The list below of links to the Capturing Cambridge website is a selection of the more interesting entries en route. Information about most of the buildings, and their historical occupants, that you will pass on this tour, and many that have vanished, can be accessed on the web site.
As with our other tours, suggestions of corrections and additions are most welcome and should be offered via the email address on the website.
Note the City Council’s own study of this area:
https://www.cambridge.gov.uk/media/2844/new-town-and-glisson-road-area-appraisal.pdf
Start at the junction of Tenison and Devonshire Road. Proceed along Devonshire Road.
1.97 Tenison Road, corner with Devonshire Road, home of the Bausor family and Youth Hostel
2. 42 Devonshire Road, home of Edward Parmenter, engine driver
3. 40 Devonshire Road, home of Col-Sergt Waldron, recruiting officer for Royal Navy and Royal Marines
4. 18 Devonshire Road, home of Walter Laird, RSPCA inspector
5. 4 Devonshire Road, Railway Mission Hall
6. 1-2 Devonshire Road, Midland tavern
7. 112 Mill Road, Great Eastern Temperance Hotel
Turn left on to Mill Road
8. 109 Mill Road (north side), The White Swan
9. 100 Mill Road, home of John and Susan Brooks
10. 103 Mill Road (north side), home of Adelaide Waters
11. 94a Mill Road, Mrs Gee reminisces
12. 92a Mill Road
13. 99 Mill Road, The Bath House (north side)
Turn left into St Barnabas Road
15. 57 St Barnabas Road, vicarage
16. 55 St Barnabas Road, W H Duke, lecturer in classic
17. 49 St Barnabas Road, 2nd Lt Islay Ferrier Burns, killed in action 1917
18. 58 St Barnabas Road, home of the Sennitt family and the German spy Jan Ter Braak 1940-41
19. 50 St Barnabas Road, home of David Diringer, linguist and palaeographer
20. 19 St Barnabas Road, home of Alexander Wood, physicist
21. 17 St Barnabas Road, home of Uberto Limentani, Italian academic
15 St Barnabas Road, home of zoologist Sydney Smith and his sister Kate
16a St Barnabas Road, modern German eco-house built in 2015
22. 12 St Barnabas Road, early flying machine
23. 11 St Barnabas Road, home of Israel Abrahams, Jewish scholar
24. 6 St Barnabas Road, Lt-Col Saint DSO, died of wound 1918
25. 4 St Barnabas Road, home of Bausor family
26. 2 St Barnabas Road, Capt. Alec John MC, killed 1918
Turn left into Tenison Road
27. 93 Tenison Road, Haydn H Inwards, teacher of music
28. 126-128 Tenison Road, Bedwell’s Organ Works
29. 134 Tenison Road, L-Corporal Gilbert Townsend, killed in action 1915
30. 152 Tenison Road, home of Edward Baker
Turn left into Station Road
31. Wilton Terrace (demolished 2016)
32. 4 Wilton Terrace, 38 Station Road, (site of) home of Thorold Gosset, mathematician
33. 3 Wilton Terrace, (site of) home of Thomas Ball, discoverer of superphosphates
34. 2 Wilton Terrace, (site of) home of organist and composer Felix Morley
35. 1 Wilton Terrace, (site of) 32 Station Road, home of Alfred Kett, builder, son of George Kett
Return west along Station Road
36. 29 Station Road, Basque Refugee Hostel, home of Robert Farren, artist
37. 27 Station Road, home of William Skeet, philologist
38. 25 Station Road, home of Alexander Kirkpatrick, professor of Hebrew
39. 16 Station Road, (site of) home of Tillyard family
40. 23 Station Road, home of Tebbutt famil. 2nd Lt Oswald Tebbutt killed in action 1915; 2nd Lt Roger Tebbutt killed in action 1918.
41. 21 Station Road, home of physicist John Strutt 3rd Baron Rayleigh
42. 19 Station Road, home of Thomas Birks, theologian
43. 17 Station Road, home of William Wright, orientalist
44. 13 Station Road, home of Passingham then Kett families
45. 1 Station Road (Hills Road), Great Northern Hotel
46. 2 Station Road, Poplar Cottage, (site of) Rattee and Kett building yard
47. Station Road
48. The Homecoming War Memorial
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