History
Stapleford is first mentioned in 956 when it
was given the Latinised name of Stapelforda. Unlike
most parishes the spelling has hardly changed
since then. The parish, however, was inhabited
long before this. Wandlebury Ring, which lies
within the parish boundary, is an Iron Age hill
fort, originally built in the third century B.C.,
but rebuilt with a double bank in the first century
A.D.
The village probably began near the ford across
the Granta in the south-west corner of the parish,
by a post (a staple) which marked the ford and
gave the village its name.
On the north-west side of the parish there were
some sixty acres of open-field land, called the
Ming Lands which were shared with Great Shelford.
The Inclosure award of 1814 drew a boundary between
the two parishes, though the memory still survives
in Mingle Lane.
Until the Inclosure in 1814 there survived a
Green of about thirty acres (12 hectares), which
extended from Bar Lane across the sites of Cherry
Tree Avenue and Greenfield Close to the far side
of Haverhill Road, up Bar Lane nearly to Green
Hedge Farm and across Bar Lane to include the site of the School. This Green, including
the pond on the corner of Bury Road and Haverhill
Road was then allotted to separate owners and
at the same time Bar Lane was laid out in its
present course, rather than around the edge of
the Green, a line which it had followed until
then.
The population in 1801 was 235 and in 1831 464.
In 1871 it reached a peak of 594, not exceeded
until 1931 when it attained 636. Since then
numbers have steadily climbed to 831 in 1951,
1548 in 1961, 1668 in 1981 and 1749 in 1991 , and slightly decreased to 1738 in 2001.
The boundaries of the parish remained almost unchanged
until 1985, when Bridge End Cottage and Dingle
Dell were gained from Sawston and a small uninhabited
area in the river bend was moved from Stapleford
to Sawston. The ancient parish contained 1835
acres (743 hectares).
The opening of Shelford railway station in 1845
had a great effect on the development of Great
Shelford and to a lesser extent on Stapleford.
Several large houses were built in Mingle Lane
and elsewhere in the village. Four substantial
mansions were built on Foxhill soon after 1900.
These included Middlefield designed by Sir Edwin
Lutyens. Development of the village has continued
slowly. The row of 32 houses in Haverhill Road was built by the late Frederick Baynes on land acquired from the Foster estate in the later 1930s.
Some council houses were built in Bury
Road in 1926 and others were built at the end of Gog Magog Way in the 1950s.
The Priam’s Way estate and Greenfield Close were
built in the 1950s, Finch’s Close in the late
1950s, Aylesford Way (in several stages) in the
1950s – 1970s, Poplar Way and Forge End in the
1960s, the Vine Farm estate and Cherry Tree Avenue
in the 1970s, Joscelynes (in two stages) in the
1970s and 1980s, Cox’s Close and Heffer Close
in the 1980s, Anvil Close in the 1980s and 1990s, Adcroft Piece in the 1990s and Greenhedges in 2007. The new South
Cambridgeshire Local Plan has designated an area
between London Road and Aylesford Way for future
development, while retaining the land presently
used for industry in Granta Terrace as “employment
land”.
Stapleford street names have suffered many changes.
Mingle Lane was called Church Road in 1814, later
becoming Church Lane. Gog Magog Way was called
Back Road in 1814, later becoming partly Church
Lane and partly Lordship Lane. It was also known
as West Lane. Bury Road was called Hills Road
in 1816, later becoming partly Bar Lane, partly
Poplar Terrace and partly Bury End. Bar Lane
was called Bar Lane Road in 1816. London Road
was formerly known as The Street or The Village
Street, but has been London Road since at least
1850. Church Street has been so called since
at least 1740. Babraham Road was called Linton
Road until 1958. Hinton Way was formerly known
as Cherry Hinton Road.
Some street names, particularly those of terraces,
have vanished though some may still be seen marked
on house frontages. St. Mary’s Cottages, Vine
Terrace, Brookside and Alma Cottages were all in
Bar Lane. Petersfield Terrace, Bury End and Poplar
Terrace were in Bury Road. Feoffee Cottages were
in Church Street and Lordship Terrace was in Gog
Magog Way.
