1841 Maids Causeway
Richard Leach, 45, painter,
Barnet, 15
Frederick, 4,
Ellen, 7,
John, 4,
Richard Hopkins Leach was born in 1794 to a family of Cambridge college servant; his grandfathers were cooks at Trinity and Trinity Hall. His parents ran pubs including the Pickerel in Magdalene Street. In 1812 he was apprenticed to an engraver in Vauxhall, London, and fell in love with the boss’s daughter, Isabella Mc Lean.
The Museum of Cambridge has handwritten transcriptions of the 1814 Diary of his walk to Cornwall, as well as of his letter of proposal of marriage to Isabella. See here for sample pages.
In 1814 he walked to Cornwall and kept a diary and sketch book. In 1817 he returned from the West Country to Cambridge and set up in business as a painter and decorator in 1818. In 1820 he married Isabella. The suggestion that he bought a house on the site of The Zebra public house is incorrect; this is the house he bought. Of the 13 children hey had, only four survived to adulthood; the others seem to have died of cholera. As regards their surviving sons:
Barnett became a painter and engraver who worked with his father on the illustrations for a book on Cambridge colleges,
Frederick Richard founded a decorating business and worked with William Morris,
John became an engraver in wood and stone who worked at Lichfield Cathedral.
These notes were prepared by Noreen Hackett (née Leach) and sent to the Museum in 1993. A large number of letters, journals and diaries, as well as family paintings are still held descendants.
1851
Richard Hopkins Leach, 56, master painter, b Cambridge
Isabella, 56, b London
Barnett, 27, painter, b Cambridge
Frederick, 14, b Cambridge
John, 11, b Cambridge
In 1861 Isabella was a widow living at 1 Newmarket Road
The museum biography of Richard leach notes the following works:
A painting of Trinity first boat ordered by the college boat club in 1845
An 1848 family portrait owned by the leach family
Several scenes of Cambridge life such as cricket matches and militia parades on Parker’s Piece. See also Garret Hostel Bridge.
Pub signs include:
The Pike and Eel on the Cam
The Chequers in Ely.
The Old Castle Hotel, Cambridge
The John Gilpin
[photo needed]
Leach painted these signs in the 1830s and 1840s; board was supplied by the landlord and he was paid 15 shillings.
Richard Leach died suddenly on 31st August 1851; an account of this is in a diary kept by his son Frederick.
For further correspondence about Leach family.
1861
Richard Wicks, 71, gardener, b Norfolk
Sarah, 71, b Cherry Hinton
1901
William Ridley
1913
William Ridley, painter
1918
Miss Lilian Maria Ridley, a teacher in Runcorn, died of influenza at the end of October 1918.
Elizabeth Mary Ridley, age 29, died from influenza 11.11.1918
1962
Miss A E Bush, corsetiere
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@
This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0