Girton village, including Manor Farm, lay in Histon parish. (fn. 81) The
Girton-Oakington road, which lay in the area
removed from Histon in 1954, had some houses
and farms in the 20th century. An isolation
hospital was built in 1905 south of the road at
Midfield by Chesterton R.D.C. and was bought
by the county council in 1941. (fn. 82) After 1945 it
had a variety of uses, and in 1986 housed up to
32 children in care, with much extended premises and c. 30 staff. (fn. 83)
One or more inns in the village had 3 guest
beds and stabling for 9 horses in 1686. (fn. 84) The
earliest recorded by name were the Bell, called
the Bell and Anchor in 1728, (fn. 85) and the Boot, so
called by 1765. They were joined in the 1770s
by the Barley Mow, (fn. 86) and after 1830 by half a
dozen more public houses and beershops.
Among the survivors in the late 19th century
were the Rose and Crown and the Green hill,
both on the green, and in High Street the Red
Lion, the Boot, and the Barley Mow. The Bell
closed after 1916. The Railway Vue facing the
station was open by 1853. (fn. 87) There were eight
pubs in Histon and Impington in 1984. (fn. 88)
The village Feast in late June or early July
had turned by the late 19th century into a church
parade which collected funds for Addenbrooke's
Hospital, Cambridge. It lapsed after the Second
World War but was revived in the early 1970s
as a festival spread over several days. (fn. 89) Camping
close, just south of Park Lane, was evidently
where traditional village football, or camp ball,
was played. (fn. 90) Early friendly societies included a
clothing club in 1836 (fn. 91) and the Ancient Order
of Foresters in the 1860s. (fn. 92) An annual ploughing
match was held from the 1850s and a horticultural show by 1862, and there was a cricket club
by 1861. (fn. 93) A village social club called the Philo
Union Society was in existence by 1869. (fn. 94) John
Chivers helped to found the Histon Institute in
1903. Its building, the former Baptist chapel on
the green, housed a reading room and sports
clubs. In the 1890s and 1900s Histon and Impington boasted a large number of other social,
sports, and political clubs. The village's mixed
character was evident in the variety of activities
from agricultural and horticultural societies to
clubs for pigeon racing, amateur dramatics, and
bicycling. (fn. 95) Voluntary associations of all kinds
continued in the 20th century. After 1939 Impington village college was the base for most
sports and recreational clubs.
By 1864 the Baptists and Methodists shared
a cemetery in the parish, (fn. 96) probably that at the
corner of Mill Lane and Pig's Lane on land
owned by Chivers until 1929. (fn. 97) Piped water was
laid on to most houses in Histon in 1883 by the
Cambridge University and Town Waterworks
Co. (fn. 98)