Caxton, Cambridgeshire
| Caxton | |
|---|---|
| OS Grid Reference: | TL303584 |
| Lat/Lon: | 52°12′ N 0°05′ W |
| Population: | 480 (2001 Census) |
| Dwellings: | 197 (2001 Census) |
| Formal status: | Village |
| Administration | |
| County: | Cambridgeshire |
| Region: | East Anglia |
| Nation: | England |
| Post Office and Telephone | |
| Post town: | CAMBRIDGE |
| Postcode: | CB3 |
| Dialling Code: | 01954 |
Caxton is a small rural village in the East of England region and the county Cambridgeshire in the United Kingdom, surrounding villages include Bourn, Eltisley and Cambourne. It is about 13 miles to the west of Cambridge.
In 2004 a bypass was completed around caxton to accomodate the newly built Cambourne to the north, the bypass means vehicles can avoid using the busy A1198. The A1198 is a Roman road as it is very straight.
Caxton is most famous for the Caxton Gibbet, there are many old tales of people being hung on it as a punishment then buried near by.
A small stream called Bourn Brook runs through Caxton, it eventually joins the River Cam.
Caxton has two churches, Caxton Baptist Church (built 1842), and the Church of St Andrew.
In 1881 the population was 129, in 1921 the population had grown to 398.
See also
External links
Categories: Villages in Cambridgeshire | UK geography stubs