Wisbech

Wisbech (/ˈwɪzb/ WIZ-beech) is a market town and civil parish in the Fens of the Isle of Ely, Cambridgeshire, England.[1] It had a population of 31,573 in 2011. The town lies in the far north-east of the county, bordering Norfolk and only 5 miles (8 km) south of Lincolnshire. The tidal River Nene running through the town centre is spanned by two bridges. Before the Local Government Act 1972 came into force in 1974 Wisbech was a municipal borough.

Wisbech

The North Brink
Wisbech
Location within Cambridgeshire
Population33,933 (2016)
OS grid referenceTF4609
Civil parish
  • Wisbech
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townWISBECH
Postcode districtPE13, PE14
Dialling code01945
PoliceCambridgeshire
FireCambridgeshire
AmbulanceEast of England
UK Parliament

History

Etymology

The place-name 'Wisbech' is first attested in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for the year 656, where it appears as Wisebece. It is recorded in the 1086 Domesday Book as Wisbece. The name Wisbech is popularly believed to mean "on the back of the (River) Ouse", Ouse being a common Celtic word relating to water, and the name of a river that once flowed through the town. A more scholarly opinion is that the first element derives from the River Wissey, which used to run to Wisbech, and that the name means 'the valley of the river Wissey'.[2] A wide range of spellings are found on trade tokens, in newspapers, books, maps and other documents e.g. Wisbece, Wisebece, Wisbbece, Wysbeche, Wisbeche, Wissebeche, Wysebeche, Wysbech, Wyxbech, Wyssebeche, Wisbidge, Wisbich and Wisbitch,[3][4][5] until the town's name spelling was fixed by the local council in the 19th century.

During the Iron Age, the area where Wisbech would develop lay in the west of the Brythonic Iceni tribe's territory. Icenian coins are known from both March and Wisbech.[6] Like the rest of Cambridgeshire, Wisbech was part of the Kingdom of East Anglia after the Anglo-Saxon invasion.

Middle Ages

One of the first authentic references to Wisbech occurs in a charter dated 664 granting the Abbey at Medeshamstede (now Peterborough) land in Wisbech[7] and in 1000, when Oswy and Leoflede, on the admission of their son Aelfwin as a monk, gave the vill to the monastery of Ely.[8] In 1086, when Wisbech was held by the abbot, there may have been some 65 to 70 families, or about 300 to 350 persons, in Wisbech manor. However, Wisbech (which is the only one of the Marshland vills of the Isle to be mentioned in the Domesday Book) probably comprised the whole area from Tydd Gote down to the far end of Upwell at Welney.[9]

A castle was built by William I to fortify the site. At the time of Domesday (1086) the population was that of a large village. Some were farmers and others fishermen.[10]

Richard I gave Wisbech a charter. King John of England visited the castle on 12 October 1216 as he came from Bishop's Lynn. Tradition has it that his baggage train was lost to the incoming tide of The Wash. Treasure hunters still seek the lost royal treasure.[11]

Twenty years later the castle was 'utterly destroyed' by marine flooding; however it was rebuilt by 1246 when the constable or keeper was Wm Justice.

The register of Bishop John Fordham of Ely appoints a Master of the Grammar Scholars in 1407 (the Grammar School dates back to 1379 or earlier).

Edward IV visited Wisbech in 1469.[12]

Early Modern

The Charter of Edward VI, 1 June 1549 raised the town to a corporation. In the same year Wm. Bellman gave a plot of land for the school-house.[13] In 1333–4 the kiln in the town was producing 120,000 bricks. There were several fisheries belonging to the manor of Wisbech and in the 1350s the reeves of Walton and Leverington each sent a porpoise to Wisbech Castle, and the reeve of Terrington a swordfish.[14]

During the reigns of Elizabeth I, James I, and Charles I, there was a state ecclesiastical prison in Wisbech for Catholics, many of whom died there owing to the insanitary conditions.[15] In 1588 it is claimed that Robert Catesby and Francis Tresham were committed to Wisbeach Castle on the approach of the Spanish Armada.[16] Among those held there was John Feckenham, the last Abbot of Westminster. The palace was demolished and replaced with John Thurloe's mansion in the mid-17th century, and Thurloe's mansion demolished in 1816 by Joseph Medworth, who also developed The Circus comprising The Crescent, Union Place and Ely Place with Museum Square and Castle Square familiar as the settings in numerous costume dramas.

In 1620 a former Wisbech resident Dorothea Bradford (née May) sailed on the Mayflower to the New World with her husband William Bradford (governor) later to be Governor Bradford.[17]

Across the Eastern Counties, Oliver Cromwell's powerful Eastern Association was eventually dominant. However, to begin with, there had been an element of Royalist sympathy within Wisbech. Bishop Matthew Wren was a staunch supporter of Charles I but even in 1640 was unpopular in Wisbech, after discovering his absence from a 'Commission of Sewers' meeting at the Castle, a crowd of soldiers plundered shops of some of his supporters. The town was near the frontier of the Parliamentary and Royalist forces in 1643. The Castle and town were put into a state of readiness and reinforced. A troop of horse was raised. Locally based troops took part in the Siege of Crowland in 1642. The town controlled the route from Lincolnshire to Norfolk particularly during the Siege of King's Lynn in 1643 as it prevented reinforcements by land of the Royalists holding the Norfolk port.[18]

A town library was founded c.1653.[19]

In 1656 the bishop's palace was replaced by Thurloe's mansion however after the Restoration the property reverted to the See of the bishop of Ely.[20]

Soap was taxed and manufacturers such as the Wisbech Soap Company required a licence. Based in an Old Market property facing the river, they were able to receive oil from the blubber yards of King's Lynn as well as coal, wood for casks and olive oil used in making the coarse, sweet and grey (speckled) soaps they produced from 1716 to about 1770.[21]

Wisbech's first workhouse located in Albion Place opened in 1722, it could accommodate three hundred inmates and cost £2,000.[22]

Peckover House on North Brink by the Nene

Peckover House, with its walled garden, was built in 1722 and purchased by the Quaker Peckover banking family in the 1790s. It is now owned by the National Trust (NT). Formerly known as Bank House, the house was renamed in honour of the Peckover family by the NT. The Peckover Bank became part of Barclays Bank.

In the 17th century, the inhabitants became known as the "Fen Tigers" for their resistance to the draining of the Fens, but the project turned Wisbech into a wealthy port handling agricultural produce. At the time, Wisbech was on the estuary of the River Great Ouse, but silting caused the coastline to move north, and the River Nene was diverted to serve the town.

In 1781 Wisbech Literary Society was formed at the house of Jonathan Peckover.[23]

Theatres in both Pickard's Lane (a barn) and North End and a third (temporary structure) in the High Street are referred to. A new theatre (now part of the Angles Theatre had been built in Deadman's Lane (later Great Church Street, now Alexandra Road) now Angles Theatre c1790. It was used to hold the auction of the contents of the castle, part of the estate of Edward Southwell on 8 November 1791.[24]

Late Modern

Wisbech Regatta was first held in 1850.[25]

June 1858 The Russian Gun. —During the past week a brass plate has been added to the Russian Gun, bearing the inscription:— "This trophy of the late Russian War, presented by Queen Victoria to the Burgesses of Wisbech. Thomas Steed Watson, Mayor, 1858."[26]

The Isle of Ely and Wisbech Advertiser was founded in 1845.[27]

The new Wisbech & Fenland Museum building opened in 1847 and continues to collect, care for and interpret the natural and cultural heritage of Wisbech and the surrounding area.[28]

On 1 March 1848 Eastern Counties Railway opened Wisbeach (sic) station (later renamed Wisbech East railway station). It closed on 9 September 1968.

