Guilden Morden

[3] The parish of Guilden Morden is long and thin in shape covering an area of 1,052 hectares (2,600 acres) in the very south-western corner of Cambridgeshire.The parish's long western border largely follows the course of the River Cam from the point where it rises at Ruddery Spring, and which separates it from Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire.The manor continued in this family until Francis Hasilden, High Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire in 1509 (died early in 1522) settled his estates on his only child Frances who conveyed them by her marriage to Sir Robert Peyton, knt., of Iselham.[4] In 1522 Francis Hasilden, Lord of the Manor of Guilden Morden, was buried in the north aisle "before Jesus's Altar" in a tomb which cost his estate £20 sterling.[8] In the village there are two open public houses; the King Edward VII on Fox Hill Road, and The Three Tuns situated on the High Street.
St Mary's Church
CambridgeshireOS grid referenceShire countyRegionCountryEnglandSovereign statePost townPostcode districtDialling codeCambridgeRoystonHertfordshireAshwell and Morden railway stationSteeple MordenAbington PigottsTadlowRiver CamBedfordshireIcknield WayGuilden Morden boarAnglo-SaxonNorman ConquestBaldockCisterciangrangeBlack DeathOld EnglishJohn of GauntBerwick-upon-TweedHuntingdonshireWayback MachineEnglish Place-Name SocietyUniversity of Nottingham