The 1831 New Guide to Cambridge states: Wray’s Almshouses which have been lately repaired and new fronted, they were founded in 1620, by Henry Wray, stationer, for four poor widowers and as many widows of trinity parish, each of whom receives from the rents of certain estates and the interest of money invested for their benefit, about 20l per annum.
The Almshouses were remodelled in 1838 with a passage to a courtyard on the N flanked by ranges each of four dwellings wholly of 1838. (see 1959 Royal Commission on Historical Monuments Survey of Cambridge)
(1) Susannah Cooper, 77, almswoman formerly schoolmistress, b Suffolk
(2)
Mary Hayles, 66, almswoman, b Melbourne
(3)
Ann Brown, 72, almswoman formerly leather glover, b Bassingbourne
(4)
Ann Brown, 74, almswoman, b Cambridge
(5)
William Ingram, 78, almsman formerly tailor, b Ely
(6)
John Cooper Reeves, 74, almsman formerly bricklayer, b Cambridge
(7)
George Gillingham, 84, almsman formerly whitesmith, b Little Shelford
(8)
William Hinson, 74, almsman formerly cabinet maker, b Cambridge
demolished
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