In the 1853–54 cholera epidemic 176 deaths were reported in the town in 1854.[29] The Wisbech death rate (49 per 10,000) was the fourth highest in the country. The following year saw £8,000 expenditure on sewerage works and £13,400 on water supplies.[30]

On Sunday 29 June 1857 a mob entered the town and broke the Corn Merchants windows and seized corn and demanded money from shopkeepers. On July the gentry and traders by beat of drum recruited about 500 men and went to Upwell and took 60 and placed them in irons. On 4 September a Report was made to the Lords Justices of 14 malfactors condemned at Wisbech for a riot, when 2 were ordered for execution the following Saturday and twelve for transportation.[31]

In 1864 the Castle estate was purchased by Alexander Peckover. In 1932 his descendant Alexandrina Peckover gave to the Borough council a piece of land to be laid out as an ornamental garden adjoining the War memorial.[32]

In August 1883 Wisbech and Upwell Tramway opened. It eventually closed in 1966 (passenger services finished in 1927). The steam trams were replaced by diesels in 1952.

The Wisbech Standard newspaper was founded in 1888.[33]

In April 1904 the Borough council contracted with the National Electric Construction Company Ltd for the installation of electric street lighting.[34]

On 30 October 1913 the Riot Act was read by the mayor in response to civil unrest in response to the death of the popular surgeon Doctor Horace Dimock. He had been arrested on charges of criminal libel on the information of Dr Meacock. On hearing that Dimock had taken his own life a crowd formed and smashed the windows of Meacock's residence on the North Brink. The police charged the crowds and cleared the streets.[35]

The Wisbech Canal joining the River Nene at Wisbech was subsequently filled in and became the dual carriageway leading into the town from the east (now crossing the bypass).[36]

Wisbech War Memorial was unveiled on 24 July 1921.[37]

In 1929 The Wisbech Pageant was held at Sibalds Holme Park on 4–5 September. The Pageant Master was Sir Arthur Bryant who had experience with the Cambridgeshire Pageant 1924, Oxfordshire Pageant 1926 and London Empire Pageants of 1928 and 1929. The Wisbech total attendance was estimated in excess of 25,000 people.[38]

In 1934 part of Walsoken parish, Norfolk was merged with Wisbech, bringing with it the schools, shops and public houses but leaving the church and much of the rural part in Norfolk. The suburb of New Walsoken is now largely built up. A boundary marker in Wisbech Park was erected to record the event.[39] Ring's End was transferred from Wisbech to Elm.[40]

In 1939 Wisbech Society and Preservation Trust was founded to safeguard the history and heritage of Wisbech.[41]

In 1949 the Borough celebrated the 400th anniversary of receiving its charter. The Pageant in Sibalds Holme Park, Barton Road featured over 600 performers.[42][43]

The first Wisbech Rose Fair was held in 1963 when local rose growers sold rose buds in the parish church in aid of its restoration.[44]

On 21 September 1979, two Harrier jump jets on a training exercise collided over Wisbech; one landed in a field and the other in a residential area. Two houses and a bungalow were demolished on Ramnoth Road, causing the death of Bob Bowers, his two-year-old son Jonathan Bowers, and former town mayor Bill Trumpess.[45]

The 5-mile (8 km), £6 million A47 Wisbech/West Walton bypass opened in spring 1982.

In 1990 further county boundary changes brought a small area of Walsoken, Norfolk into Wisbech.[46]

Contemporary

In 2009 Oxford Archaeology East (OAE) organised a dig at Wisbech Castle to search for remains of the Bishop's Palace.[47] Large numbers of local volunteers took part and hundreds of children visited the dig site. Later in the year a group of volunteers formed Fenland Archaeological Society (FenArch). The Society has carried out a number of digs including the Manea Colony dig organised by Cambridge Archaeology Unit (CAU).[48]

The town is well known for horticulture, the Wisbech Rose Fair and other flower festivals. In 2018 the town won the business improvement district (BID) category gold award at the Royal Horticultural Society's (RHS) annual Britain in Bloom awards ceremony.[49] In 2019 the town received Gold Award in the large town category in the RHS Anglia in Bloom completion. Waterlees was 'Best in Group' and Gold Award in Urban category and St.Peters Gardens a Gold Award in the Small Parks category.[50]

Governance

The Wisbech Town Council elects a mayor. The town council of 18 councillors is elected every four years. The town has seven electoral wards: Clarkson, Kirton, Medworth, Octavia Hill, Peckover, Staithe and Waterlees village. The town council is responsible for allotments and the market place.[51] In 2018 the council took a lease on Wisbech Castle.[52]

The town also elects councillors to Fenland District Council and Cambridgeshire County Council. Wisbech is within the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority.[53]

In the May 2019 elections, twelve councillors were returned without a vote to Fenland District Council, which topped the Electoral Reform Society's list of 'rotten boroughs'.[54]

Wisbech is now part of the North East Cambridgeshire constituency.

Transport

Waterways

Wisbech sits on either side of the River Nene,[55] and its port is Cambridgeshire's only gateway to the sea.[56] Schemes to connect the River Nene and the River Welland are proposed, allowing boats a fresh water connection.[57] In the past, the Port of Wisbech could accommodate sailing ships of 400 tons, but its prosperity declined after 1852 when extensive river works impeded navigation.[58] Now, a river-side yacht harbour provides 128 berths for vessels, and Crab Marshboat yard operates a 75-tonne boat lift. In December 2013, the town's river flood defences were tested when an unusually high tide threatened to top the recently improved walls and flood gates.[59]

Roads

In 1831 the construction of a lifting bridge at Sutton Bridge finally provided a means to travel directly between Norfolk and Lincolnshire.[60] The town stood at the crossing of two Class A roads: from Peterborough to King's Lynn (A47) and from Ely to Long Sutton (A1101). The A1101 now crosses the river at the newer 'Freedom bridge' taking some traffic away from the older 'Town Bridge'. The A47 now bypasses the town. The old part of the A47 inside the town (Lynn Rd and Cromwell Rd) is now the B198.

Railways

Wisbech once had three passenger railway lines, but they all closed between 1959 and 1968. There is an active campaign to reopen the March–Wisbech Bramley Line as part of the national rail network, with direct services to Cambridge and possibly Peterborough. It is supported by Wisbech Town Council and subject to reports commissioned by the county council in 2013.[61] The line is currently (2019) at GRIP 3 study stage.[62] A report published in 2009 by the Association of Train Operating Companies (ATOC) indicated that this was viable.[63] The line has been identified as a priority for reopening by Campaign for Better Transport.[64]

Demography

Parish population 1981
1991
2001
2011
2016
Wisbech 22,932 24,981 26,536 31,573 33,933

[65]

As of 2016 the population of Wisbech was 33,933, of whom 16,800 were male and 17,133 female. 6,748 were aged under 18 and 7,156 over 65. [66]

Several official places (libraries, surgeries, local council) provide translations into Lithuanian, as well as Polish, Latvian, Russian and Portuguese.[67]

Economy

Before the draining of the Fens was completed, animals were grazed on the common land and were marked to identify their owners; this was also the case with swans, which were usually marked on their bills.[68] The riverside location and fertile soils surrounding Wisbech allowed the town to flourish.

