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Queen Adelaide is a hamlet on the River Great Ouse in the Fens about 1+12 miles (2.4 km) northeast of Ely, Cambridgeshire, England.

Queen Adelaide sign in the hamlet
Queen Adelaide sign in the hamlet

Queen Adelaide

Former chapel of St Etheldreda
Queen Adelaide
Location within Cambridgeshire
OS grid referenceTL565814
Civil parish
  • City of Ely
District
  • East Cambridgeshire
Shire county
  • Cambridgeshire
Region
  • East
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townEly
Postcode districtCB7
Dialling code01353
PoliceCambridgeshire
FireCambridgeshire
AmbulanceEast of England
UK Parliament
  • South East Cambridgeshire
List of places
UK
England
Cambridgeshire
52.4098°N 0.3022°E / 52.4098; 0.3022

The hamlet is named after a pub,[1] which in turn was named after Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen, wife of King William IV. The hamlet did not exist until the 19th century, when the railways reached Ely and the pub was built.

The B1382 road is Queen Adelaide's main street. South of the hamlet is a junction of three railways: the Fen, Breckland and Ely to Peterborough railway lines. Each of the three lines crosses the hamlet's main street with a separate level crossing. West of the hamlet there is also a loop line, the Adelaide Loop,[1] that the B1382 crosses on a bridge.

The River Great Ouse is just to the east, and the section flowing north from the Queen Adelaide Bridge to the Sandhill Bridge at Littleport is known as the Adelaide straight, completed in 1829; it has been used as an emergency alternative to the River Thames for the Boat Race in 1944, and again in 2021, when Hammersmith Bridge in London was closed to river traffic.[2]

Queen Adelaide is in the Church of England parish of Ely Cathedral, which is 2 miles (3 km) away by road, so in 1883 a chapel of ease was built in the hamlet. It was dedicated to St Etheldreda,[3] who was a 7th-century East Anglian princess and Abbess of Ely. More recently the chapel has been deconsecrated and converted into a private house.


References


  1. Pugh 1953, pp. 28–33.
  2. "Boat Race 2021: Famous duel returns to quiet backwater". BBC News. 28 March 2021.
  3. Pugh 1953, pp. 82–86.

Sources








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