Warboys is a large parish and a village on what was the eastern side of
Huntingdonshire bordering on Cambridgeshire. The place-name 'Warboys' is first attested in a Saxon charter of 974, where it appears as
Wardebusc and
Weardebusc. The name is perhaps from the
Old Norse vardi and
buski, and means 'beacon with bushes'. "Wearda" was also an
Old English personal name, and it has been suggested this word means, literally, "bush of a man called Wearda", or, that the first element is from the Old English "weard" ('watch, protection'). Additionally, the first Norman family to settle there was named Wardebois, whom, initially, according to
John Leland, were named Verbois, from Verboys, near
Rouen. The Verbois were known as the Wardebois, from at least 1199 to 1322. After this period, the town's name shifted to Warbois, then, finally, Warboys.
Warboys in the Domesday Book Warboys was listed in the
Domesday Book in the
Hundred of
Hurstingstone in Huntingdonshire; the name of the settlement was again written as
Wardebusc in the Domesday Book. The
Domesday Book does not explicitly give the population of a place, but it records that there were 48 households at Warboys. In 1774 an
Act of Parliament was passed for draining certain lands in Warboys, including called High Fen and part of New Pasture. In 1795, an Act was passed for dividing, enclosing and draining the open common fields in Warboys. A further Act was passed in 1798 to amend the previous Act as regards the lands allotted in lieu of
tithes. A local landmark is the clock tower, built in 1887 to celebrate the Golden Jubilee of
Queen Victoria on the throne. Warboys is also famous for the trial of the so-called "
Witches of Warboys". Much witch-related iconography can be found in the village, including part of the emblem of the local primary school.
Local English dialect The village was one of two sites in Huntingdonshire included in the
Survey of English Dialects (SED). The other was
Kimbolton. The traditional dialect of Warboys recorded in the SED was characterised by a '
Canadian raising' type alternation in the vowel of the PRICE lexical set.
RAF Warboys During the Second World War the
RAF operated a bomber airfield just south-west of the village,
RAF Warboys.
Wellingtons operated there from 1942 until early 1943 when they were replaced by
Lancasters. After early 1944, the airfield was used for training until flying operations ended late in 1945. All the buildings and land were sold by 1964. == Government ==