Cambridge Club Site the Backs and Colleges Walk
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Cambridge Nature Network Final Report
Cambridge Nature Network Final Report FOREWORD I’m delighted to introduce this important report. For years, now, we have known we need to ensure nature’s recovery, and for years that has been an all-too-elusive ambition. In fact, we are still overseeing nature’s decline. It’s a ship that simply must be turned around. Now we have a clear way forward. This report, building on the ambition to double nature in Cambridgeshire, tells us precisely how and where we can do it. Working from the ground up, looking at real places and the actual state of nature, it offers for the first time a tangible plan for the revitalisation of nature in the 10km around the city of Cambridge, based on what is already there and how it can be brought back to life. And there’s more. Fully integrated with the vision for nature recovery is one for the enhancement and creation of green spaces for public recreation and refreshment – vital needs, as we have come to understand fully during the covid-19 crisis. The risk with nature recovery is that in our enthusiasm we may do the wrong thing in the wrong place: plant trees on peat or valuable grassland, or put hedgerows in where the landscape should be open. This report will ensure we do the right thing in the right place. It provides a place-based analysis of where existing nature sites can be enhanced, what kind of nature-friendly farming to encourage, how to create stepping-stones to create new, linked nature networks, and how, overall, the ambition for doubling nature can be met. -
Fen Causeway
Fen Causeway An important vehicular route which crosses the attractive rural spaces of Coe Fen and Sheep’s Green with views back towards the city. Fen Causeway was built in as one of the main routes the 1920s to link Newnham around Cambridge, but the village with Trumpington negative effect of this traffic Road and to provide access is mitigated by the pastural to the south of the city. Its setting and the views of the construction was the subject River Cam with the historic of fierce local opposition city centre beyond. at the time. The road was built on the line of Coe Fen Lane, which joined the footpaths that crossed Coe Fen and Sheep’s Green. Today the road is very busy Fen Causeway SIGNIFICANCE - SIGNIFICANT General Overview At its eastern end Fen Causeway passes between the large properties of the Leys School to the south and the Royal Cambridge Hotel and University Department of Engineering to the north. Although the hotel is built up against the pavement, the car parks to the rear provide a large open space, whilst the school and engineering department stand back from the road behind high walls. The setback makes the street a light space, although the high buildings to either side channel views along the street in both directions. The grounds on either side provide greenery that softens the streetscene. The Royal Cambridge Hotel North House of the Leys School provides architectural interest as part of the late Victorian Methodist School complex, built in red brick with exuberant stone and brick detailing which provides a strong vertical emphasis. -
The Cam from Grantchester to Cambridge a Much Loved River in Need of Our Care
The Cam from Grantchester to Cambridge A much loved river in need of our care. Grantchester Meadows- Autumn 2019.. Michael Goodhart April 2021 Page 1 of 25 Introduction This document was prompted by the dismay over the damage caused by the crowds who sought refuge and recreation along the banks of the river Cam and in the river during the Pandemic of 2020- 2021. While most respected the river and its ecology, sadly, there were a small but significant minority who indulged in reckless, antisocial and damaging behaviour, showing little or no regard for this precious and beautiful stretch of water. This document explains the context and importance of the river. It illustrates the entire 2.8 miles length of the “upper river”, from Byrons Pool to Kings Mill Weir in Cambridge, and may provide a better understanding of the river’s rich history and precious ecology. It is hoped that it may motivate more people to want to protect it from damage, now and in the future. This is the first of the documents that has been prepared as part of Cam Valley Forum’s “Cam Safer Swim Initiative” (CSSI) If you wish to comment on this, please email [email protected]. You can see more information on Cam Valley Forum on our website here. https://camvalleyforum.uk/ Do join us. Michael Goodhart- Chair of Cam Safer Swim Initiative (CSSI) Cam Valley Forum 19th April 2012 Page 2 of 25 The Cam from Grantchester to Cambridge A much loved river in need of our care. 1. The sources of the River Cam include Chalk springs, such as those at Ashwell, Bassingbourne, Fowlmere, Melbourn, Hauxton, Thriplow and Horseheath. -
