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Gedney Hill sits on the southern edge of the Lincolnshire Fens, right where the county borders Cambridgeshire. It is a quiet, linear village defined by its open horizons and its location about twelve miles southeast of Spalding. Historically, the village grew around the trade of the surrounding silt lands, and that agricultural heritage remains clear today in the expansive fields of wheat and sugar beet that frame the settlement. At its heart is the parish church of the Holy Trinity, a notable 14th-century building which is unusual for its timber-pillared nave - a rare structural feature in this part of England. For day-to-day life, the village maintains a local primary school and a shop, though many residents look toward nearby Crowland or Long Sutton for broader amenities. While the landscape is famously flat, it offers a distinct sense of space and big skies that you only really find in this pocket of the East Midlands.