A thriving pipe making business was being carried out in the town by Amy White in the 1740s.[69] Soapmaking was also taking place in the 1740s[70]

A number of breweries existed in the town; the last one remaining is Elgood's on the North Brink. Established in 1795 and remaining a family owned business, the brewery and gardens are a popular location for tourists to visit.[71]

The first half of the 19th century was a very prosperous time for the town and an annual average of 40,000 tons of goods passed through the port, consisting mainly of coal, corn timber and wine. The surrounding land produced large quantities of sheep and oxen as well as wool, hemp and flax.[72] Such was the trade with Denmark that a consul was based in North Terrace in a Queen Anne house sometimes called the Danish House.[73] In 1851 the population was 9,594. It decreased to 9,276 in 1861 and picked up to 9,395 in 1891. In 1853 the Wisbech and Isle of Ely Permanent Building Society was established.[74]

Rope making took place at the Rope Walk and tent making also took place in the town at W.Poppleton's, Nene Parade. Customers included the visiting J.W.Myers circus in 1881.[75]

The Wisbech Fruit Preserving Company Ltd was wound up in 1894.[76]

In October 1906 the first of the annual mustard markets of the year took place where the harvest of 'brown' and 'white' seed took place. Regular annual Buyers included Messrs Coleman of Norwich.[77][78]

The Wisbech Mustard market held on four Saturdays in October was claimed to be unique, in 1911 it had been running for over forty years. Buyers from the major mills and producers attended and traded in and near the Rose and Crown.[79]

Large numbers of workers were needed to pick fruit, in 1913 due to the great influx of pickers, the police had to find accommodation for 500 'homeless' workers each night. Until 1920 the train companies provided special rail fares for fruit pickers coming to the area.[80]

Liptons had one of their jam factories in the town in the 1920s.[81]

Samuel Wallace Smedley bought the old Crosse and Blackwell jam making factory. The Wisbech Producer canners in 1931 became part of the National Canning Company. Princes Group are now (2020) the owners.[82]

The Wisbech Produce Canners (formed in 1925), on Lynn Rd, was the first in England to produce frozen asparagus, peas and strawberries. It was renamed Smedley's Ltd in 1947 and later taken over by Hillsdown Foods. It is presently owned by Princes.

The Metal Box company established their largest manufacturing unit at Weasenham Lane in 1953. The site provides processed food cans for fruit, vegetables, soups, milk and pet foods. The workforce grew to over 1,000 before reducing as a result of automation and redundancies. Steel was brought from Welsh steelworks and also from overseas. The site had its own rail yard before the Wisbech to March line closed. The site is now part of Crown Cork.[83]

English Brothers Ltd, another long-established company in Wisbech, are importers of timber brought in at Wisbech port.[84] In 1900 they manufactured wooden troop hits for the war in South Africa.[85] During World War II they produced wooden munitions boxes.[86] Shire Garden Building Ltd based in Wisbech and Sutton Bridge have been manufacturing wooden buildings since the 1980s.[87]

In 2010 Dutch based Partner Logistics opened a £12m frozen food warehouse on Boleness Rd, employing over 50 staff. The 77,000 pallet, fully automated 'freezer' centre had contracts with Lamb Weston, Bird's Eye and Pinguin Foods.

In recent decades the closure of the Clarkson Geriatric hospital (1983), Bowthorpe maternity hospital (c. 1983), Balding & Mansell (printers) (c. 1992), Budgens store[88] (formerly Coop) (2017) and horticultural college (2012),[89] Bridge Street post office (2014), as well as gradual reductions in workforce by CMB, indicate a decline in the economy.

Small family businesses such as Bodgers (2013),[90] Franks butchers (2015)[91] and local bakeries have given way to the supermarkets.

The larger employers in Wisbech include Nestle Purina petcare, Cromwell Rd[92] and Princes, Lynn Rd.[93]

In April 2018 plans for an £8m redevelopment of the North Cambridgeshire Hospital were announced.[94]

Breweries, beer houses, clubs, inns and taverns

The Rose and Crown hotel on the market place is one of the oldest buildings in the town. Underneath there are brick-barrel vaults dating from Tudor times.[95]

Tourism

National Trust property Peckover House and Gardens attracts tourists and locals.

The Wisbech and Fenland museum draws in visitors to see the Charles Dickens manuscript, Thomas Clarkson memorabilia and other exhibits. The Octavia Hill Birthplace House also attracts those interested in the National Trust, army cadet force or social housing. An annual Rose Fair, music festival, music concerts at the Bandstand in the park and the theatre and two cinemas also attract audiences from outside the town. Wisbech port and marina attracts boating enthusiasts. The Castle has now opened to the public after being unavailable for a number of years, and is starting to attract visitors to its programme of events and activities.[96]

Religious sites

The Anglican Parish Church of St Peter and St Paul dates back in part to the 12th century. The tower contains the third oldest full peal of 10 bells in the world, cast by William Dobson in 1821; the bells are still in use.[97]

The Anglican St Augustine's church on Lynn Rd was erected in 1868–9 and consecrated on 11 May 1869. An associated school building is now the Robert Hall scouting hall. In 1997 a new parish centre was created when the church was linked to its nearby hall.[98]

Our Lady & Saint Charles Borromeo Church has been the church of Roman Catholics since 1854.

Other places of worship are: Baptist, Hill St; Society of Friends, North Brink; United Reformed, Castle Square; King's Church, Queens Rd; Jehovahs Witnesses, Tinkers Drove; Trinity Methodist, Church Terrace; West St; and Spiritualist, Alexander Rd.[99]

Education

Wisbech Grammar School on North Brink.

Primary schools in Wisbech include: Clarkson Infant and Nursery School, St Peters Church of England Junior School, Orchards Church of England Academy, Peckover Primary School, The Nene Infant School, Ramnoth Junior School and Elm Road Primary School. There are also specialist schools, Meadowgate Academy, Cambian Wisbech School, The County School & Trinity School. Wisbech has two secondary schools: the independent Wisbech Grammar School, which was founded in 1379, making it one of the oldest schools in the United Kingdom, and the state-funded Thomas Clarkson Academy. There is also a further education centre: the College of West Anglia formerly the Isle of Ely College.[100]

Sport

As the River Nene, and other waterways are located in the area, water sports are popular. The rivers and canal provide opportunities for canoeing and kayaking. As an example of organized water sport, in 1955, the Wisbech Yacht Club opened their new clubhouse at Lattersley Pit, Whittlesey.[101]

Culture

Georgian Angles Theatre

The Georgian theatre, Deadman's Lane (now the Angles Theatre on Alexandra Rd) was built c1790 as part of the Lincoln circuit.

The Georgian Angles Theatre on Alexandra Road is now used by community theatre groups and touring companies. The theatre is run by the Wisbech Angles Theatre Council a registered Charity.

Museums

Wisbech & Fenland Museum, Museum Square opened on its current site in 1847. The Friends of Wisbech and Fenland Museum supports the museum with Grants for acquisitions, and assists with research programmes, conservation, publishing and new technologies throughout the Museum.[102] Wisbech Castle was donated to the Isle of Ely County Council by the family of the former education director and is now run by the town council. It is used as a community asset and hosts educational and other activities. The contents include furnishings, books and other items of interest. Octavia Hill's Birthplace House opened with the purpose of housing items linked to the various philanthropic activities of Octavia Hill and her family. The Wisbech Working Men's Institute and Social club's origins date to 1864.[23]

Inns, taverns, breweries and beer festivals

The town's licensed premises have a long history of providing leisure facilities from bowling greens and skittle alleys to darts, cards, chess and other board games as well as other social events. In 1853 the 'Wisbech Brewery' (Phillips, Tidbits and Phillips) on the riverside owned 20 pubs and hotels in the town and about 30 outside.[103] Elgood's brewery located on the North Brink supplies its tied-houses the Angel Hotel, Coyote Bar & Grill (formerly the Gallery Steak House & Grill), the Hare and Hounds hotel, Red Lion and Three Tuns Inn in the town and others in the surrounding area.[104] In 1950 Arthur Oldham researched and produced in very limited numbers Pubs and Taverns of Wisbech. This was reprinted in 1979 by Cambridgeshire libraries as Inns and Taverns of Wisbech.

