A former Roman villa was also found in the village
Railways used to be the most popular form of travel before cars became more common. Across Cambridgeshire, there were many more railway stations than there are today.
However, over time, these stations disappeared and became something else. One old railway station that has totally disappeared was in Stow-cum-Quy. The former station opened in June 1884 and was first run by Great Eastern Railway. It was located around four and a half miles from Cambridge and two miles outside the city boundary.
Quy was never the busiest station, as it lay in a small village that had a population of only around 360 people in 1884. This population dropped down to 307 in 1931. Passenger numbers were never recorded to be high at the station. Quy was the least used station on the Mildenhall branch and it held this title for the whole time it was open.
From 1894, the station didn’t have a station master due to it being so quiet. It was then unstaffed in June 1935 and tickets were only able to be bought from a conductor on the train.
The station managed to survive the economies of the 1930s, however it finally closed to passengers in 1962, and fully closed in 1964. If you visited the village today, you wouldn’t even know there was a former station – it’s almost like it disappeared. Like many former railway stations, Quy station was turned into private homes. The old station house still stands, however it has undergone a face lift in recent years.
As well as a lost railway station, Stow-cum-Quy also has a name that is hard to pronounce. Some may think it’s pronounced like ‘stow-come-kai’, however it’s pronounced like ‘stow-come-kwai’.
Another important part of the village’s history is its link to Roman times. It was once where a Roman villa was situated. The villa was found just to the west of Quy Hall, a Grade II listed country house.
There have also been remains from the Bronze Age and Saxon Times found, showing how Stom-cum-Quy has stood the test of time.

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