Dry Drayton

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Dry Drayton
Cambridgeshire

Church of St Peter and St Paul
Location
Grid reference: TL381620
Location: 52°14’20"N, -0°1’17"E
Data
Population: 582  (2001)
Post town: Cambridge
Postcode: CB23
Dialling code: 01954
Local Government
Council: South Cambridgeshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
South Cambridgeshire
Website: http://www.drydrayton.net

Dry Drayton is a Cambridgeshire village about 5 miles northwest of Cambridge.

The village High Street once was the main focus of the village but with expansion the focus has moved towards the area closer to the field called 'The Park', despite not being a play park or recreational area. Most of the village services and shops closed following the opening of the Tesco superstore in Bar Hill.

Dry Drayton is connected to Bar Hill by a cycle path and pedestrian path known as "The Drift".[1]

Churches

St Peter and St Paul

The village has two churches:

The parish church has been dedicated to St Peter and St Paul since the 15th century. The building dates from the 13th century, and consists of a chancel, an aisled and clerestoried nave with north porch, and a three-storey west tower.

The tower is the oldest part of the present building and dates from the 13th century, as does the majority of the chancel and nave, though the church was restored in the 19th century. The plain octagonal font dates from the 13th century.

History

The ancient parish of Dry Drayton formed between the Roman Via Devana (now the A14) to the north, and the Cambridge to St Neot's road to the south, covering an area of 2,421 acres. In 1966 around 350 acres were removed from the north west of the parish to create the new civil parish of Bar Hill. Now completely cleared of ancient woodland, the village has been used for arable farming for centuries.[2]

Listed as Draitone in the Domesday Book, the village became known as Dry Drayton by the start of the 13th century to distinguish it from Fen Drayton 5 miles to the northwest. The name "Drayton" means "farmstead where drays or sledges are used".[3]

Village life

Dry Drayton village hall

Dry Drayton has two churches, a primary school and a cricket ground.

The village has one remaining public house, The Black Horse, that opened around 1780. Former pubs include the Three Horseshoes, that opened in the mid-18th century and closed in the mid-20th century. Away from the village was the Five Bells, that opened in the early 19th century where the Oakington road met the Huntingdon turnpike (now the A14). It became a farmhouse in the first decades of the 20th century.[2]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Dry Drayton)

References