Festivals and events

The town hosts annual festivals and events. The Wisbech Mart Fair is held in the town every March.

Wisbech Rose Fair is held in late June and early July each year.[105] It originated in 1963 as a flower festival when the local rose growers sold rose buds in the Parish Church of St.Peters in aid of its restoration fund. The church still uses this annual occasion to raise funds for the upkeep of the ancient building, and over the years, the Rose Fair has grown into a Town Festival. It developed into an event that encompasses many of the charities and other organisations in the town and district running stalls and events including two parades of floats starting from Queens Road.[106][107][108][109]

The Arles Festival celebrates the twinning of the two towns.

Wis-beach day is held every year in June on the market place. The seaside comes to the town for the Sunday and donkey rides, Punch and Judy shows, sand, beach chairs and amusement rides fill the centre of the town.

On Armed Forces Day in June the market place is taken by military vehicles and units and veterans associations. A Sunday service is held with a parade and march past.

Wisbech Rock Festival is held in Wisbech Park and is run by the town council.[110]

Friends of Wisbech Park Bandstand host a series of musical events at the bandstand on Sunday afternoons throughout the summer and winter.[111]

In August many local gardens are open to the public as part of the National Garden Scheme Open Days.

In September the town participates in Heritage Weekend when many buildings are open to the public for tours.

Wisbech Statute Fair is held every September.

The Elgoods Beer Festival takes place each September when musical events accompany the wide range of drinks on offer.

Wisbech Castle and the Horse Fair stage Halloween events.

Christmas Lights Switch On takes place on the market place in late November.

A Christmas market and Fayre takes place in December.[112]

Literature

Local nonfiction authors include William Godwin, Thomas Clarkson, William Ellis (missionary), William Watson, FJ Gardiner, N Walker & Prof.T Craddock, Arthur Artis Oldham, Andrew C Ingram, Robert Bell, George Anniss, Roger Powell, Bridgett Holmes, Kevin Rodgers, Andrew Ketley, William P Smith and Diane Carlton Smith and fiction writers John Muriel, John Gordon and Rev. Wilbert AwdryOBE.

Poetry

The town nearly added the poet John Clare to its residents when he visited for a job interview.

Fen speak ran a series of events funded by the Arts Council, Metal Culture and John Clare Cottage.

More recently the town has hosted Fenland Poet Laureate awards (2012 – Elaine Ewerton; 2013 – Leanne Moden; 2014 – Poppy Kleiser; 2015 – Jonathan Totman; 2016 – Mary Livingstone; 2017 – Kate Caoimhe).

'Wisbech Words' holds regular events at Wisbech Castle.

The Fenland Poet Laureate Awards were relaunched with funding from the Arts Council in 2019 with the results to be announced in the autumn.[113] Charlotte Beck, 13 and CJ Atkinson were announced as the 2019–2020 Young Fenland Poet Laureate and Fenland Poet Laureate.[114]

Art

Wisbech Art Club was formed in 1933 and holds exhibitions at venues in the town including Wisbech & Fenland Museum and Wisbech Castle. Regular meetings are now (2020) held at Wisbech Town Football club.

Notable buildings and monuments

  • Wisbech has over 250 listed buildings and monuments[115]
  • Wisbech Castle and grounds leased by Wisbech Town Council from Cambridgeshire County Council.
  • Former New Inn, Union St dating to about 1500.[116][117]
  • Rose and Crown hotel, located on the market place, is an early 17th century coaching inn. A date of 1601 and trumpet and pheasant are visible on the exterior of the building. It is listed grade II* by Historic England.
  • Peckover House (1722); owned by the National Trust; in its grounds are the remains of the white cross.[118]
  • Ely House, an early 18th century farmhouse. A grade II listed building.[119]
  • The Angles Theatre, a typical Georgian playhouse built in 1791. Grade II listed.
  • Wisbech General Cemetery contains an old chapel (recently restored by The Wisbech Society and formally opened in April 2019) and 11 Commonwealth war graves.[120] It is an early nonconformist cemetery now no longer in use, and is a pocket park.[121]
The Thomas Clarkson Memorial in Wisbech 2013
  • Thomas Clarkson Memorial, Bridge St (1881)
  • Mill Tower formerly known as Leach's Mill, located on Lynn Road, is remarkable on account of its height and age. Built on a mound and eight storeys in height, it had eight sails. It dates to at least 1778, although the initials SH and 1643 are reputed to have been on a beam inside the mill. The last miller used it in the 1930s. The adjoining flour and provender roller mill suffered a fire in the 1970s. The mill minus the sails is now used as a residence. None of the other dozen or so mills survive.[122]
  • Richard Young MP Memorial (1871) sited in Wisbech Park (1870).[123]
  • Drinking fountain erected to the memory of Mr & Mrs G. D. Collins in the Old Market in 1897. Relocated to Lynn Road.[23]
  • Grammar School for boys, South Brink opened in January 1898 to replace the old Grammar School for boys in the ancient town hall in Hill Street.
  • Parish Church of St Peter and Paul. (Restored in 1858 and a clock added in 1866). There are some pictures and a description of the church at the Cambridgeshire Churches website.[124]
  • Our Lady & Saint Charles Borromeo Church(1854)
  • St Mary's Parish church,[125] also on the Cambridgeshire Churches website.[126]
  • Octavia Hill's Birthplace House; the family later moved to London.[127]
  • Wisbech & Fenland Museum (1847); extensive collections of local records and other items. Notable artifacts include: Napoleon's Sèvres breakfast service, said to have been captured at the Battle of Waterloo; Thomas Clarkson's chest, containing examples of 18th century African textiles, seeds and leatherwork which he used to illustrate his case for direct trade with Africa; and the original manuscript of Charles Dickens' Great Expectations.
  • Elgood's Brewery;
    Elgoods Brewery on North Brink in Wisbech
    The brewery was founded in 1795 and bought soon afterwards by the Elgood family.
The Octagon Chapel in Wisbech Old Market, demolished in 1952

Notable people

Past

In order of birth.

