Trumpington
Trumpington maps (2 available)
Map of Cambridgeshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Cambridgeshire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Trumpington books (10 available)
- 5 photos on Trumpington appear in 4 Frith books - View photos of Trumpington
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Trumpington and Cambridgeshire
Trumpington memories
To Ron Goodliffe - A Trumpington Ploughman 1946 - 1958
My late father worked for the Pemberton Estate as a tractor driver from 1946 to around 1958.
I offer below, in his memory, an extract from the tribute I composed for his funeral in March 2005.
But, there was another love in your life,
by the name of Allis-Chalmers.
And you spent many hours alone in her company
as she ploughed each field with furrows.
As a child I’d sometimes join you on her ample bench type seat.
The constant roar of the engine and the screaming of the gulls
made conversation difficult
and I often fell asleep.
So you’d put your strong arm round me,
to stop me falling and getting crushed,
and we’d plough ...read more here
Contributed by Brian Goodliffe
I lived in those cottages! 1948 - 1957-ish
In 1946 my late father, Ron Goodliffe, got a job as a tractor driver for the Pembertons, and we moved into one of their tied-cottages in Swans Yard, that used to be off the High Street. Then, in 1948, we moved into 18 Grantchester Road which is the white cottage that's set back in the photo. In those days it was known as Dated Cottage, as it had the year 1654 on the front in big metal numerals; plus a plaque depicting the rays of the sun with a smiley face in the middle. Many years ago these plaques, I found out much later, used to be affixed to properties covered by The Sun Fire Insurance Company. ...read more here
Contributed by Brian Goodliffe
Cambridgeshire memories
I lived in those cottages! 1948 - 1957-ish
In 1946 my late father, Ron Goodliffe, got a job as a tractor driver for the Pembertons, and we moved into one of their tied-cottages in Swans Yard, that used to be off the High Street. Then, in 1948, we moved into 18 Grantchester Road which is the white cottage that's set back in the photo. In those days it was known as Dated Cottage, as it had the year 1654 on the front in big metal numerals; plus a plaque depicting the rays of the sun with a smiley face in the middle. Many years ago these plaques, I found out much later, used to be affixed to properties covered by The Sun Fire Insurance Company. ...read more here
A memory of Trumpington contributed by Brian Goodliffe
To Ron Goodliffe - A Trumpington Ploughman 1946 - 1958
My late father worked for the Pemberton Estate as a tractor driver from 1946 to around 1958.
I offer below, in his memory, an extract from the tribute I composed for his funeral in March 2005.
But, there was another love in your life,
by the name of Allis-Chalmers.
And you spent many hours alone in her company
as she ploughed each field with furrows.
As a child I’d sometimes join you on her ample bench type seat.
The constant roar of the engine and the screaming of the gulls
made conversation difficult
and I often fell asleep.
So you’d put your strong arm round me,
to stop me falling and getting crushed,
and we’d plough ...read more here
A memory of Trumpington contributed by Brian Goodliffe
Extracts From Trumpington & Cambridgeshire books
Thatched cottages abound in this view of Trumpington. At this time, the village was separate from Cambridge. Although only visible from its sign in this picture, the Green Man is a magnificent timbered public house.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Photographic Memories".
Thatched cottages abound in this view; at this time, Trumpington was a village separate from Cambridge. Although only visible from its sign in this picture, the Green Man is a magnificent timbered public house.
An extract from from"Cambridge Photographic Memories".
The Unicorn Inn stands beside the road that crosses the water meadows of the Granta and takes us to Grantchester. It was extended in the 1930s when the suburbs of Cambridge extended into Trumpington. The inn was a popular local place for people to ride or walk to.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Villages Photographic Memories".
At first glance, this row of modern shops, named after the local Anstey Hall, has not changed since 1960; but closer inspection reveals new tenants in the shops, larger trees and flower beds, and more people - the area is a popular haunt of the younger generation these days.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Living Memories".
A row of cottages with weather-boarding and a thatched roof faces the parish church. Set back from the road edge is a substantial 17th-century farmhouse; we can just see its large chimney stack with grouped diagonal shafts.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Villages Photographic Memories".