Hodson's Folly: 'Swimmers Temple'
Temples, Gardens and Characters Things soon went awry as Hodson’s fortunes collapsed according to his niece The provenance of the picture (shown) of the brewer Col. Dale (Owner of Hodson’s Folly: ‘Swimmers Temple’ Mrs E Fordham following the Whittaker Wright railway scam in 1900, which was Dale’s Brewery, Gwydir Street off Mill Road), has been difficult to determine, odson’s Folly is not listed, but is known as a Building of Local Interest (BLI). The investments for building the Bakerloo Line in London. Following this in 1901 it is suggested the picture was taken in 1903, Col. Dale would have been Folly is a small classical building in a walled garden. Hodson’s Folly is thought Hodson sold his garden for £300, the Folly and possibly his house ‘Waterloo 4 or 5 years old as he died in 1969 aged 71. It has been established that to have been built circa 1897, by Rattee and Kett stonemasons, a Cambridge House’ on Lensfield Road to Frederick Dale the local brewery magnate (Dale’s following John Hodson’s ‘loss of fortune‘ the Dale’s did purchase the HBusiness which appears to have ceased existence in 2011 after around 167 years of brewery Gwydir Street off Mill Road), the Dale’s family used the garden from land, which backs up the picture as circa 1903, does this mean that the trading (1844). They built Cambridge University Library in the 1930s, completely rebuilt this time and it was accepted that no-one intruded. In 1907 he was living at child in the picture is Col. -
Autumn / Winter 2012 Edition 30
Clare AUTUMN / WINTER 2012 News EDITION 30 CATS & DOGS OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS WOMEN AT CLARE FUTURE DEVELOPMENT Three Clare vets at one of the Foreign exchanges for Fortieth anniversary of Clare Clare’s development towards largest vetinerary hospitals. Clare students. as a mixed College. its 700th birthday. PAGE 2 PAGE 6 PAGE 8 PAGE 16 ALUMNI NEWS Cats & Dogs Three Clare vets Dr Clive Elwood (1983) manages one of the largest veterinary hospitals for cats and dogs in the UK, if not Europe. Forty vets, fifty nurses and tens of support staff keep him on his toes. Two of his vets are also Clare alumni, Mark Goodfellow (1994) and Mark Lowrie (1998). “It’s not at all like ‘James Herriott’, is the first thing to say. This is a modern hospital concentrating on advanced surgery on cats and dogs, which makes it different to most other practices. Surgery of this kind, historically, was done at universities but there is now a large private sector market.” Clive joined the Davies practice in 1998 and became managing director two years ago. “I didn’t have any clear ambitions when I was at Clare other than to be a vet. Although I got a Mark Goodfellow, Clive Elwood, Mark Lowrie First in my first year, I went downhill from there academically and coasted until I caught the over Clare bridge, said that he should apply for Clare Pageant ‘bug’ by visiting the University of Pennsylvania Clare. His mother, he says, is not someone you in the summer of my fifth year”. The bug was can say ‘no’ to. -
Queens' College, Cambridge
Visiting Queens’ The President, Fellows, Students and Staff of Queens’ College, Cambridge welcome you. The College is both an important historical and architectural site, and a dynamic, working institution. Spanning both banks of the River Cam on Silver Street, Queens’ is one of the largest of Cambridge’s thirty one Colleges and the ninth oldest. The College has been a site for learning for over 560 years, and today is a community, a home and a place of study and research for our President, 90 Fellows, 400 Graduate Students, 530 Undergraduate Students and 120 College Staff. We hope that you enjoy your visit and ask that you please respect the College as a place of study. You are requested: • Not to walk on the grass or on the river banks. • Not to take picnics in the College grounds. • Not to enter staircases or areas marked ‘private’. • Not to smoke anywhere in the College. • Not to block the narrow pathways. • To observe all instructions given by College Staff. Please be aware that some surfaces are uneven and in wet weather may be slippery. You need to take great care when near the river. Contents 1 The Foundation of Queens’ Queens’ College College 3 Patronesses 5 Old Court 6 The Gate and Gatehouse 14 The Old Library and War Memorial Library 18 Old Hall 24 Cloister Court 42 27 The President’s Lodge 28 Walnut Tree Court 31 The College Chapel 35 Friars’ Court 38 The Wooden Bridge 41 38 41 Fisher Building and the Round 42 Cripps Court and Lyon Court 27 24 18 35 31 14 28 5 The President’s Lodge, the Old Library, the War Memorial Library and Cripps Dining Hall are not open to visitors. -
Trumpington and Cambridge Connections
