ECONOMIC HISTORY. (fn. 66)
In 1251 15 'fields'
were recorded. (fn. 67) From the 14th century to the
late 17th century there were six open fields in
the parish. (fn. 68) In the south Middle field lay
between Gravel field to the east and Mill field
to the west. In the north lay Eye Hall, Clayhithe,
and Northale fields, the latter so named in 1313,
and later known as North Hills field. (fn. 69) The
northern three may originally have formed a
separate set of fields for the adjoining Clayhithe
hamlet. In both groups a triennial rotation was
followed in 1356-7. (fn. 70) Eye Hall's demesne comprised c. 200 a. of arable in 1386-7, when fragments of it were leased. (fn. 71) By the early 19th
century the six fields had been amalgamated into
three, lying in the south, centre, and north of
the parish.
In 1086 there were 15 servi, 22 villani, and 14
bordars in Fen Ditton and Horningsea
together. (fn. 72) In 1222 Horningsea tenants of the
bishop of Ely did not have to provide food for
the bishop's chamber in contrast to the obligations imposed upon their counterparts in Fen
Ditton. (fn. 73) In 1251 the 16 half yardlanders each
paid 18d. in rent, 13 cottars with crofts 12d.
each, and 8 cottars 6d. each. In 1279 16 freeholders each paid c. 2s. 6d. in rent. Ten free cottars
paid rent and provided a man for services, and
18 cottagers were obliged to mow, as well as each
owing rent of between 2d. and 12d. In 1386-7
harvest works numbering 211 days were performed on Eye manor's demesne. (fn. 74)
Meadowland, probably adjacent to the Cam,
was grazed by oxen in the 11th century, and in
the mid 13th century there was 45 a. of meadow
in Fen Ditton on the demesne of the bishop of
Ely's manor. (fn. 75) Thomas Willys, lord of Fen
Ditton, was in dispute with some of his tenants
about common rights over 100 a. of pasture
called Little Rough in 1620-2. (fn. 76) High fen, on
the eastern edge of the parish, was grazed by
sheep in the winter months and by cattle in the
remainder of the year until its inclosure in
1665. (fn. 77) Other important areas used for common
grazing in the 17th century included Green, also
known as Hatridge fen, adjacent to the eastern
bank of the river Cam, and the fen at North
Hills extending towards Bottisham lode. (fn. 78) After
inclosure in 1810 the only remaining fenland,
comprising c. 70 a., was administered for the
poor of Fen Ditton, Horningsea, and Quy
parishes. (fn. 79) The Horningsea portion lay in the
most eastern projection of the parish. (fn. 80)
In 1669 one farm had 66 a. of inclosed arable,
and in the early 1790s another of 230 a. included
40 a. of inclosed arable. (fn. 81) In 1794 a third of the
parish lay within old inclosures. (fn. 82) An Act for
inclosure was obtained in 1802 and the award
was effected in 1810, covering 1,060½ a. of open
fields, meadows, fens, and commons. (fn. 83) In the
19th century there were six farms with substantial landholdings in the parish. The principal
farms with farmhouses in the village were
Manor farm, with 207 a., St. John's farm which
had 145 a., and King's farm with 118 a. in
Horningsea and 112 a. in Fen Ditton. (fn. 84) Eye Hall
farm had 260 a. and Clayhithe farm 150 a., both
farms worked together in the late 19th century.
North Hills farm had c. 218 a. owned by St.
John's College. In the 19th century the Fison
and Saunders families were prominent farming
dynasties in the parish. In 1910 W. C. Saunders
was tenant of St. John's, North Hills, and King's
farms. (fn. 85) In 1941 Manor farm had 506 a., Eye
farm 282 a., King's farm 163 a., St. John's 323
a., and Lodge farm 203 a. (fn. 86) In 1970 there were
three large farms with c. 800 a., c. 600 a. and c.
400 a. each, and eight other holdings ranged
between c. 50 and c. 100 a. (fn. 87)
In 1386-7 on the demesne of Eye manor equal
proportions of maslin and barley were grown,
but the acreage under wheat was only a fifth as
large. (fn. 88) In the 16th century barley was probably
the largest crop. In the early 1790s wheat, barley
and rye were grown in equal proportions. Hops,
already an important crop in 1692, (fn. 89) were still
grown in the 1820s. (fn. 90) In 1870 and 1890 c. 300 a.
of wheat and 300 a. of barley were grown, but
in 1930 and 1941 their respective acreages comprised c. 340 a. and c. 220 a. (fn. 91) After the Second
World War, however, barley once again became
the principal crop, although in the late 20th
century much sugar beet was also grown in the
parish. (fn. 92) In the later 19th century farm seeds
were grown on Clayhithe farm, (fn. 93) taking advantage of the richness of the local soil.
