Memory Lane (2004), Swavesey History Society, has a chapter by Joyce and Bill Chowings – “Where is the Rose and Crown?”
1765 licensee Sarah Wilderspin
1779 Archibald Wilderspin
1797 – 1812 Samuel Thorp
1812 Joseph Thorp
1841 Joseph Thorp, butcher
1850 inquest held into death of 4 month old sick child had been given poppy tea. Child died the next morning and a verdict of death from convulsions was returned. These would have been caused by the opiates in the poppies. (Swavesey Chronicle, Cambridge Chronicle)
1859 sold by Thompson’s Lane Brewery, Cambridge. Described as having two parlors, taproom, four bedrooms, cellar and dairy.
1861 High Street ‘Rose and Crown’
Joseph Thorp, 57, innkeeper and farmer 15 acres, b Swavesey
Mary Ann, 19, b Swavesey
Sarah, 13, b Swavesey
Charles Kester, 15, servant, b Swavesey
1860s – 1880s: Robert Webster, 22 acres
Ann wife
Robert, son, plumber and glazier
1881
Robert Webster
Ann
Jane, daughter
Christopher Ingle, grandson
1891
Robert and Eliza Ellwood, sausage skin cleaners
1909 Rose and Crown demolished and house built. Daisley’s move into Rosedale. There remains attached a building that predates 1909. There is also a cellar.
William Daisley was a shopkeeper from 299 Mill Road, Cambridge. He had been born in Swavesey where his mother had been working in 1881. An inheritance by William’s wife, Nellie Constance, made the new house possible. He was a perfectionist and insisted on the very highest workmanship.
1939
William Daisley, b 1862, farmer own account
Douglas Gee Daisley, b 1916, farmer assisting father
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