1662/4 Robert Abbott succeeded by Nicholas Apethorp, maltster
1692 property bought as an investment for Peirce Dent, apothecary and his wife Deborah.
1785 Dent grandson sold property to Joseph Willett, gardener and greengrocer. At time property consisted of two tenements and a ‘garden ground’. Willett occupied one of the tenements: according to evidence given in 1858 by Robert Hills, paper hanger, he lived ‘in a house now occupied by Twiney the chemist next to Hobb’s court. then called Willett’s yard.’ The yard was called Hobb’s in 1858 because William Setchfield Hobbs, himself a chemist, bought the whole property in 1848.
1851
William S Hobbs, 51, chemist and druggist, b Whittlesea
Mary A, 53, b Whitechapel
Daniel, nephew, 6, b Peterborough
William A Ewen, 24, assistant chemist and druggist, b Spalding
Mary Bensbard, 19, house servant, b Great Wilbraham
James M Foster, lodger, 63, retired engine maker, b Cambridge
James Michael Foster was the son of Richard Foster of Thompson’s Lane. James died Castle Street, 24th Apr. 1853.
1861
William S Hobbs, 60, chemist, b Whittlesea
(43?) William Hills, 33, hairdresser, b Surrey
Hobb’s Passage:
(1) Alfred Brockett, 29, fly driver, b Guilden Morden
(2) John Fordham, 28, miller, b Chesterton
(3) Charles Cooper, 29, college servant, b Cambridge
1873 bought from Daniel Hobbs by St John’s for £996. It was a house and chemist’s shop with a passage leading to a warehouse and two small cottages and a stable.
1911
Horace Coulson, 38, chemist, b Cambridge
Alice Charlotte, 29, b Elsworth
Horace Bernard, 3, b Cambridge
Gordon Neale, 8 mos, b Cambridge
Gertrude Emily, 17, servant, b Dry Drayton
1913
Horace Coulson, photographic and dispensing chemist
Coulson’s Passage:
1 & 2 Horace Coulson, chemist, storerooms
3 J Mayes
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