In 972 Bishop Aethelwold granted Thorney
abbey 68 pigs from his Horningsea estate. (fn. 94) In
1086 there were 100 swine, 160 sheep, and 6
cattle on Ely abbey's manor of Fen Ditton with
Horningsea. (fn. 95) A shepherd and a herder of horses
were among the bishop's tenants c. 1251, when
pigs and cattle were kept on his manor. (fn. 96) There
was a sheepfold on the demesne of Eye manor
in 1386-7. (fn. 97) By 1672 the sheepwalks and rights
of pasture attached to Eye manor had been surrendered in exchange for separate pastures in
Low fen, High fen, Hatridge fen, and North
Hills fen. (fn. 98) Between 1870 and 1890 there were
c. 1,500 sheep in the parish, and 135 in 1941,
but none in 1950. (fn. 99) Several poultry farms were
established between the First and Second World
Wars, with 7,000 poultry in 1930. In 1941, however, only St. John's farm specialized in poultry
farming, with 1,570 turkeys, and by 1950 very
few poultry were kept.
In 1086 the abbot of Ely had a mill at
Horningsea which yielded 10s. (fn. 1) A miller was
recorded in the 13th century. About 1540 there
were two mills in the parish, one at Horningsea,
the other at Clayhithe. (fn. 2)
Willows planted between the high and low
grounds of the common fens in the north
marked the boundary of the lord's right of
pasture in the 17th century. (fn. 3) Osier holts in
Clayhithe, recorded in the Middle Ages, were
exploited until the early 19th century, (fn. 4) when
plantations existed on the Eye Hall and
Clayhithe estates, but declined thereafter as a
result of cheap imports from France. (fn. 5) In 1941
5 a. of osiers were farmed commercially on the
Holts farm. (fn. 6) Willows on the river banks of the
river Cam were cut, split and dried by the
inhabitants of Fen Ditton and Horningsea to
make baskets in the early 20th century. (fn. 7)
Coprolite deposits were dug in the late 19th
century in both those parishes. (fn. 8) About 70 a. of
land on Eye Hall and Clayhithe farms was so
worked in 1885, with each acre yielding around
300 tons, and in Fen Ditton parish coprolite diggers worked the land adjacent to Green End
Lane. In 1861 on Manor farm 27 men worked
as coprolite diggers. In 1871 there were 85
coprolite diggers living in Horningsea parish: 46
were unmarried men aged between 18 and 35
who had been born in other parishes, and took
up lodgings in the houses of Horningsea residents and at the Crown and Punch Bowl inn,
which had eleven lodgers. In Fen Ditton there
were 47 coprolite diggers, but only 6 lived in
lodgings. During the 1880s and 1890s demand
slackened, and after 1900 coprolite deposits were
no longer required except for a brief period of
renewed activity during the First World War,
when they were used in munitions. The effects
of the coprolite 'rush' were still visible in 2000
in the ponds and trenches of fenland known as
the Poor's Fen.
Clay and gault from Horningsea and
Clayhithe probably began to be used for
making pottery in the 2nd century A.D. (fn. 9) The
Horningsea kilns lay just to the south of
Clayhithe, and specialised in the production of
large storage jars, which supplied a region
stretching from Hertfordshire to Huntingdonshire. The pottery continued to be produced
until the 3rd century. In the 16th century bricks
were either made or stored in Clayhithe. (fn. 10) Two
brickmakers, who were buried in the parish in
the 1730s, may also have worked there. (fn. 11) In the
1830s the Clayhithe kiln specialised in producing tunnel bricks, (fn. 12) and in the late 19th century
white facing bricks, much in demand in
Cambridge, were manufactured at Clayhithe
brickyard. (fn. 13) There was a small brickpit on the
south-west side of Horningsea village in the mid
19th century. (fn. 14)
Between 1811 and 1831 the number of households engaged in farming increased from 20 to
49. Between 1851 and 1881 the number of farm
labourers rose from 62 to 72. (fn. 15) In the 1860s and
1870s work was abundant, as inhabitants could
work either as farm hands or as coprolite diggers. In 1941 there was an acute shortage of
labour on the farms in Horningsea, where 42
men and 5 boys were employed. Trades provided a continuous source of employment from
at least the 13th century, and during the 19th
century villagers were employed in trades such
as blacksmith, laundress, and shopkeeper. In the
early 20th century a butcher, cobbler, and grocer
each had a shop in the village, but from the
1950s there was only a village shop with post
office, which closed in 1992. (fn. 16)
In 1970 Ansells Garden Centre was established at the south-eastern outskirts of
Horningsea village, initially among the allotments. (fn. 17) It expanded thereafter, and in the 1990s
employed 25-30 people. In 1998 it was renamed
Ansells Garden and Leisure Centre. In addition
to the nursery there were several franchises at
the garden centre, specializing in the sale of pine
furniture, conservatories, and garage doors. In
2000 the centre, which occupied a 5-a. site, was
one of the largest gardening centres in the East
Anglian region. From 1996 a nursery opposite
Eye Hall, called Cambridgeshire Garden Plants,
specialized in growing herbaceous plants, and
was still in business in 2000. (fn. 18)