Little Paxton
Little Paxton | |
High Street |
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Little Paxton |
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OS grid reference | TL195628 |
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District | Huntingdonshire |
Shire county | Cambridgeshire |
Region | East |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
EU Parliament | East of England |
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Coordinates: 52°15′N 0°15′W / 52.25°N 0.25°W
Little Paxton in Cambridgeshire, England is a village near Great Paxton north of St Neots. It is in the district and historic county of Huntingdonshire. Until the 1970s it was a minor village and the church was under threat of closure. The building of a housing estate and a junior school revived its fortunes and the establishment of the Paxton Pits Nature Reserve around part of the nearby gravel pits has brought visitors to the village.
The nature reserve features lakes, woodland and part of the Ouse floodplain and is home to large numbers of cormorants and many summer visitors such as nightingales and a large number of passerine birds. Grebes, ducks and geese have colonised the lakes.
The village has a public house called The Anchor. Gravel extraction remains an important industry in and around the village. There is also a fencing company, a tool hire and a conservatory village. On the edge of the village, a derelict industrial site has been redeveloped to provide modern housing on an island in the middle of the River Great Ouse, between the lock and the weir stream.
Curiously, the village of Little Paxton is much bigger than the village of Great Paxton.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Little Paxton. |