1
Bill Rickaby Drive, Newmarket
Image: © Alex McGregor
Taken: 15 Jan 2013
0.08 miles
2
Houses on Exning Road, Newmarket (1)
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 3 Feb 2018
0.08 miles
3
Newmarket: Exning Road Working Men's Club
Or once just the Exning Road Club if the inscription on the original stone tablet above the left doorway is used.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 6 Jul 2008
0.08 miles
4
Newmarket: on Exning Road
The twin-gabled building on the right is Exning Road Working Men's Club. Beyond it is the small church of St Philip with St Etheldreda, next to the former Union Workhouse.
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 12 Nov 2017
0.09 miles
5
Exning Working Men's Club WW2 War Memorial
The memorial records the 26 names of people lost in WW2 including four civilians.
Details: http://media.geograph.org.uk/files/fe9fc289c3ff0af142b6d3bead98a923/Exning_Working_Mens_Club_WW2_Memorial.pdf
Image: © Adrian S Pye
Taken: 29 Jun 2017
0.09 miles
6
Newmarket: Church of St Etheldreda
Etheldreda was a Saxon princess born in Exning in 630 AD who founded the first Christian place of worship at the site where Ely Cathedral was subsequently built. This tiny church was built in a corner of the 1837 Newmarket Union Workhouse, part of the converted buildings of which can be seen to the left. The Church post-dates the workhouse by many years. It is not shown on the Ordnance Survey map of 1891 but is present on the 1903 edition. The tree in front with the very light green foliage is a false acacia.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 6 Jul 2008
0.09 miles
7
Newmarket Leisure Centre car park entrance
Off Exning Road.
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 3 Feb 2018
0.10 miles
8
Exning Road Working Men's Club car park, Newmarket
Seen from Exning Road, with the leisure centre in the background.
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 3 Feb 2018
0.10 miles
9
New Aldi, Newmarket
The High Street has many empty shops, but this store has just opened
Image: © Hugh Venables
Taken: 26 Jun 2021
0.10 miles
10
Newmarket: Former 1837 Union Workhouse
This building on Exning Road has been converted to a residential development and the estate agents' ads coyly refer to it as a "gated period conversion". What they don't say is that the building started out in life in 1837 as the Newmarket Union Workhouse and it remained as such until at least 1903. By 1927 it had acquired the name White Lodge but was still a Poor Law Institution. But by 1938 it had become the White Lodge Hospital and was used as an emergency hospital during the Second World War. After the war it became part of Newmarket's General Hospital until it was surplus to requirements and sold off.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 6 Jul 2008
0.11 miles