The Waits and All Saints Church.All Saints is the parish church of St Ives in Cambridgeshire. The earliest recorded mention of the Parish Church of St Ives is in the Domesday Book, AD 1086, when it is stated that there was here a “priest and a church”. The original building would have been made of wood, By 1150 it was replaced by a stone structure before a complete rebuild began in 1470. The church is situated on the north bank of the Ouse. The chief item of interest in the church records is an old vestry book which contains the signature of Oliver Cromwell as one of the overseers of the parish.
All Saints is the parish church of St Ives in Cambridgeshire. The earliest recorded mention of the Parish Church of St Ives is in the Domesday Book, AD 1086, when it is stated that there was here a “priest and a church”. The original building would have been made of wood, By 1150 it was replaced by a stone structure before a complete rebuild began in 1470. The church is situated on the north bank of the Ouse. The chief item of interest in the church records is an old vestry book which contains the signature of Oliver Cromwell as one of the overseers of the parish.
St Ives in Cambridgshire is a medieval market town on the banks of the Great River Ouse. It lies 5 miles east of Huntingdon and 12 miles North West of Cambridge. Historically it was part of Huntingdonshire.
St Ives in Cambridgshire is a medieval market town on the banks of the Great River Ouse. It lies 5 miles east of Huntingdon and 12 miles North West of Cambridge. Historically it was part of Huntingdonshire.
St Ives in Cambridgshire is a medieval market town on the banks of the Great River Ouse. It lies 5 miles east of Huntingdon and 12 miles North West of Cambridge. Historically it was part of Huntingdonshire.