TRUMPINGTON HISTORY TRAILS Trumpington and Cambridge Connections Explore the Route between Trumpington and Cambridge 2 Walk or cycle, approximately 6 miles/9.7 kms walk on pavements and footpaths; cycle on roads and dual use paths 1. Start at the green by the shops, Anstey Way Go from the green to the High Street, turn left and go to the junction with Shelford Road. 2. Turnpikes to Cambridge The High Street follows the route from the south to Cambridge. From the 1720s, two turnpike roads merged at this junction: from Barkway (straight ahead) and Great Chesterford (from the left) (Feature A). The tollhouse on the other side of the High Street was built in 1811, with a weighbridge added to its right in 1863. Return to the pedestrian lights, cross, turn right, continue along the High Street to the War Memorial. 3. War Memorial and Cross Hill The War Memorial was dedicated in 1921 at Cross Hill, the same location as the Medieval village cross (Trail 1). The surroundings were renovated in 2014. Through the gates to the left, there is a lodge and the driveway to Trumpington Hall. Continue along the High Street (Trail 1) and its continuation, Trumpington Road. Go a short distance beyond the Long Road junction and stop opposite the school sign on the right. 4. Trumpington Road The building across the road is Leighton House (the Perse Preparatory School), built in 1866-69 for Cambridge philanthropist and retailer Robert Sayle (his store is now the Cambridge John Lewis’s). The grounds were called Gibbet Hill, the site of a gallows until the late 1700s. -
Crested Cow-Wheat in Trouble C
Nature in Cambridgeshire No 55 2013 Plate 1 Riffle and kingfisher bank Plate 4 Restored ditch to give two-stage channel. Plate 2 Shoal creation through gravel placement Plate 5 Reed-bed two years after planting. Photographs by Rob Mungovan. See article on page 49 Plate 3 Log jam bank CONTENTS Muntjac Deer in Cambridgeshire Arnold Cooke 3 Crested Cow-wheat in trouble C. James Cadbury 22 The Hemiptera of Coe Fen, Cambridge Alex Dittrich, Alvin Helden, Rodi Mackzenie & Guy Belcher 32 Marsh Carpet moth larvae at Wicken Fen Norman Sills 37 Cambridgeshire Otter Survey – 2012 Peter Pilbeam 44 A Land Flatworm new to Britain Brian Eversham 46 River Cam Habitat Enhancement Project Rob Mungovan 49 Symphytum ´ perringianum in Cambridge Philip H. Oswald 57 A recovery programme for wetland plants at the Kingfishers Bridge Reserve Roger C. Beecroft, C. James Cadbury, & Stephen P. Tomkins 60 Contributions towards a new algal flora of Cambridgeshire:7. Rhodophyta. Hilary Belcher, Erica Swale and Eric George 71 Diptera of the Devil’s Ditch, Cambridgeshire I Perry 76 Lichens in the West Cambridgeshire woodlands Mark Powell, Louise Bacon and the Cambridge Lichen Group 87 Waterbeach Airfield and Barracks Louise Bacon 96 Trumpington Meadows CNHS Survey Jonathan Shanklin 100 A New Era for Cambridge University Herbarium Christine Bartram 108 Announcing a Fenland Flora Owen Mountford and Jonathan Graham 112 Green-flowered Helleborine in Cambridge Monica Frisch 116 Bourn Free Jess Hatchett, Ruth Hawksley & Vince Lea 118 Geodiversity Ken Rolfe 127 Additional Sulphur Clover populations Philippa M. Harding and Paul T. Harding 129 Sulphur Clover: a correction Louise Bacon 131 Vascular Plant Records Alan Leslie 131 Bryophyte records M. -
The Occasional Newsletter of the Cam Valley Forum
CAM VALLEY MATTERS No.1, 3 June 2013 The Occasional Newsletter of the Cam Valley Forum http://www.colc.co.uk/cambridge/cam.valley.forum/ Chair: Jean Perraton Editor: David Brooks Please reply with any items suitable for the next newsletter, forward this letter to anyone else who may be interested, or, if you wish, reply to request that your address be taken off this emailing list. The Draft Local Plan 2014 for (the City of) Cambridge sets out some important principles to guide development along the river corridors of the Cam and its tributaries. ‘Policy 7’ states that proposals should: a. include an assessment of views of the river and a demonstration that the proposed design of the development has taken account of the assessment in enhancing views to and from the river; b. protect and enhance the unique physical, natural and culturally distinctive landscape of the River Cam; c. raise, where possible, the quality of the river, adjacent open spaces and the integrity of the built environment in terms of its impact, location, scale, design and form; d. propose, where possible, enhancement of the natural resources of the River Cam and offer opportunities for re‐naturalisation of the river; e. enable, where possible, opportunities for greater public access to the River Cam; and f. take account of and support as appropriate the tourism and recreational facilities in the corridor. One of the Plan’s most exciting proposals is the designation (Policy 15, Fig 3.4 on page 56) of the area between the Cherry Hinton Brook and Coldham’s Lane as an “Area of Major Change”. -