One modern street name has unfortunately been
given in error. Adcroft Piece was named after
the house called Ancroft Piece at 76 London Road
but the name was altered to Adcroft, as it had
been spelled in the inclosure award. In this
case, however, the inclosure award was wrong and
every other source gives the old field name as
Ancroft. Something similar affected Greenhedge Farm, so called because it lay on the edge of the one-time Green. The former Special School corrupted the name to Green Hedges and this has now been perpetuated in the small housing estate built on its site.
Communications in the parish have always been
good, even apart from the nearby Shelford Station.
The road that runs through the village from Great
Shelford to Sawston and Great Chesterford (A1301)
was a turnpike road from 1724 to 1870. The road
from Cambridge to Linton and Haverhill (A1307)
was likewise a turnpike road from 1765 to 1876.
Stapleford was formerly crossed by the railway
to Haverhill, which branched from the Liverpool
Street line south of the London Road bridge.
The line was opened in 1865 but closed in 1967
and is now dismantled, though the humped bridge
where it passed under the road to Sawston still
remains. Opening of the M11 motorway in 1980
relieved Stapleford and neighbouring parishes
of much of the traffic which had formerly used
the A1301. Continuing increase of local traffic,
however, necessitated the construction in August
1997 of a pelican crossing across London Road
at the Post Office, which has since become a photographic
studio. The Parish Council had first requested
a crossing there in 1964.
In September 1989, the District Council defined
an area in Mingle Lane and Gog Magog Way, together
with two properties in Dukes Meadow and four in
Church Street, as a conservation area.
The history of Stapleford is fully described
in the Victoria County History of Cambridgeshire.
Volume 8, 1982 pp. 227-238 More recent history,
assembled from reports in the Cambridge Chronicle,
appears in the Stapleford Chronicle, 1770-1899,
by Mary Miller, 1982. The history of the village
as described in the minutes of the Parish council
is summarised in Stapleford Matters, 1894-1994,
by Tony Doggett, 1994. Stapleford Millennium
Chronicle, Volume 1, edited by Alan Bullwinkle,
2000, contains news about some of the inhabitants
and happenings in the village from 1900 to 1939.
Copies of this are still available locally.
The Stapleford Chronicle, Volume 2, edited by Dorothy Millgate and covering the years 1939-1977, was published in 2007.
Places of interest
Wandlebury
Wandlebury, an ancient monument, is an Iron-Age
hill fort, originally built with a steep-sided
ditch in the third century B.C. and rebuilt with
a double bank in the first century A.D. Evidence
was found in excavations in 1995-6 of settlement
in the area even before the fort was first built.
The earthworks were extensively landscaped as
an ornamental feature in the 18th Century by Lord
Godolphin, as they lay in the park surrounding
the house and stables which he began to build
in 1729. The family inherited the Dukedom of Leeds
in 1859.
In 1895 they sold the Wandlebury estate and it
was eventually it was purchased in 1904 by Harold
William Stannus Gray. Sir Harold died in 1951
and his wife two years later. Their son, Terence,
presented the hill fort to the Cambridge Preservation
Society in 1954. The Society at the same time
bought the surrounding 38.67 hectares.
The estate and Wandlebury Ring have since then
been owned and managed by the Cambridge Preservation
Society and are freely open to the public all
year. The 18th century house was demolished
in 1955, but the ditch and ramparts of the Iron-Age
earth works are still clearly defined. Under
the archway of the old stable block is buried
the Godolphin Arabian which died at the age of
29 in 1753. It was one of three stallions from
which most modern thoroughbreds are descended.
Granary
Grade II listed building (early 15th
century), removed from original site in Tadlow
and re-erected here in 1980.
Stables, Coach House and service block
Grade II listed building (mid – late 18th
century)
The Lodge
Grade II listed building (early 19th
century) - circular plan and conical roof, with
20th century additions.
South Stable Block
Grade II listed building (late 18th
century)
Causewayed Enclosure and Bowl Barrow
Another ancient monument, lying at Little Trees
Hill, on the other side of the A1307 from Wandlebury.
Dormer Cottage, No. 5 Bar Lane.
Grade II listed cottage built around 1750 with
timber frame and tiled mansard roof.
No. 7 Bar Lane
Grade II listed cottage built around 1800.
Stapleford Hall, Bar Lane.
Grade II listed building dated circa. 1630 – timber
framed and thatched roof, extended c. 1700.
No. 2 and 4 Church Street.