  • John of Wisbech (died 1349) was in charge of the erection of the Lady Chapel at Ely Cathedral in the first half of the fourteenth century.[128]
  • Richard Huloet, lexicographer and author.
  • John de Wisbech, Abbot of Croyland. He was first Prior of Freiston. He died on 19 November 1476.[129]
  • John Alcock (bishop), (c1430-1500) appointed to the see of Ely on 6 October 1486 he died in The bishops palace in Wisbech and is buried in Ely Cathedral.
  • John Feckenham, (c1515-1584) Abbott of Westminster, imprisoned in The Bishop's palace from 1580 until his death in October, 1584. At his own cost he arranged the repairs of the road and erected a market cross in the town.
  • Thomas Parke (c1543-1630), Town Bailiff and High Sheriff of the county of Cambridge and Huntingdon. Married 1. Jean Coulson, 2 or 3. Audrey Cross. Died on 1 January and a monument is inside St.Peter's church, Wisbech.
  • Robert Pygot a painter from Wisbech and William Wolsey a constable of Welney, Upwell & Outwell were tried at Ely sessions for heresy and later burnt at the stake on 16 October 1555.
  • John Thurloe, MP (1616–1668), Solicitor-general, Lord Chief Justice, Secretary of State and lawyer. Cromwell' spymaster. He replaced the bishop's palace at Wisbech with a mansion (later demolished by Medworth).
  • Mathias Taylor JP, linen draper, Capital Burgess and appointed Constable of the Castle in 1631.
  • Jane Stuart (Quaker) (c1654-1742), a daughter of James II joined the Society of Friends on the North Brink and lived on the Old Market, she died aged 88 in Wisbech on 12 July and is buried in the Friends' graveyard.[23]
  • Sir Philip Vavasour, High Sheriff of Cambridgeshire. Knighted in 1761. Lived on South Brink, Wisbech.
  • Richard Middleton Massey MD, FRS, FSA (1678–1743), Doctor and antiquarian. Born in Cheshire, after studying at Oxford he became deputy keeper at the Ashmolean Museum he later obtained a licence to practice medicine in Wisbech. He was appointed Keeper of the town library and was a founder member of Spalding Gentlemen's Society. He retired to his family estates in Rostherene and died in 1743 on 29 March 1743.[130]
  • Thomas Herring, MA (1693–1757), Archbishop of Canterbury (from 1747), was educated at Wisbech Grammar School.
  • Jane Southwell, (aka Lady Jane Trafford)(?-1809), heiress of Wisbech Castle, married Sir Clement Trafford (aka Clement Boehm), they had two children Sigismund & Jane. Separated by 1768 and changed her name back to Southwell by an Act of Parliament in 1791. Buried at Orsett, Essex.
  • Joseph Medworth, (born in Wisbech, 1752–1827) was a builder who developed castle estate into a circus including "The Crescent" in Wisbech and redeveloped "Thurloe's Mansion" into the current Regency villa on the castle site. He died on 17 October 1827.
  • Richard Kelham Whitelamb, baptised 1765 in Wisbech was 2' 10" tall. His portrait by Samuel Ireland (1744–1800) is in the Royal Collection. He was an exhibit at fairs and a handbill dated 23 August 1787 states "he is now in the 22nd year, 34 inches high and weighs 42lbs."
  • William Godwin the elder, (born in Wisbech, 3 March 1756 – 7 April 1836) was an English political writer and novelist, considered an important precursor of utilitarian and of liberal anarchist thinking. He first married Mary Wollstonecroft. A daughter of theirs, Mary Wollstonecroft Godwin, became Mary Shelley, famed author of Frankenstein.[131]
  • Thomas Clarkson MA, anti-slavery campaigner, was born in Wisbech in 1760 and educated at Wisbech Grammar School. The Clarkson Memorial was built to commemorate his life's efforts to end slavery in the British Empire on 25 March 1833. Two local schools and a road are named after him.
  • Lieutenant John Clarkson RN (1764–1828), younger brother of Thomas, was another key figure in the British abolitionist movement. As governor of Sierra Leone he organised voluntary migration of former slaves freed by the British under a deal to reward their loyalty during the American War of Independence.
  • Sir Charles Wale KCB (1765–1845) attended Wisbech Grammar School.
  • William Skrimshire, (born in Wisbech, 1766–1829) was a surgeon and botanist. A walkway 'Skrimshires Passage' off Hill Street is named after him.
  • Fanny Robertson aka Frances Mary Robertson (1768–1855), actor and theatre manager and lessee of Wisbech theatre (now the Angles Theatre). Born Frances Mary Ross. Married Thomas Shaftoe Robertson (1765–1831). Retired to live in Norfolk street and died on 18 December 1855.
  • Lt Col William Watson, DL FAS (1770–1834) died on 31 March 1834. Lawyer, brewer, banker, soldier, magistrate, town bailiff, chief bailiff of the Isle of Ely and author of A history of Wisbech. He is buried in Wisbech.
  • Rev.William Ellis (missionary) (29 August 1794 – 9 June 1872) and pioneer photographer, was brought up and went to elementary school in Wisbech. He later went to Magdalene college (then in London) and became a missionary, this coupled with his writing and photographic skills led him to become the author of History of Madagascar (1838), Polynesian Researches and History of the London Missionary Society and other publications.
  • Samuel Smith (photographer) aka 'Philosopher Smith' (1802–1892), merchant and pioneer photographer. A director of Wisbech Gas Light and Coke company and a member of the Palaeontographical Society of London. His photos taken in the 1850s and 1860s record the development of the town. Collections can be seen in the Science Museum, London and Wisbech & Fenland Museum.[132]
  • William Peckover F.S.A.,(1790–1877) philanthropist son of Jonathan Peckover. President of Wisbech & Fenland Museum. Died 12 May.[23]
  • Elizabeth Dawbarn (died 1839) was a religious pamphleteer who addressed children and adults.
  • Charles Boucher (died 1866), Brewer lived at 'The Castle' and owned the Union Brewery and 44 public houses.
  • Rev. Chauncy Hare Townshend M.A.(1798–1868), philanthropist and owner of property in Wisbech. He was a friend of Charles Dickens and the writer's manuscript of Great Expectations given him by Dickens was left to Wisbech and Fenland museum.[23]
  • Algernon Peckover (1803–1893), Quaker a son born in Wisbech on 25 November to Jonathan and Susanah Peckover. A collection of his drawings and watercolours from 1859–1865 are at Peckover House & Garden. He married Priscilla Alexander. A son Alexander was created 1st Baron Peckover of Wisbech. Died on 10 December.
  • Alderman John Minnet Mason (1807–1886), bonesetter and local politician. The son of a GP also a bonesetter, the skills were passed on to his sons Frederick and George.[133]
  • Alderman Richard Young (MP) JP DL (1809–1871) for Cambridgeshire was a ship owner, five times Mayor of Wisbech (1858–62), JP for the Isle of Ely and Norfolk and a sheriff of the city of London & Middlesex in 1871.[23] He was born on 22 March in Scarning, Norfolk, the son of John and Mary Younge. He owned more than 40 ships at different times. He died on 15 October, only two days after being made Sheriff.[134]
  • James Hill (banker) (c1800-1871) a Unitarian, social reformer, newspaper editor, merchant, ship owner, owner of the Angles Theatre and banker. His children included Octavia Hill and Miranda Hill.
  • Professor Thomas Craddock (1812–1893), photographer, writer and academic. Coauthor of a History of Wisbech, later professor of Literature, Queen's College, Liverpool. Died 9 April 1893 in Liverpool.[135]
  • Caroline Southwood Hill (née Smith)(1809–1902), writer and educationalist. Eldest daughter of Dr Thomas Southwood Smith. Became third wife of James Hill (banker)on 21 July 1835. Mother of Octavia Hill. Died aged 94 on 31 December 1902.[136]
  • Lt Robert Pate, Jr (25 December 1819 – February 1895) son of corn merchant Robert Francis Pate, was a British Army officer, remembered for his assault on Queen Victoria on 27 June 1850. He was transported to Australia for seven years, where he married and later returned to England.
  • Edward Johnson (1822–1907), photographer. His photographs of local churches were published in three volumes by Leach & Son.[137]
  • Henry Herbert aka Master Herbert (born in Wisbech 22 December 1829), child actor known as 'The Infant Roscius'. Son of John Herbert.
  • Fanny Maria Robertson (1831-1909) actress, elder sister of Dame Madge Kendall.
  • Alexander Peckover 1st Baron Peckover LL.D., FRGS., FSA., FRGS., FLS. (1830–1919) British Quaker banker and philanthropist. Born in Wisbech 16 August 1830. Died 21 October 1919.
  • Sir Thomas George Fardell BA, MP (1833–1917), English politician and lawyer, born on 26 October 1833 he was the youngest son of Rev Henry Fardell, vicar of Wisbech. He dies 12 March 1917
  • Priscilla Hannah Peckover (1833–1931), Quaker, pacifist and linguist; she founded the Wisbech Local Peace Association, which grew to have 6,000 members.
  • Johnathan Peckover (1838–1882), Quaker and philanthropist. Born 16 June and died 8 February. Son of Algernon and Priscilla Peckover. He founded the Wisbech Working Men's Institute in 1864.[138]
  • Algerina Peckover (1841–1927), Quaker, philanthropist and plant collector who donated a collection of Madagascan ferns to Wisbech Herbarium in 1904.[139]
  • William Digby CIE, (born in Wisbech, 1 May 1849 – 29 September 1904) was an English writer, journalist and liberal politician, and first secretary of the National Liberal Club.
  • Rev. William Hazlitt,(1737–1820) who was minister at the Presbyterian meeting house here in 1764–66, became an influential Unitarian minister. He was father of the essayist William Hazlitt and the portrait painter John Hazlitt. While resident at Wisbech he married Grace Loftus.
  • Miranda Hill (1836–1910), born in Wisbech, founded the Kyrle Society, a progenitor of the National Trust.
  • Octavia Hill (1838–1912), born at Wisbech, was treasurer of the Kyrle Society, a progenitor of the National Trust, of which Octavia became co-founder.
  • W. H. Jude (1851–1922) composer and organist attended Wisbech Grammar School .
  • Lilian Ream (1877–1961) photographer. Lilian was born in West Walton, Norfolk. Aged 17 she became photographic assistant to William Drysdale and went on to dominate the local photographic business. After her retirement her son Roland took the studio and it continued until it eventually closed in 1971. Over 10,000 negatives have survived to form the 'Lilian Ream collection'. This may be the most comprehensive record of its kind in England. In April 2013 the Wisbech Society erected a blue plaque at 4 The Crescent in her honour.[140][141]
  • Philip Vassar Hunter CBE (1883–1956) engineer was born in Wisbech.
  • Sir Frank Arthur Stockdale, GCMG, CBE, FLS (24 June 1883 – 3 August 1949) a pupil at Wisbech Grammar School became an agriculturist and colonial agricultural administrator.
  • Arthur Artis Oldham (1886–1980), historian and writer was born in Wisbech. Titles included A History of Wisbech River (1933), Wisbech Bridges, Inns and Taverns of Wisbech (1950), Wisbech Windmills, Windmills around Wisbech, The Inns & Taverns of Wisbech (1979) and Windmills in and around Wisbech (1994). He married Ellen (Nellie) Fewster and had two children. He retired to Norwich where he died in 1980.[142]
  • John Muriel (1909–1975), born in Hadleigh, Suffolk, aka as John St Clair Muriel, John Lindsey or Simon Dewes, was an author who taught at Wisbech Grammar School. His father was John Muriel (1859–1946) a[143] Novels, autobiographies and short stories include: Molten Ember (1930), Voice of One, Still Eastward Bound (1940), Suffolk Childhood (1959), Essex Days (1960) and When All the World was Young (1961). One of his pupils was John Gordon, who also went on to become an author.
  • Rev. W. Awdry OBE (15 June 1911 – 21 March 1997), creator of Thomas the Tank Engine, was Vicar of Emneth in 1953–65.Toby the Tram Engine, one of Awdry's characters, was similar to the small steam trams that ran farm produce on the Strawberry Line between Upwell and Wisbech.
  • Jesse Pye (1919–1984), professional footballer, scored two goals in the 1949 FA Cup Final, and played for England, before becoming a player-manager for Wisbech Town F.C. in 1960–66.
  • John Gordon (1925–2017), attended Wisbech Grammar School and after leaving the Royal Navy became a journalist and later a young-adult fiction writer and author of The Giant under The Snow, its sequel Ride the Wind, The Ghost on the Hill and other stories. The town and the surrounding fens inspired many of his novels, including The House on the Brink (Peckover House) and Fen Runners.
  • Russell Arthur Missin FRCO (1922–2002), was born at Gorefield, near Wisbech) was organist and master of choristers at Newcastle Cathedral.
  • John Barrie (snooker player), (1924–1996) snooker and champion billiards player. Born William Barrie Smith on 30 June, Wisbech and died 20 April aged 71.[144]
  • Geoff Hastings (1935–2005), photographer and artist.[145][146]
  • James Crowden CVO (1927–2016). Chartered surveyor, Olympian, Lord Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire, High Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Isle of Ely. Wisbech J.P. Born 14 November in Tilney All Saints, died 24 September.
  • Brian Hitch (1932–2004), diplomat, academic and musician was born in Wisbech.
  • Anton Rodgers (1933–2007), actor, was born in London on 10 January 1933 and moved to Wisbech during the war. He was president of the Georgian Angles Theatre.
  • Professor Sir Harry Kroto FRS (1939–2016), born in Wisbech 7 October 1939 son of Heinz Fritz Kroton and Edith Kathe Dora Kroto was the 1996 Nobel Laureate in chemistry, for the discovery of fullerenes.
  • Mick Walker (1942–2012), born 30 November 1942, Wretton, Norfolk. Following 10 years in the RAF he became a dealer, importer and race sponsor. After running his motorcycle business he became assistant editor of Motorcycle Enthusiast magazine and an author of over 100 books. He died on 8 March 2012 and was survived by his wife Susan and son Steven.

