In 1923 W M palmer wrote:
The most frequent walk we took was along the Kneesworth Road as far as the turnpike, or Robin Hood’s tree. The turnpike stood a little on the Royston side of the Ashwell Street and was not done away with until 1878. The Robin Hood tree stood on the right had side of the road near the chalk pit. It was an ancient white-thorn tree, which 45 years ago ha already split into three and has now quite disappeared. The tradition was handed down by each generation of schoolboys was, that it had grown out of the shaft of an arrow which Robin Hood had shot from Linloe Hill, Litlington. This was, of course, an impossible shot, but the name for the locality is an old one. On old ordnance maps the name Robin Hood appears across the road which runs parallel to the main road on the Litlington side, was once known as Robin Hood Way and may be still.
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