Capturing Cambridge
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43 (16) Norfolk Terrace

History of 43 Norfolk Terrace

1871 (16)

Samuel L Coulson, 30, tailor, b Cambridge

Louisa E, 30, b Cambridge

Lucy, 3, b Cambridge

John Baker, 69, widower, father-in-law, printers warehouseman, b Middlesex

 

1881 (16)

Charles Baldrey, 24, clerk, b Cambridge

Alice, 25, b Cambridge

Arthur, 7, scholar, b Cambridge

Ada M, 5, b Cambridge

Frederick C, 3, b Cambridge

Ernest E, 1 month, b Cambridge

Alfred Brown, 23, lodger, coal porter, b Cambridge

 

1891

John Bain, 29, stonemason, b Peterborough

Kate, 27, b Cambridge

Sarah, 60, widow, mother, nurse, b Whittlesea

Thirza Underwood, 30, sister-in-law, tailoress, b Cambridge

 

1901

Albert Lander, 33, college kitchen porter, b Cambridge

Mary A, 33, college helper, b Essex

George L, 13, school, b Cambridge

Jessie E, 11, school, b Cambridge

Mildred E, 9, school, b Cambridge

Agnes N, 7, school, b Cambridge

Harry W, 6, school, b Cambridge

Elizabeth J Frost, 22, domestic, b Essex

 

1911

John Samuel Curwain, 35, wine merchants porter, b Cambridge

Alethea Maud, 31, b Great Wilbraham

Hilda Marian, 10, school, b Cambridge

Stanley John Leonard, 7, school, b Cambridge

Albert Arthur, 6, school, b Cambridge

Kathleen Marjorie, 4, b Cambridge

Reginald George, 1, b Cambridge

Harry Edward Bond, 32, boarder, college waiter, b Cambridge

 

1939

John S Curwain, b 1876, college waiter

Alethea, b 1878, housewife

Reginald G, b 1909, compositor printing

George E, b 1911, dancing teacher

Samuel W, b 1913, disabled

Gladys E Matthews, b 1918, laundry packer and sorter

1 closed record

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

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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.

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Thank you,
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Museum of Cambridge