Godmanchester ( ) is a town and civil parish in the Huntingdonshire district of Cambridgeshire, England. It is separated from Huntingdon, to the north, by the valley of the River Great Ouse. Being on the Roman roads, the town has a long history. It has a waterside location, surrounded by open countryside of high value for its biodiversity but it remains highly accessible, with a railway line to London, the A1 road and M11/A14 which run nearby.
The first part of the name comes from an Anglo-Saxon personal name, either Guðmund or Godmund. Godmund is also the basis of the place-names Goodmanham (East Riding of Yorkshire) and Gumley (Leicestershire). Later forms of these names occur with a spelling Guth- or Gut-. The second part of the name refers to the Roman Britain fort or ‘chester’ (from the Latin ‘castrum’) south of the River Ouse, identified with the Durovigutum mentioned in the Antonine Itinerary.
There is no etymological or historical connection between the town and the Danish King Guðrum of East Anglia (c.835–890) or with the Goths, a Germanic people of central and eastern Europe.
A minority of visitors, former residents and residents continue to pronounce the place as Gumster (), though this has long-since been superseded by Godmunchester, with stress on the first syllable.Candida Lycett Green, England: travels through an unwrecked landscape (1996), p. 74: "GODMANCHESTER Huntingdonshire... As a child I was taught to pronounce it 'Gumster'."
The town's prosperity since the Romans has been closely tied to its strategic position on the old Roman roads from London to York. It is suggested that, in the Middle Ages, the Danelaw allowed development of an inland port by digging the Mill race.
The place was listed as Godmundcestre in the Domesday Book of 1086 in the Hundred of Leightonstone in Huntingdonshire.
Godmanchester was first recognised with a town charter by King John in 1212, although it had been a market town and royal manor for some years. King James I granted a second Royal Charter in 1604.
Farm Hall, on West Street, was used as a bugged detention centre for German nuclear scientists as part of Operation Epsilon, from July 1945 to January 1946.
The plot was successfully produced as a West End play in 2023
The highest tier of local government is Cambridgeshire County Council, locally represented by two county councillors serving Godmanchester and Huntingdon East (electoral division).
The second tier of local government, the planning authority and council-tax collecting body, is Huntingdonshire District Council, a non-metropolitan district, locally represented by two councillors elected for an eponymous ward.
The third and lowest tier of local government is Godmanchester town council. The council comprises 17 councillors, including a mayor and a deputy mayor.
Godmanchester is represented within the parliamentary constituency of Huntingdon, in the House of Commons. Ben Obese-Jecty (Conservative) was elected as MP in 2024, replacing Jonathan Djanogly
The fastest growth, an 81% increase in population, was between 1981 and 1991
Population figures since 1911 are:
In 2021, the parish covered an area of and so the population density for Godmanchester in 2021 was 10,300 persons per square mile (3,980 per square kilometre).
By 2016, Godmanchester had a population of about 6800 in 3,100 homes; it is expected that this will further increase to at least 4050 homes and 8600 residents by 2036.
England's largest meadow Portholme may be accessed from Godmanchester or Huntingdon, but lies within the Parish of Brampton. It remains an important flood plain, but has served as an equestrian racecourse and centre for early aviation.
To the North and East of the town are West and Eastside Common (SSSI), and Godmanchester Nature Reserve. These Common land are intersected by The Ouse Valley Way and Pathfinder March long-distance footpaths, and the route of a disused railway which connected the demolished Godmanchester Station and St Ives.
South of the town centre are the headquarters and a large operational shelter of veterinary/rescue charity Wood Green Animal Shelters.
A number of small businesses, plus DHL and Coop warehouses are situated on the southern edge of the town, on Chord Business park, Roman Way Industrial Estate and Cardinal Business Park.
Original historical documents relating to Godmanchester, including the original church parish registers, local government records, maps, photographs and the surviving borough charters, are held by Cambridgeshire Archives and Local Studies at the County Record Office, Huntingdon.
In October 2003 BBC1's Songs of Praise was hosted by St Mary's and featured the new hymn tune Godmanchester, written by the then vicar, Peter Moger.
The A1198 road, Ermine Street links traffic to the A14 or to Royston, and is used for shorter journeys south avoiding the A1.
Huntingdon railway station, a semi-major stop on the East Coast Main Line is less than from the town centre by car.
The town of Huntingdon and railway station may also be accessed on foot via the expansive meadow or by National Cycle Network route 51.
Local buses from Godmanchester are provided by Whippet (bus company) on routes 66 (to Huntingdon and St Neots) and X2/X3 (to Huntingdon or Papworth and Cambridge).
Government
Demography
Population
Godmanchester 2,130 2,035 1,993 2,502 2,955 5,255 5,996 6,711 7,893 Population census figures from report Historic Census figures Cambridgeshire to 2011 by Cambridgeshire Insight.
The censuses of 1961 and 1971 are omitted as Huntingdon and Godmanchester were merged into a single municipal borough.
Culture and community
Landmarks
Church of St Mary the Virgin
Chinese Bridge
Twin towns – sister cities
Facilitated by Huntingdon and Godmanchester Twinning Association
Sport and leisure
Transport
Notable people
Notes
External links
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