A. P. M. Wright & C. P. Lewis (Editors)
'Girton: Charities for the poor', A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely: Volume 9: Chesterton, Northstowe, and Papworth Hundreds (1989), pp. 129. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=15358 Date accessed: 01 August 2010. > Add to my bookshelf
CHARITIES FOR THE POOR
In 1521 William Collyn devised a house, apparently then
ruinous, and 15 a. to pay the king's tax upon
Girton, whenever levied, for its poor. (fn. 50)
In 1525
the churchwardens bought 5 a. in Oakington. (fn. 51)
From those and similar bequests and purchases
the parish had by 1611 acquired lands comprising c. 12 a. in Oakington, Westwick, and Madingley, and in Girton itself 54 a., including 6½ a.
of closes. In 1813 32½; a. east of the road to
Cambridge were allotted for the arable. (fn. 52)
By
1735 a third of the income was assigned to
church repairs, the rest going primarily to assist
the poor, (fn. 53)
whose share yielded £20 in 1728, (fn. 54)
and £23 by 1785, mostly carried to the poor
rate. (fn. 55)
By 1807 a row of five tenements, called
poorhouses or almshouses, let rent free to paupers, stood on part of the former Camping
close. (fn. 56)
About 1837 the poor's share of the £44
income, c. £32, was given in coal in proportion
to the size of their families. The land itself, then
occupied by one large farmer, was claimed by
the poor as allotments: 26½ a. were so let by
1841. (fn. 57)
The poor-law union sold the almshouses
to Miss A. M. Cotton in 1848. (fn. 58)
Some £38 was distributed yearly in fuel c.
1860, (fn. 59)
as was £60 c. 1910. (fn. 60)
By then £400 of
accumulated income had been invested, while
the Girton land, including half the church's
former share, was mostly still let as allotments. (fn. 61)
Although the income fell in the 1920s to c. £40,
the number of beneficiaries rose from 100 to
170. From 1936 only £24 was spent yearly on
coal, distribution of which apparently ceased
after the early 1940s, the balance being used
to repay a loan of £540 raised to build two
almshouses, completed c. 1938, for aged poor
people. (fn. 62)
In 1966, when the total income was
£65, c. £1,700 was spent on building two more
bungalows. The almshouse rents, almost
doubled after 1970 to over £400 a year by the
late 1970s, covered their maintenance. Those of
the allotments, raised from £49 in 1955 to £475
by c. 1980, when much of the land was let to
one man, provided in the 1960s £50-60, by 1980
c. £200 for Christmas gifts to old people and
donations to a pensioners' club, much income
being accumulated. (fn. 63)
Footnotes
| 50 |
B.L. Add. MS. 5861, f. 82v.; cf. P.R.O., C 1/418, no.
6. |
| 51 |
C.U.L., Queens' Coll. Mun., Box 5, Dd. 2, ct. roll 17
Hen. VIII. |
| 52 |
1611 conveyance noted in C.R.O., P 77/25/11; cf. ibid.
Q/RDz 7, p. 23; C.U.L., E.D.R., H 1/Girton 1615; 31st
Rep. Com. Char. 120. |
| 53 |
C.R.O., P 77/25/1, 3, 4. |
| 54 |
C.U.L., E.D.R., B 8/1, f. 15. |
| 55 |
Ibid. B 7/1, p. 41; Char. Don. i. 92-3. |
| 56 |
C.U.L., E.D.R, C 1/4. |
| 57 |
31st Rep. Com. Char. 120-1; C.U.L., E.D.R., G, tithe
award 1841. |
| 58 |
Char. Com. files, vol. 31, p. 119, addenda. |
| 59 |
Char. Digest Cambs. 1863-4, 392-3. |
| 1 |
60 C.R.O., R 54/25/28, accts. 1911 at Jan. 1912. |
| 61 |
Ibid. accts. 1913 at Mar. 1914; Char. Com. files, order
1910. |
| 62 |
C.R.O., R 54/25/1A, p. 11; R 54/25/4, accts. 1936 and
later. |
| 63 |
Char. Com. files. |