Almost every year there was flooding in Earith along the Causeway until the road level was raised.
Table of Contents:
Receiving tips for pushing cars through the flooding in Earith
As children, we used to have a great time down there (when there was flooding in Earith at the Causeway) when the water was only about, say, a foot deep and the cars used to try and get through and they’d get stuck.
So in we’d go, the lads; “Give you a push?” and then get a sixpence or something like that.
The petrol ones, it used to splash up and short circuit them and then they’d stop.
Eastern County buses, were diesel, they could still come through when it was about 2-3 ft water but once we knew the buses were stopped then everybody else stopped.
There was no way of getting across, only by the boat.
(The road got raised up in the 1950s to stop it from flooding so often when they built the new bridge.)
Carrying father through the floods
When I farmed at Cottenham, we used to go there every day and used to take my father who was in his seventies.
We’d come back and there’d be water across the road you see, so we used to leave the car on the Hermitage side and I’d got wellies on, so I used to hump my father on my back.
And if you walk to the right-hand side the grass is a little bit higher where the posts are and I used to struggle through the water with him humped up on the top.
Then when it got too deep, and quite a few times we had to go around either by St Ives or Chatteris and then we would cut out between Willingham and Rampton.
It was flooded there one day about 3 or 4 feet and we couldn’t get through that way either, so I don’t know what we did about milking the cows that day.
Cycling through floods from Earith to Huntingdon
I used to bike to school at Huntingdon, we used to go through the Thicket at St Ives, a lovely walk, but if you kept to the main road you had to go up Houghton Hill and the wind would be blowing and was hard work.
So we would cut through there but when the waters were up, you can’t.
We used to be able to half pedal, then there used to be, like a stile, across there (about halfway along) and of course, you had to get off your bike and the water came over your knees, lift your bike over the top.
Flooding at Houghton and being late for school
And one day we got up to Houghton clock tower, that’s where it used to come out, just through there and back onto the main road.
But there was water all around there, the clock tower- 2 or 3 feet I suppose – and we had to carry our bikes.
We put our bikes on our shoulders and cut off to right up Harry Anderson’s fields, walked up onto the top road that goes by the aerodrome and then when we got to school half an hour late.
There the blooming Prefects were waiting at the bike shed, giving a hundred lines because you were late.
It was no good saying we couldn’t get through.
(Extracts from ‘Keeping Time by the Crows’ University of Cambridge
John Wales retains copyright on original contributions)
The next article [10] At school in 1930s Earith
Or see the first article in this series: [1] 1930s Earith National Fishing attraction