The
Eastern Counties Railway opened its line from Cambridge to
Ely in 1845. The Ely and Huntingdon Railway was authorised by the
Ely and Huntingdon Railway Act 1845 (
8 & 9 Vict. c. xlviii); it was to build from east to west through
St Ives, but it was unable to raise sufficient money to build the whole of its line. Instead it opened only between St Ives and a station named
Huntingdon, that was actually in
Godmanchester, east of the
River Great Ouse. The opening date was 17 August 1847, and the Eastern Counties Railway between
Cambridge and St Ives was opened on the same day. The
East Anglian Railway soon acquired the
Ely and Huntingdon Railway, but it did not consider that progressing the completion of the Ely and Huntingdon scheme was worthwhile, and it allowed the powers to lapse. In August 1862 the Eastern Counties Railway merged with other lines to form the Great Eastern Railway; this heralded a change of policy in that the Great Eastern Railway decided to encourage local schemes for connecting and feeder railways. Accordingly in the Autumn of 1863 two prominent landowners,
Oliver Claude Pell of Wilburton and Frederick Camps of Haddenham, generated enough support from other landowners in the area to consider building a line linking Ely and
Sutton, about a third of the extent of the unbuilt Ely to St Ives line. The route was planned at first to be direct via
Witchford, but Pell and Camps insisted on a route further south to serve their estates and the planned route of the line was altered accordingly. This had the incidental benefit of aligning the route on lower ground throughout, with easy gradients. The line was to be known as the
Ely, Haddenham and Sutton Railway. The Great Eastern Railway considered assisting the promoters of the Ely, Haddenham and Sutton Railway, but they were sceptical about its potential profitability. Now the local company proposed an extension from Sutton to
Somersham on the St Ives to
March line and this changed the GER position, as they saw this as a threat to their strategic intentions, potentially facilitating an incursion by the
Great Northern Railway. ==Authorisation==