Parks and Open Spaces Biodiversity Toolkit
Cambridge City Council parks & open spaces BIODIVERSITY TOOLKIT RE-THINKING AND ENHANCING PUBLIC OPEN SPACES TO BENEFIT BIODIVERSITY AND PEOPLE 1 WELCOME! I am so pleased that this guide is now available, and I am sure that it will provide inspiration to us all to do what we can to make sure our beautiful parks and open spaces can support a wide range of plants and animals. Improving biodiversity is one of the most important things we can do to counter the effects of climate change, and the advice given here will help us make sure that we can co-exist with other species and help threatened wildlife adapt to the impact of global heating. Cambridge is fortunate to have an amazing range of community groups, residents associations and wildlife associations who care about the environment, and our team is working closely with many of them. I encourage everyone to get involved - if being in a park can make you feel good, then getting involved with park projects, learn- ing more about local wildlife, and making a difference, is even better. At the City Council we are doing all we can to ensure that land we look after is hospitable to wildlife, but there’s a lot that you can do too, in your garden or in the spaces around your workplace. We want to create more space for plants and animals and connect them together to form ‘linked habitats’, and many of the suggestions in this guide will work for gardens and spaces of any size, so please give them a go. -
CAMBRIDGE STREET-NAMES Their Origins and Associations
Cambridge University Press 0521789567 - Cambridge Street-Names: Their Origins and Associations Ronald Gray and Derek Stubbings Frontmatter More information CAMBRIDGE STREET-NAMES Their Origins and Associations This book draws on the great wealth ofassociations ofstreet- names in Cambridge. It is not a dictionary but provides a series ofentries on such topics as the Reformation, George IV and his wife, twentieth-century scientists, businessmen, Elizabethan times, medieval Cambridge, mayors, millers and builders. It includes hermits and coal merchants, field-marshals and laun- dresses, martyrs and bombers, unscrupulous politicians and the founder of a Christian community, Cromwell and Newton, an Anglo-Saxon queen, Stalin’s daughter and the discoverer of Uranus – all people who lived in or often visited Cambridge. The ancient Stourbridge Fair is included, along with castles and boat-races, sewage pumps and the original Hobson of ‘Hobson’s Choice’. Who was St Tibb? Where did Dick Turpin hide? Where was the medieval takeaway? Unlike earlier works, this is a history of everybody for everybody, not least for teach- ers, for whom the many references to other works will be helpful. The book also sheds light on such questions as which names are preferred, and how such choices may benefit the soci- ological study ofCambridge. The entries are spiced with anec- dotes and epigrams, and a number ofdrawings by the architect and planner, Virén Sahai OBE, are included. is a Fellow ofEmmanuel College, Cambridge, having formerly been Vice-Master of the college -
River Cam, Cambridge to Grantchester Easy Trail: Please Be Aware That the Grading of This Trail Was Set According to Normal Water Levels and Conditions
River Cam, Cambridge to Grantchester Easy Trail: Please be aware that the grading of this trail was set according to normal water levels and conditions. Weather and water level/conditions can change the nature of trail within a short space of time so please ensure you check both of these before heading out. Distance: 12 miles Approximate Time: 3-8 Hours The time has been estimated based on you travelling 3 – 5mph (a leisurely pace using a recreational type of boat). Type of Trail: Out and Back Waterways Travelled: River Cam Type of Water: River navigation Portages and Locks: One lock and one set of rollers each way, four in all. Route Summary Nearest Town: Cambridge Start and finish: Fen Road, Chesterton, CB4 1TX The tranquil River Cam rises at Ashwell in Hertfordshire O.S. Sheets: Landranger No. 154 – Cambridge and and meanders to Cambridge, flows along the ‘Backs’ Newmarket past the historical colleges and then on to join the Ely Ouse and thus on to Denver Sluice. It is regularly canoed Licence Information: A licence is required to paddle from Hauxton and is a statutory navigation from Byron’s on this waterway. See full details in useful information Pool. below. Local Facilities: For location of pubs please see Start and Finish Directions below Small (free) Car Park adjacent to the (now closed) Penny Ferry pub in Fen Road, Chesterton, CB4 1TX. TL 470670 Page 1 of 5 Description Start at the small car park beside the river in Water Lane, Chesterton, just beside the now defunct ‘Penny Ferry Pub’ Paddle upstream (right).