Eastrea

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Eastrea
Cambridgeshire
Fenland thatch in Eastree, Cambridgeshire - geograph.org.uk - 335124.jpg
Location
Grid reference: 29492&y=2 97237&z=120 TL 29492 97237
Location: 52°33’22"N, 0°5’20"W
Data
Postcode: PE7
Dialling code: 01733
Local Government

Eastrea is a little fenland village in Cambridgeshire, on the A605 between Whittlesey and Coates. The site has been inhabited since Roman times.

The village has its name form the Old English Eastre ea meaning "the eastern river".

History

There was once a church in the village, lost in the 18th century,[1] as well as a chapel which still stands today, albeit converted for commercial use. The first official wedding there took place on 27 September 1927.[2] The village also had a railway station (Eastrea railway station) from 1845 until 1866, as well as a shop which closed in the 1980s.

Eastrea was formerly the home of two public houses, The Windmill and The Nags Head. The Windmill was demolished in the mid 20th century and it was hoped that the site would be used for a new village hall; such plans never came to fruition.[3] In 2010 the owners of The Nag's Head sought planning approval to convert the pub into houses, citing a significant downturn in business as the main reason for doing so, but the council refused permission, stating that the pub was 'the beating heart of the community'.[4]

Village Hall

Since the 1940s, residents have been fighting for permission to build a village hall. A number of possible locations have been suggested over the years, and permission was granted in the 1960s for a hall on the former site of The Windmill pub, but no work was completed before the permission expired. In the 1990s an area of land off Thornham Way was offered, but once again no work was done quickly enough, and the land is now public open space. The present site was provided by Fenland District Council in 2004, on the basis that 14 new homes would be also be constructed alongside the village hall. Planning permission was given in 2009.[5] Work began in 2010 but was halted when an archeological dig revealed a human skeleton, believed to be around 2000 years old.[6]

Surveying work and the test digging was completed in 2011, and construction work began in earnest the following summer. In September 2012 work began on the framework of the building, and it was due to be completed in May 2013. The total budget cost was over £800,000. In July 2013, Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester opened the new hall, called the Eastrea Centre, in Coates Road.[7]

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Eastrea)

References