William Bacon, 45, tobacconist [this is the William Bacon whose former property at 63 Sidney Street Charles Darwin lodged at when an undergraduate. In 1851 William Bacon was a widower living at 40 Hills Road].
There were many famous customers: Edward Fitzgerald, HRH Prince of Wales (later Edward VII), Tennyson, Charles Kingsley, and Samuel Butler.
Mary, 32
Thomas, 16
George, 10
Frederick, 9
Sophia, 1
infant, 3 mos,
Charlotte Speed, 24, servant
Mary Morgan, 15, servant
Ann Barton, 60, servant
Ann Adams, 64, servant
Henry Thompson, 25, independent
Edward Baker, 24, independent
Burwell Chronicle 3/1/1846 reports that a man named Coxall defrauded a merchant called John Warren by ordering brandy, rum etc to the value of £9 15s, under the pretext that he had opened a pub in Burwell called the The Green Man. Coxall was arrested and it was discovered that he had also defrauded Messrs Bacon of Market Hill of tobacco worth more than £2.
James Bacon, tobacconist
James Bacon, 56, tobacconist
Martha Ann
Mary Ann Marsh, 27, servant, b Cambs
Elizabeth Thurby, 21, cook, b Shelford
James Bacon, head, 67, tobacconist, b Norfolk
Martha A, 56, b Cambridge
Ann Pulford, 24, cook, b Norfolk
James J Bacon, head, 37, tobacconist, b Essex
Martha P, 33, b Cambridge
Martha E, 15, b London
Jessie, 11, b London
Minnie,9, b London
Claude E, 6, b London
Eveline M, 6 mos, b Cambridge
Frances Hasler, 17, servant, nursemaid, b Cambridge
Isabella Deane, 18, servant, housemaid, b Gt Shelford
James John Bacon, 47, tobacconist, b Cambridge
Martha P, 43, b Cambridge
Martha E, 25, b London
Jessie, 21, b London
Eveline M, 9, b Cambridge
Leslie R, 7, b Cambridge
Sarah A Nightingale, 20, servant, b Girton
Louisa Harris, 20, servant, b Fulbourn
Archibald C Norman, 18, undergraduate, b Middlesex
John F W Deacon, 21, undergraduate, b Kent
Frederick Musselwhite, 25, groom to J F W Deacon, b Barford
Bacon Bros, tobacco and cigarette manufacturers and cigar importers
16a: Mrs E Mason
19/10/1929 With the passing of Mrs Eliza Jane Mason of the Livingstone Hotel, Petty Cury, Cambridge has lost a prominent member of the restaurant business. She commenced business with a university lodging house on Market Hill which became known as ‘Masons’ and was converted into a restaurant. It was largely used by cadets and catered for the officers stationed here during the Great War. Almost the first Belgian wounded soldiers were billeted there and she acted as a sort of nursing mother to them. Her next move was to Sadd’s before she bought the Livingstone Hotel which was then only a coffee house. It is now one of the best commercial hotels in Cambridge. She also built the Rendezvous, Magrath Avenue as a skating rink in 1909. (Cam.News)
1/8/1934 Gonville and Caius College’s scheme for the complete rebuilding of the block of shops and houses on the north side of Cambridge Market Hill has been finally approved. At present the site from Rose Crescent to St Mary’s Court is occupied by a group of houses, mostly of the 18th century. Their disappearance will be regretted, even by those who knew how dilapidated they had become behind their neat Georgian facades. But the whole effect of the completed block should stifle these regrets. The shops will be set back seven feet with upper rooms carried on slender pillars. (Cam.News)
1/8/1934 After a history of 100 years it is hardly surprising that there is a thorough tobacco atmosphere about the shop of Messrs Bacon Bros which has stood on Market Hill since 1805 and the news that it is to be pulled down with cause regret to many. A number of ledgers over 100 years old, containing fascinating information about the smokers have come to light including the original accounts sent to C.S. Calverley whose ‘Ode to Tobacco’ [below] appears on the outer wall of the shop. A new shop will be built on almost the same spot. (Cam.News)
Thou who, when fears attack,
Bid’st them avaunt, and Black
Care, at the horseman’s back
Perching, unseatest;
Sweet when the morn is grey;
Sweet, when they’ve cleared away
Lunch; and at close of day
Possibly sweetest:
I have a liking old
For thee, though manifold
Stories, I know, are told,
Not to thy credit;
How one (or two at most)
Drops make a cat a ghost—
Useless, except to roast—
Doctors have said it:
How they who use fusees
All grow by slow degrees
Brainless as chimpanzees,
Meagre as lizards;
Go mad, and beat their wives;
Plunge (after shocking lives)
Razors and carving knives
Into their gizzards.
Confound such knavish tricks!
Yet know I five or six
Smokers who freely mix
Still with their neighbours;
Jones—who, I’m glad to say,
Asked leave of Mrs. J.)—
Daily absorbs a clay
After his labours.
Cats may have had their goose
Cooked by tobacco-juice;
Still why deny its use
Thoughtfully taken?
We’re not as tabbies are:
Smith, take a fresh cigar!
Jones, the tobacco-jar!
Here’s to thee, Bacon!
In 1935 S C Roberts wrote:
Apart from certain alterations to the frontage in 1894 Bacon’s shop differed little from the days of its founder. It is therefore with a tinge of regret for things past that one looks upon the new premises, since although the inside of the store still contains many relicts of bygone days, the march of progress has precluded any serious attempt to reproduce the old style of the exterior. Nevertheless, consolation may be sought in the fact that this is now one of the finest tobacco stores of its kind in the kingdom.
1946
The museum was given a large wooden figure of a Turk from Bacon’s shop, thanks to the Executors of the late Mr F R Whitaker
Bacon’s closed
French Connection
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