Present

Names in birth order:

  • Ray DaSilva, born 1933 in Wisbech, puppeteer, founded the DaSilva Puppet Company. After touring overseas the company moved from its base in Cambridgeshire to Norfolk, opening Norwich Puppet Theatre in 1980. As well as being a puppeteer (both making and performing), he was a director, producer and dealer in Puppet books. He was a founder member of the Puppet Centre Trust, chair of British UNIMA and a co-founder of Puppeteers East.[147]
  • Malcolm Douglas Moss MA, (born 1943, Lancashire) politician, was a Wisbech Town councillor and later conservative MP for North East Cambridgeshire from 1987 until retirement at the 2010 general election. Made an Honorary Freeman of Wisbech.
  • Victoria Gillick (born 1946 Hendon), activist and campaigner.
  • Mike Stevens (born 1957) is a musical director, session musician and record producer.
  • Joe Perry (born 13 August 1974 in Wisbech);– is a professional snooker player.
  • Jody Cundy OBE, (born 14 October 1978 in Wisbech) is a Paralympian.
  • George Russell (racing driver), (born February 1998)

Film and television

The North Brink by the River Nene in Wisbech
The Brinks, depicted in 1851

A 1924 film recorded a day at the North Cambridgeshire Hospital in the East Anglian Film Archive (EAFA).[148]

1926 street scenes filmed to be shown at the local Electric Theatre. EAFA.[149]

North Cambridgeshire Hospital in the 1930s. EAFA.[150]

'Approaching Wisbech' an amateur film of a simulated road traffic accident made in the late 1930s. EAFA.[151]

1932 The 'Capital of the Fens' is brought to a standstill as crowds fill the streets to catch a glimpse of Prince George as he receives the Loyal Address from the Mayor.[152]

1957 The BBC filmed Mrs Chester's Little Theatre Group performing in the grounds of Grammar school house, South Brink.[153] It was broadcast as part of ‘'Maypole and Melody'’ on 26 April 1958.

