Listed Building:
Early C18 with C20 alterations and additions. Timber-framed and plastered with C18 panelled decoration. Ridged pantiled roof formerly thatched.
In 1930 the Routh family moved here from Norman Hall, Ickleton. The house name was changed to Surdeval Cottage but reverted later in the building’s history.
While here, Prudence Richarda Eveleen Routh went to school at the Girls Perse in Cambridge.
In the 1939 Register the only name shown at this address is that of Prudence Routh, b 22nd November 1923.
Her mother died in 1941 at the cottage; her father died in 1945. She married, aged 21, the engineer Norman Morrow-Tait, and in 1946 became the first person to be granted a civil pilot’s license after World War II. In October 1946 their first child, Anna, was born. At some point before her famous flight, the family seem to have moved to St Regis, Chesterton Road.
On 18th August she took off from Marshall Airport, Cambridge and travelled to Croydon airport, the official start of her round the world journey. Her navigator for the journey was her childhood friend and experience RAF navigator, Michael Townsend. She arrived back at Croydon on 19th August 1949.
She divorced Norman Morrow-Tait in 1951 and later that year married Michael Townsend.
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