The parish of Snailwell covers an area of in the extension of eastern Cambridgeshire that surrounds the town of Newmarket in
Suffolk. The western and southern boundaries also form the border between Cambridgeshire and Suffolk, with the southern boundary following the line of the ancient
Icknield Way (now the B1506). The northern boundary with
Fordham follows the River Snail that rises in the parish, and the eastern boundary with
Chippenham follows field boundaries. The parish has been occupied since at least the
Bronze Age when woodland was cleared. Ten
tumuli, discovered in 1879, were situated alongside the Icknield Way but were flattened in 1941 when preparing space for a wartime airfield.
RAF Snailwell was open from 1941 until 1946 just north of the railway line towards
Bury St Edmunds and housed primarily
American Air Force personnel with contingents from the
R.A.F., 302 Polish squadron and the
Royal Belgian Air Force. Sections of the concrete track and air-raid shelters can still be seen. ==Church==