Eaton Socon is an area of St Neots town, having been a village, in Cambridgeshire, England. It was originally in Bedfordshire, along with the similar parish to the north of Eaton Ford, but officially became part of the town in 1965. Its housing grew and its population more than doubled: 1931 to 2001. It was absorbed into Huntingdonshire, which was in turn absorbed into Cambridgeshire. The population was, as at the year 2011, 5,704. And, is now as of 2020 at 9,042
History
The village is mentioned as "Eaton" in the Domesday Book, when the manor belonged to Eudo Dapifer. In the 13th century it became a "Soke", which meant it was independent of the local Hundred Court at Barford. In time, "Soke" became "Socon". The parish had a manor or epithet of "Sudbury". Near the river are the remains of Eaton Socon Castle. The church burned down due to a 1930 organ fire but was rebuilt in the original style. It was a 15th-century enlargement and completion of a 14th-century form. It had unusual poppyhead bench-ends. The fire damaged the chancel less than the rest, enabling reconstruction of its delicate 15th-century windows. The architect of the 1930s was Albert Richardson and local craftspeople were employed. The village has a conservation area centred on listed buildings including modest thatched cottages along the Great North Road and side roads such as Peppercorns Lane and School Lane.
Traditional May Day celebrations take place every year on the green.
Housing and demography
Most, 65.8%, of housing is owned ; the next largest category is 22.5% which is socially rented, including 5.4% from the district council directly. 1.7% of the 2,489 homes had no usual residents.
Transport
The A1 ran along the central street running the length of the village until its bypass skirting to the west, of 1971. A second bypass opened in 1985 to enable traffic travelling between that road and Cambridge to avoid Eaton Socon, Eaton Ford and St Neots. 17.9% of households have no car/van.
Government
A second tier of local government operates, Huntingdonshire District Council, headquartered in Huntingdon. It has 52 councillors representing 29 wards. It collects all council tax and administers/provides building regulations, planning and environmental checks/approvals, day centres, assessed housing benefits, parks, waste collections, a communal leisure budget and supports tourism. Eaton Socon lately approximates to the St Neots Eaton Socon ward having two councillors. District councillors serve four-year terms after District elections. The first tier of local government is Cambridgeshire County Council, headquartered in Cambridge. This provides county-wide services such as in road infrastructure, fire and rescue, education, social services, libraries and heritage. Cambridgeshire County Council consists of 69 councillors representing 60 electoral divisions. Eaton Socon is of late in electoral divisionSt Neots Eaton Socon and Eynesbury having two councillors. In parliamentary elections voters contribute to the Huntingdon seat. This is represented by Jonathan Djanogly since 2001, succeeding Sir John Major .