Kings Ripton, Cambridgeshire
Kings Ripton maps
Historic maps of Kings Ripton and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Kings Ripton maps
Kings Ripton photos
We have no photos of Kings Ripton, although we do have photos of these nearby places: Abbots Ripton, Hartford, Huntingdon, Houghton, Hemingford Abbots, Godmanchester, Warboys, St Ives, Hemingford GreyKings Ripton books
Displaying 3 of 9 books about Kings Ripton and the local area. View all Kings Ripton books
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Kings Ripton
No memories of Kings Ripton have been shared yet - be the first!
Add your memory of Kings Ripton
or of a photo of Kings Ripton.
Cambridgeshire memories
Evacuation to Abbots Ripton 1939
My father, Gerald Blockley, originally from Derby, had just completed a degree in History from Unversity College, London and was appointed to teach at Bruce Grove School in Tottenham in 1939. He was evacuated with a lot of the children to Abbots Ripton in the autumn of 1939. He managed to find lodgings for all the children but none for himself,... [more]
Shared on 08 August 2008
David and Julie Smith lived in Abbots Ripton 1987-1999.
walky talkys enabling the posse... [more]
Shared on 05 December 2007
I remember Huntingdon's High Street in 1965. I was only a little girl then, holding on to my grandmother's hand. My grandparents were Kate and Reginald Wayman and they lived in Hartford Road opposite the River Ouse. Nanna and I would often walk to the town centre and she'd buy me a 'Pixie' comic; there were some lovely shops, I remember... [more]
Shared on 17 June 2009
My family moved from Kent to Little Stukeley at the beginning of the Second World War. I believe my uncle had a bakery there for my father was a baker. My uncle's name was Sidney P Bull and his wife was Etta. I am told that we moved back to Kent but moved back again to Little Stukeley - as I... [more]
Shared on 19 June 2009
My father was in the USAF and at the age of 7 I was living in Hemingford Abbotts and stayed there for 3 years. I enjoyed the three years there. We lived in a bungaloo and in back of the bungaloo was a trailer park. We went to the base school which was the pathfinder in Alconbury. I would love to... [more]
Shared on 29 January 2009
St Ann's Lane / Black Bull pub
Hi, I'm trying to find some people: Doris May Fisher born 1910 and Harry William Fisher born 1913, both born at St Ann's Lane, Godmanchester. Their parents were Harry William Fisher and Gertrude Church. Harry William senior died in 1932. Apparently the last address for Harry junior was Cambridge Villas, also someone told me Harry junior was hit by a police... [more]
Shared on 28 March 2009
My 3 x great-grandfather William Lightfoot was born in 1809 in Roxton, Bedfordshire. He was a grocer. His wife was Mary Jane Lightfoot (nee Clarke). They had 5 children, 3 of whom worked in the shop. The youngest son James (1846) was born in St Ives, he and his brother John Scott Lightfoot were painters. The family moved between 1861 and... [more]
Shared on 16 August 2009
Extracts From Kings Ripton & Cambridgeshire books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Kings Ripton, inspired by Frith photos.
Cambridge Photographic Memories
The early Tudor gateway of St John's College is richly decorated with the arms of its founder, Lady Margaret Beaufort. The gatehouse leads to the First Court, and beyond come the Second and Third Courts, each younger than the previous one.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Cambridge Photographic Memories
Queens' College was founded in 1448. It was one of the first colleges to be built in red brick at the time when the rather expensive fashion of imported stone began to decline. The second court contains the President's Lodge, one of the few half-timbered Tudor college buildings.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Cambridge Photographic Memories
Queens' College was founded in 1448. It was one of the first colleges to be built in red brick at the time when the rather expensive fashion of imported stone began to decline. The second court contains the President's Lodge, one of the few half-timbered Tudor college buildings.
Read more and see photos from this book.
