Capturing Cambridge
  • search
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
53 High Street, Melbourn

53 / 55 High Street, The Anchor, Melbourn

History of 53 / 55 High Street, Melbourn

Listed building:

House, formerly The Anchor public house. C16. Timber framed roughcast rendered and tiled roof with later end stacks. Wing at rear now forms an L plan.

In c.1840 it was owned by Thomas Dickason Titchmarsh and occupied by Mynott Titchmarsh, farmer. It became the Anchor P.H. in 1840’s when Mynott Titchmarsh moved to a farmstead in fields after enclosure.

The Anchor, Melbourn

In 2022, K B sent this email: My great grandfather Frederick B Marcks was publican at The Anchor and ran it with his wife Polly from about 1931 until the beginning of the WW2. Frederick had been in the army all his life and ran the pub in his retirement. When the war started he moved to Hornchurch where he ran a flying officers mess for the duration of the war. There was an old two story sized rectangular dove cote at the end of the garden which was demolished at a later date. Beyond the garden were two fields, one for growing vegetables and the other with a permanent built marquee for weddings etc. The main house was built from clunch, chalky limestone bricks cut from nearby open clunch pits.

 

Contribute

Do you have any information about the people or places in this article? If so, then please let us know using the Contact page or by emailing capturingcambridge@museumofcambridge.org.uk.

Licence

This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Dear Visitor,

Thank you for exploring historical Cambridgeshire! We hope you enjoy your visit and, if you do,  would consider making a donation today.

Capturing Cambridge makes accessible thousands of photos and memories of Cambridge and its surrounding villages and towns. It is run by the Museum of Cambridge which, though 90 years old, is one of the most poorly publicly funded local history museums in the UK. It receives no core funding from local or central government nor from the University of Cambridge.

As a result, we are facing a crisis; we have no financial cushion – unlike many other museums in Cambridge – and are facing the need to drastically cut back our operations which could affect our ability to continue to run and develop this groundbreaking local history website.

If Capturing Cambridge matters to you, then the survival of the Museum of the Cambridge should matter as well. If you won’t support the preservation of your heritage, no-one else will! Your support is critical.

If you love Capturing Cambridge, and you are able to, we’d appreciate your support.

Every donation makes a world of difference.

Thank you,
Roger Lilley, Chair of Trustees
Museum of Cambridge