Falcon Yard was a lane that ran from Petty Cury to St Tibb’s Row. The Falcon inn was in existence in the 16th century. Queen Mary saw ‘a play at the Fawcon Inn’ in 1557. Lord North stayed at the ‘Falcon’ during the reign of Elizabeth I.
1850 Morning Chronicle: 27.9.1850: Labour and the Poor
In many parts of the town of Cambridge the dwellings of the poor are also in the most disgraceful condition. I might refer to King street and the alleys leading therefrom, to Christ’s lane, and other places. But perhaps the worst of all is a place called Falcon yard. In one of the houses which I visited there were thirteen families residing. In a room on one of the floors lived a man, his wife, and five children. The eldest boy was sixteen years of age, the eldest girl, a little over fourteen, having been for several months a common prostitute, and three younger children, together with the parents, all slept in one and the same room: the eldest boy and girl and two other children in one bed on the floor, the father, mother, and one child, on a stump bedstead. The number of persons residing in this Falcon-yard, I was informed, was about 300. There are two privies for the use of the whole of the inhabitants, but as they are at a distance of about fifty yards from some portion of the premises, those of the inhabitants who have back windows to their rooms are in the habit of throwing all their refuse out of the windows on to a large dung-heap in the Red Lion-yard, the reeking steam from which is constantly penetrating the rooms. “Here,” said one of the inmates of this crowded and dirty yard, “this is my grand hole that I pays sixteen pence a week for – this is where me and my husband and daughters sleeps; the bed is about as big as an old pocket handkerchief. I have been here four and thirty years.” “I’ve got two rooms,” said another person, ” and here’s our bed-room,” opening at the same time a small door which led to a dark recess in which there was no window or light whatever. A piece of paper, however, was lighted, and I was then enabled to distinguish the form of a bedstead in one corner, and a heap of bed clothes on the floor in the opposite portion of this “black hole.” The “Falcon,” which gives its name to the yard was formerly a very extensive inn. There is an old-fashioned gallery which runs round the yard, and the different apartments round this gallery have been let off to lodgers at rents varying from 1s. 4d. to 2s. per week. Several of them are kept remarkably clean, considering the character of the place, but the majority are as wretched as it is possible to conceive. They are all of them very dark and ill-ventilated……
1861
(12) Ralph Gravestock, 57, carpenter, b Beds
(11) William Coleman, 38, porter, b Suffolk
(10) William Arnold, 28, mail cart contractor PO, b Cambridge
(9) William Plane, 46, shoeing smith, b Norfolk
(8) George Jarvis, 41, bricklayer, b Cambridge
(7) John Greenwood, 33, b Cambridge
(6) Samuel Sharrocks, 39, hatter, b Nottingham
(5) Robert Dyer, 50, labourer and publican, b Cambridge
(27, 28, 29 Rooms) :
Sarah Sayer, head, 59, shoe binder, b Fowlmere
Eliza Langran, head, 50, charwoman, b Cambridge
1870
1878 Kelly’s
William Goddard, whitesmith, Falcon Yard, Petty Cury
1913
James Valentine Pryor, fishmonger, game dealer and ice merchant
Cury Chambers: Fenn D’Albani and Ellis solicitors
University Musical Club
University Boxing and Fencing Club
Back of YMCA
12,13,14 Roe Roger warehouse for furniture
The Falcon Ice Works
Lipton’s Stores
For Mary Greene’s description of Falcon Yard see her autobiography, The Joy of Remembering.
1937
Falcon Ice Works (Mac Fisheries Ltd)
(17) British Legion
(17) Toc H
1962
(5) Footlights Dramatic Club
(5) University Cruising Club
(2) Cambridge International Club
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