The two cottages, illustrated below, are grade
II listed buildings, with timber frame and thatched
roof, dating from about 1700. They were transferred
to South Cambridgeshire District Council who,
together with the Cambridgeshire Cottage Improvement
Society, restored them to their present condition.
The administration and ownership of the cottages
now rests with the Cottage Housing Society.
Slaughterhouse, Church Street.
Grade II listed building, built about
1840. It is described under Parish Council property
below.
Dove Cottage, No. 4 Gog Magog Way
Grade II listed building converted from
a dovecot. Originally about 16th century, but
the door and window openings are 20th century.
Middlefield and garden wall, Haverhill
Road
Starred grade II listed building. Designed
in 1908 by Sir Edwin Lutyens for Henry Bond of
Trinity Hall, a Lecturer in Law. The house was
later called Mount Blow, but has now reverted
to its original name. Associated with Middlefield, though not listed buildings, are Middlefield Lodge, now called The House on the Hill, Middlefield Cottage and Keeper's Cottage, all of them probably designed in Lutyens' workshop.
Galewood, Pinewood and The Towers, Hinton
Way
Grade II listed building, originally
a single house by William Flockhart.
St. Andrew’s Church, Mingle Lane
Starred grade II listed buildings, described
under Churches.
The White Cottage, No. 45 Mingle Lane
Grade II listed building, 15th century,
with mid-17th century alterations.
The Particular Baptist Chapel
was in Church Street. There was a congregation
of Particular Baptists in Stapleford from about
1855, though they had met for worship in barns
in the parish from as early as 1808. A site for
a new chapel, named the Providence Baptist Chapel,
was provided by Richard Headley in 1863. The chapel
was slightly extended in 1947, but, following
disagreement over church rules, was sold by the
Midland Strict Baptist Association in 1975. It
is now a private residence, 9A Church Street.
The Magog Trust Land
Magog Down is a impressive sweep of Cambridgeshire
hillside, restored from the farmland to walks,
woodlands and meadows, for conservation and informal
recreation. The area of 163 acres, neighbouring
the Wandlebury country park was purchased on Michaelmas
Day 1989 by the Magog Trust, a registered charity,
which was set up specifically for the task. This
wildlife haven nurtures 24,000 trees and many
species of wild flowers, grasses and abundant
wildlife. The perimeter walk stretches for 2.25
miles and has been developed especially for dog
walkers, allowing a leash-free walk around the
site. In 1996 the Magog Trust achieved a highly
commended in the Henry Ford European Conservation
Awards for Natural Environment projects. It is
freely open to all; there are environmental rules
that ensure that everyone can enjoy the peace
and beauty.
A Blacksmith’s Shop formerly
stood at the junction of Church Street and London
Road. It was later converted into three cottages,
being known as The Triangle. The cottages became
derelict and were purchased by the County Council
from Beatrice Minnie Harris in 1913 to improve
the road junction.
A Windmill was built on the
hill to the south of Haverhill Road in 1804. It
ceased to be used by 1905. The sails had been
taken down by 1939 and the brick base was removed
in 1961.
A Public Pump in a tall wooden
casing formerly stood in the road at the junction
of Bar Lane and Bury Road. Before mains water
came to the village in 1936 some residents depended
on it for their supply, though many properties
had their own wells. In 1948 it was reported to
be out of order and the Parish Council asked for
it to be dismantled. It had for long been a landmark,
and continued to give a name to the local bus
stop.
The Rose Public House in London
Road dates in part from 1665, and the remainder
from 1707 or earlier. It was probably licensed
from at least 1728, and was called The Rainbow
in 1740, but by 1764 had been renamed The Rose
and Crown. It retained this name in legal records
until 1897.
The Longbow Public House in
Church Street was formerly the Three Horse Shows.
The earliest licensee that can be traced was Daniel
Rider in 1815. After closure and refurbishment
it was reopened as The Longbow in 1976.
The Tree Public House in Bar
Lane is recorded from 1895. It was rebuilt in
1979.
Other vanished public houses and beer
houses were the Dolphin (1861-1920),
commemorated in Dolphin Way, the Hammer and Anvil
(1875-99), the Millwrights Arms, possibly the
same as The Tree (1871), the Gipsy Weaver (1871)
and The Bell (1774-82) which was no doubt the
same as The Light Horse (1783-84).
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