1961 'The Wisbech to Upwell Tramway'. EAFA.[154]

In 1963 Anglia TV recorded a film report on Wisbech Castle. This is also available to download on the East Anglian Film Archive.[155]

'The Flood' a 1963 drama filmed using boats from Wisbech.[156]

1975 Anglia TV report about the first purpose-built traveller site in GB. EAFA.[157]

'A Passage to Wisbech'(1986) a BBC documentary on the coaster ships which work around the shores of Britain, followed the voyages of the Carrick, a 30-year-old ship owned and skippered by Rick Waters.[158]

Wisbech is noted for its unspoilt Georgian architecture, particularly along North Brink and The Crescent. It has been used in BBC One's 1999 adaptation of Charles Dickens' 'David Copperfield'[159] and ITV1's 2001 adaptation of 'Micawber', starring David Jason.[160]

In 2000 BBC One's 'The Antiques Roadshow’ was hosted and recorded at the Hudson Leisure centre.[161]

A 'Wisbech Rock Festival' appears in the 1998 British comedy film Still Crazy starring Stephen Rea, Jimmy Nail, Billy Connolly and Timothy Spall, Bill Nighy, Juliet Aubrey, Helena Bergstrom and Bruce Robinson.[162]

The 2008 feature film Dean Spanley starring Peter O'Toole was largely filmed in Wisbech.[163]

In February 2010 the effect of immigration on the town was featured in the BBC documentary 'The Day the Immigrants Left', presented by Evan Davis. The programme looked at jobs in the town reported to have been "taken over by migrants". In the programme, several local unemployed persons were given the chance to try such jobs.[164][165][166]

2009 Channel 5's reality TV series ‘The Hotel Inspector’ starring Alex Polizzi featured The Rose and Crown hotel.[167]

2018 'Celebrating Nestle Communities – Wisbech' was released in September 2018. This is one of a series of films showcasing communities around the UK and Ireland where Nestle operate.[168]

In December 2018 the American TV Channel ‘The Late Late Show’ with British star James Cordon featured a giant inflatable Santa blocking Cromwell Road. This Father Christmas had broken free from its fixings in a garden and it took several hours to catch.[169]

Wisbech '2019 Made in Minecraft: A different point of view' was released. It shows parts of the town in a Minecraft format.[170]

Other media

In More English Fairy Tales collected and edited by Joseph Jacobs the tale of Tom Hickathrift and his battle with the Wisbeach (Wisbech) Giant is retold.[171] In other versions the protagonist is described as The Wisbech/Wisbeach Ogre[172]

Isaac Casaubon recorded in his diary his visit to Wisbech on 17 August 1611. He accompanied Lancelot Andrewes, bishop of Ely, from the episcopal palace at Downham.[173]

Samuel Pepys recorded in his diary his trip to Parson Drove on Thursday 17 September 1663 in order to accompany his uncle and cousin to go to Wisbeach in connection with another uncle Day's estate. At Wisbeach on Friday 18 September he visited the church and library.[173]

Daniel Defoe (c1660-1731) toured the Eastern Counties of England in 1723 and commented about Wisbech as a seaport. He had visited the Isle of Ely in 1722 and observed: "That there are some wonderful engines for throwing up water, and such as are not to be seen any where else, whereof one in particular threw up, (as they assur'd us) twelve hundred ton of water in half an hour, and goes by wind-sails, 12 wings or sails to a mill".

"Here are the greatest improvements by planting of hemp, that, I think, is to be seen in England; particularly on the Norfolk and Cambridge side of the Fens, as about Wisbech, Well, and several other places, where we saw many hundred acres of ground bearing great crops of hemp ".[174]

William Cole (antiquary),(1714–1782) the Cambridge antiquary, who passed through in 1772, mentions that 'the buildings were in general handsome, the inn we stopped at [the Rose and Crown] uncommonly so . . .'. 'But the Bridge,' he added 'stretching Rialto-like over this straight and considerable stream, with a good row of houses extending from it, and fronting the water, to a considerable distance, beats all, and exhibits something of a Venetian appearance'.

John Howard (prison reformer) came to Wisbech to visit the 'Wisbeach Bridewell' on 3 February 1776 and found two prisoners locked up in it. He described it as having two or three rooms. No courtyard. No water. Allowance a penny a day; and straw twenty shillings a year. Keeper's salary £16: no Fees – This prison might be improved on the Keeper's Garden.[175]

In 1778/1779 Italian author and poet Giuseppe Marc'Antonio Baretti (also known as Joseph Baretti; 1718–1789) took up residence with a family living at the castle for about a fortnight. Afterwards he published a series of letters Lettere Familiari de Giuseppe Baretti including a description of his Wisbech visit. He attended horse races, the theatre, public balls, public suppers and assemblies.[176]

William Cobbett (1763–1835), who 'speechified' to about 220 people in the Playhouse Angles Theatre in April 1830, called it 'a good solid town, though not handsome' and re marked the export of corn

William Macready arrived in Wisbech on 13 June 1836 and performed in Hamlet and Macbeth in what is now the Angles Theatre. He recorded his visit which was later published in 1875 in 'Diaries and Letters'.[23]

Charles Kingsley's 1850 novel Alton Locke has a character Bob Porter referring to the gibbeting of two Irish reapers at Wisbech River after trial for murder. Wisbech and Fenland Museum has a headpiece that was used with the gibbet in a similar case in the 18th century.[177]

Wisbeach and its river Nene (or Nen), wooden piling and riverport, two stations are mentioned by Hilaire Belloc (1870–1953) who dined at the Whyte Harte hotel, North Brink.[178]

Wisbech was one of eight towns featured in Old Towns Revisited published by Country Life Ltd in 1952.[179]

Brian Vesey-Fitzgerald describes his experience of visiting Wisbech in May 1964.[180]

Travel writer Nicholas Wollaston's (1927–2007) visit to the town produced a chapter in his 1965 book.[181]

Wisbech features in John Gordon's 1992 autobiography.[182]

There are two free newspapers distributed within the town and online, the Wisbech Standard (owned by Archant)[183] and the' Fenland Citizen (owned by Iliffe Media).[184]

Several free local magazines are published online and distributed: The fens (monthly),[185] Discovering Wisbech (monthly),[186] The Wisbech Post (quarterly),[187] and the Fenland Resident (quarterly).[188]

According to a study looking into immigration patterns, Wisbech was once identified as the seventh "most English" town in Britain by Sky News. However, on 16 February 2008 a report in the Daily Express titled "Death of a Country Idyll" wrote about how the influx of Eastern European immigrants may have caused an increase in crime. Then on 20 February 2008 The Fenland Citizen contained an article opposing the Daily Express article.[189]

On 14 May 2011 Wisbech featured in The Guardian "Let's Move to..." column: Tom Dyckhoff highlighted the Georgian streets, cinemas, local community groups and poor rail links.

In June 2018 Country Life magazine ran a feature on Wisbech.[190]

In November 2018 Wisbech featured in an article in the Daily Telegraph by Jack Rear entitled "The spirited English town with some of Britain's best forgotten history".[191]

Wisbech Merchants' Trail was updated and released as a map and booklet and as a free mobile app in August 2019. There are 17 brass plaques at historical sites around the town.[192]

The town council produces an annual Official Town Guide and Map published by Local Authority Publishing Co Ltd. There is also an online version.[193]

Climate

Like the rest of the United Kingdom, Wisbech experiences an oceanic climate, but Cambridgeshire is one of the driest counties in the British Isles along with Essex. February is the driest month, whilst October is the wettest. In temperature terms, both January and December are the coldest months, whilst August is the warmest.

