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"For What Is Chatteris"

In 2005, cult British indie band Half Man Half Biscuit - best known for "The Trumpton Riots" and "Dickie Davies Eyes", had a song entitled "For What Is Chatteris" on their award-winning Achtung Bono album. The song extolled the virtues of the small Fenland town offset against how little the best place in the world can suddenly become to someone when the one they love is no longer resident. News of the song made the headlines of the Cambridgeshire Times during September 2005 - a month before the album's official release - and bemused locals were delighted with their immortalisation from this unlikely source.[37]

Description

Coordinates: 52°27′22″N 0°03′18″E / 52.456°N 0.055°E / 52.456; 0.055 Chatteris is one of four market towns in the Fenland district of Cambridgeshire, situated in The Fens between Whittlesey, March and Ely. Mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086, the town has evidence of continuous settlement from the Neolithic period and is locally reputed to have been the last refuge of Boudica as she fled from the Romans.[1] The parish of Chatteris is large, covering 6099 hectares, and following the draining of the Fens, the town has become a centre of agriculture and related industry. Due to its proximity to Cambridge, Huntingdon and Peterborough, the town has in recent years also become popular as a commuter town. The town is in the North East Cambridgeshire parliamentary constituency.

Economy and industry

Chatteris is sited in particularly fertile agricultural land, and as such, the town's local economy is largely based on this industry.[23] Albert Bartlett Ltd, a major British grower and packer of root vegetables has a large facility in the town with over 2,500 hectares under cultivation, much of it growing the Chantenay carrot. According to their website, one in six of Britain's onions pass through their facilities in Chatteris, as well as a third of Britain's parsnips.[24] Rustler Produce Ltd, also based in Chatteris, is another major player in this industry, and a number of smaller vegetable producers and processors operate in the Chatteris area. Another major employer in the town is Metalcraft (Stainless Metalcraft (Chatteris) Ltd).[25] The company was established in the town in the late 19th century and over the years has manufactured diamond mining equipment and overhead cranes. The company is now part of the Avingtrans Group and specialises in creating engineered products for the oil, gas, nuclear and medical industries.[26]

History

Archeological evidence has been found of Neolithic, Bronze Age and Iron Age settlements in the area, and Chatteris possesses what has been interpreted as the only upstanding Neolithic boundaries in Fenland.[2] Saxon evidence is less well preserved, although in 679, Hunna, the chaplain to Æthelthryth of Ely built a hermitage on Honey Hill.[2] More apocryphically, Chatteris is reputed to have been the last refuge of Boudica as she fled from the Romans.[3] Its name probably derives from the Anglo-Saxon Caeteric - Ceto meaning a wood and Ric, a river, although it may also derive from "cader", meaning hill fort, suggesting a similar site to the nearby Stonea Camp.[2] The town was mentioned in the Domesday Book as "Ceterig" or "Caterig".[4] Chatteris was once the site of a small Benedictine nunnery, built in 980 by Alfwen the niece of King Edgar. Little of it remains today, although the "Park Streets" of Chatteris mark the boundary of its walls. It has been conjectured that the parish church may have been the abbey church.[2] In 1115, the apprentice monk Bricstan was freed by the Queen following a vision of Saint Etheldreda - he was the first known parishioner of Chatteris. A large portion of the town was destroyed by a great fire which raged between 1306 and 1310, and destroyed the nunnery and a large portion of the church, leaving only sections of the base of the tower. The fire was allegedly started by a boy playing with a mirror. Later fires in 1706 and 1864 destroyed any medieval and Georgian architecture, and most of the town's listed buildings date from the Victorian period onwards.[2] However, many of the pasture fields on the outskirts of the town have evidence of ridge and furrow farming practices, although these are under threat by current building proposals. The parish church of St Peter & St Paul is situated in the centre of the town. A church has been on the site since at least 1162, although the current tower dates from 1352. The building had fallen into disrepair during the 19th Century, and the majority of the building is the result of an intensive restoration in 1910. Recent years have seen the construction of several new facilities, such as the Bricstan room extension.[5] The Emmanuel Church was created through the union of the Methodist, United Reformed, and Baptist Union churches in Chatteris in 1990. It is based in the former United Reformed building in East Park Street, although several of the former chapel buildings still exist.[6] The town also has a Salvation Army citadel, also in East Park Street.[7] To the north of the town runs the Forty Foot Drain, a large river also called Vermuyden's Drain, after the Dutch engineer whose name is associated with the fen drainage works of the middle of the 17th Century. Several of the older buildings of the town show evidence of the Dutch architectural style.[8] Chatteris is a market town and has possessed this designation since 1834, although there is evidence of an earlier market which was discontinued due to poor roads in 1808.[9] A small market is still held every Friday. Chatteris railway station, formerly on the St. Ives extension of the Great Eastern Railway was closed in March 1967.[10][11]

Notable residents

* Dave Boy Green, boxer * Joe Perry, snooker player[35] * George William Burdett Clare, Victoria Cross recipient whom the doctors' surgery is named in honour of.[36] * Joseph Ruston, engineer and MP

See also

* List of places in Cambridgeshire

Sport and leisure

The town's football club, Chatteris Town, play in the Peterborough & District League. The town also has a cricket club, Chatteris Cricket Club, which was founded in 1879. The club has five senior teams and four youth teams that compete in both the Fenland and Cambridgeshire leagues. Chatteris CC won the St Ivo Midweek League in 2008 going the whole season unbeaten.[27] The town also hosts the Fenland Golf Society, founded in 1999,[28] a bowls club and a tennis club (St Peters). Chatteris Airfield is about 2 km NNE, which is mainly used for skydiving, and is the base of the North London Parachute Centre.[29][30] The town has one swimming pool, the Empress, which is privately owned and is a registered charity run by three trustees. It is open to members and can be booked for private hires or group sessions.[31] It is home of the Chatteris Kingfishers swimming club, who after successes in 2008 are due to compete in Division One of the 2009 "Cambs Cup" competition.[32] Plans for a public swimming pool and leisure centre have been proposed by the council since 1990, but have yet to be approved. Proposals for the development of Cromwell Community College under the government's BSF programme include significant leisure provisions and these are expected to start in 2010. [33][34]

Today

The town has two primary schools, Kingsfield Primary School (created in 2003 by the amalgamation of the former Burnsfield School and King Edward School)[12] and Glebelands School, which opened in the early months of 1994.[13] The town's secondary school is Cromwell Community College, founded in 1939.[14] The town is noted for its annual display of Christmas lights, which are entirely funded by community donations and have been featured on BBC Look East. In June, the town hosted a popular festival week, which includes a flower festival in the church, a street carnival and a concert by the Chatteris Town Brass Band.[15] Due to a decreasing number of volunteers, a medieval-themed festival replaced the standard festival week in July 2008.[16] The town has a museum run by volunteers, with several permanent exhibitions about local history, the Fens, Victoriana and the Railways.[17] Chatteris also has a Scout club, an Army Cadet force and a youth football team.[18][19] Chatteris has a Women's Institute, which meet at the King Edward Centre[20] and a Rotary Club which meet at the local fire station, and put on an annual firework display, plus other events in the town.[21] In 2007 The Petrou Brothers fish and chip shop in West Park Street won the National Chip Shop of the Year competition.[22]