Climate data for Wisbech
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 7
(45)
8
(46)
11
(52)
13
(55)
16
(61)
19
(66)
21
(70)
22
(72)
19
(66)
15
(59)
10
(50)
7
(45)
14
(57)
Daily mean °C (°F) 4.5
(40.1)
5
(41)
7
(45)
9
(48)
12
(54)
14.5
(58.1)
16.5
(61.7)
17
(63)
14.5
(58.1)
11
(52)
7
(45)
4.5
(40.1)
10.2
(50.5)
Average low °C (°F) 2
(36)
2
(36)
3
(37)
5
(41)
8
(46)
10
(50)
12
(54)
12
(54)
10
(50)
7
(45)
4
(39)
2
(36)
6
(44)
Average precipitation cm (inches) 4.5
(1.8)
3
(1.2)
3.3
(1.3)
4
(1.6)
4.6
(1.8)
4.4
(1.7)
4.8
(1.9)
5.2
(2.0)
5.3
(2.1)
5.6
(2.2)
5
(2.0)
4.4
(1.7)
54.1
(21.3)
Average precipitation days 18 15 15 14 13 12 12 12 13 16 17 17 174
Source: World Weather Online[194]

Twin town

gollark: And I disagreed with you.
gollark: This would be great for encouraging new, younger leaders, who have better reaction time.
gollark: Also probably performance enhancing drugs.
gollark: Can't wait for leaders to be selected based on revolver duel performance.
gollark: You should really just flash LineageOS or something, and/or use a better carrier.

See also

Further reading

  • Sir William Dugdale (1651). History of Imbanking and Draining of the divers Fens and Marshes both of Foreign Parts and this Kingdom.
  • John Smeaton (1768). The report of John Smeaton, Engineer, conerning the drainage of the North level of the Fens, and the outfall of the Wisbech river.
  • Mann Hutchesson (1791). Introduction to the Charter of Wisbech. W.Nicholson.
  • William Watson (1827). An historical account of the ancient town and port of Wisbech. H.&J.Leach.
  • anonymous (1833). The History of Wisbech. William Watts.
  • Thomas Craddock & Neil Walker (1849). The History of Wisbech and the Fens. Richard Walker.
  • Frederic John Gardiner (1898). History of Wisbech and Neighborhood, During the Last Fifty Years – 1848–1898. Gardiner & Co. Retrieved 3 October 2019 via archive.org.
  • Lt-Col Louis Tebbutt (1914). Cambs & Isle of Ely Territorial Recruiting Week Souvenir. Cambridge Chronicle.
  • Arthur Artis Oldham (1933). The History of the Wisbech River. AA Oldham.
  • Cyril Swinson (1949). Wisbech Charter Celebrations 1549–1949. Balding & Mansell.
  • Ed by P.Reynold (1958). The Wisbech Stirs. Catholic Record Society.
  • Arthur Oldham (1950). Pubs and Taverns of Wisbech (out of print).
  • E.J.S. Gadsden (1966). The Wisbech and Upwell tramway. Branch Line Handbooks.
  • Rodney Tibbs (1969). Fenland River: The Story of the Great Ouse and its tributaries. The Lavenham Press Ltd.
  • anonymous (1969). The Wisbech Regency Town Book. Regency Town Books.
  • Charlotte Mahoney (1970). A short history of Wisbech High School. Miss M Whitlock.
  • William Taylor (1971). with the Cambridgeshires at Singapore. T.A.Bevis.
  • Edward Storey (1971). Portrait of the Fen Country. Robert Hale Ltd. ISBN 0-7091-2443-0.
  • Michel Millard and Brian Coe (1974). Victorian Townscape: The Work of Samuel Smith. Ward Lock Ltd. ISBN 0-7063-1855-2.
  • A.K. Parker; K.D. Pye (1976). The Fenland. David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-7296-3.
  • C.N. Veal (1980). Wisbech. Charles N.Veal & Co.
  • Trevor Bevis (1990). A Pocket Guide to The Fenland. T.A. Bevis. ISBN 0-901680-33-8.
  • Ellen Gibson Wilson (1992). The Clarksons of Wisbech and the abolition of the slave trade. Wisbech Society & Preservation Trust. ISBN 0-9519220-0-9.
  • John Gordon (1992). Ordinary Seaman. Walker Books. ISBN 0-7445-2106-8.
  • Dorothy Thurman, with illustrations by Derek Abel (1998). Wisbech: Forty perspectives of a Fenland town. The Wisbech Society and Preservation Trust Ltd. ISBN 0-9519220-5-X.
  • Ellen Gibson Wilson (1992). The Clarksons of Wisbech and the abolition of the slave trade. The Wisbech Society and Preservation Trust Ltd. ISBN 0-9519220-0-9.
  • Peter Clayton (1993). Octavia Hill 1838–1912 Born in Wisbech. The Wisbech Society and Preservation Trust Ltd. ISBN 0-9519220-1-7.
  • Madeline G H McReynolds (1994). The Peckovers of Wisbech. The Wisbech Society and Preservation Trust Ltd. ISBN 0-9519220-2-5.
  • Roger Powell (1996). Richard Young of Wisbech 1809–1871. The Wisbech Society and Preservation Trust Ltd. ISBN 0-9519220-3-3.
  • F.A. Reeve (1976). Victorian and Edwardian Cambridgeshire from Old photographs. BT Batsford Ltd. ISBN 0-7134-3079-6.
  • W.J. Reader (1976). Metal Box. Heinemann. ISBN 0434625000.
  • Arthur C Ingram (1979). Branch lines around Wisbech. Middleton Press. ISBN 9781901706017.
  • Andrew C Ingram (1983). The Wisbech and Upwell tramway Centenary album. Becknell Books. ISBN 0907087205.
  • Vic Mitchell; et al. (1995). Branch line to Upwell including the Wisbech canal. Middleton Press. ISBN 1873793642.
  • Jane Arthur; et al. (1996). Medicine in Wisbech. Seagull Press. ISBN 0-948147-00-8.
  • Chris Hawkins & George Reeve (1982). The Wisbech and Upwell tramway. Wild Swan publications ltd. ISBN 0906867096.
  • John Gordon (1970). The House on the Brink. Childrens Book Club. ISBN 0060220287.
  • John Gordon (2009). Fen Runners. Orion Childrens. ISBN 978-1-84255-684-9.
  • A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely: Volume 4: City of Ely N. and S. Witchford and Wisbech Hundreds. 2002.
  • Raymond Brown (1992). The story of Balding & Mansell. Balding & Mansell.
  • Arthur Artis Oldham & Robert Bell (1994). Windmills in and around Wisbech. Spindrift.
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  • Mark Hinman & Elizabeth Popescu (2012). Extraordinary inundations of the sea: Excavations at Market Mews, Wisbech, Cambridgeshire. EAA.
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  • Mike Osborne (2013). Defending Cambridgeshire. the History Press. ISBN 978-0-7524-9330-5.
  • William P Smith (2014). Pictorial Journey Down The Wisbech Canal. Carrilson Publications. ISBN 978-0-9543997-3-3.
  • Neil R. Wright (2016). Treading The Boards - Actors and Theatres in Georgian Lincolnshire. SLHA. ISBN 978-0-903582-55-1.
  • Diane Calton Smith (2018). Webbed feet and wildfowlers - an early history of Wisbech and the Fens. New Generation Publishing. ISBN 978-1787193215.
  • Diane Calton Smith (2019). Plague, Flood and Gewgaws - Wisbech and the Fens in Tudor and Stuart Times. New Generation Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78955-496-0.
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  • Geoff Hastings & Andy Ketley (2019). Images of Wisbech no.2. Friends of Wisbech & Fenland Museum.
  • Geoff Hastings & Andy Ketley (2020). Images of Wisbech no.3. Friends of Wisbech & Fenland Museum.

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