Tuesday 1 February 2011

Home Farm street names

Some interesting ideas for names for the new streets from parishioner Margaret Rooney: Thanks Margaret


Summary of suggested street names for the Home Farm Development

Five new streets need to be named.

Recommendations are:

  • Bullen
  • Bradshaw
  • The Bury
  • Thillians
  • Ramsey Abbey

Bullen
Bullen Road, Close or Way. The name of the family living at Home Farm, Cranfield Court, in the 1911 census – a 100 anniversary commemoration of Home Farm. William Bullen, a farmer, his wife and one daughter.

Bradshaw
Bradshaw Road, Close or Way. The name of the family living at Bury Farm, (also known as The Bury or Home farm), in the 1881 census. Benjamin Bradshaw, a farmer, his wife, six children and a servant.

Bury
Suggest the street is named The Bury. The Bury, in the 1880s, was also known as Bury Farm or Home Farm. A way to commemorate a 19th century name for the farm.
.
Thillians
One of eight fields in The Bury, in the 1880s, was known as ”Thillian’s” - pasture. Suggest, for simplicty, that the apostrophe is dropped. A charming, simple name. Similar single names appear elsewhere in the village – Simdims, Lordsmead, Lincroft.

Ramsey Abbey
Suggest Ramsey Abbey Close or Road, depending on house layout. Owner of Cranfield for over 500 years from 998 until the dissolution of the monastries in 1536. A good opportunity to mark this significant historical link with Cranfield. Ailwyn’s Acre marks another Ramsey Abbey link, and is on Lodge Road, very close to the Home Farm development..

Further names that could be considered

  • Capell
  • McFalone
  • Corner Piece


Capell
Name of the family at Home Farm, in the 1901 census. Richard Capell, a Farm Bailiff and widower, three children and a boarder, (Louisa Spray, National School Teacher).

McFalone
Name of the family at Farm House, Cranfield Court, in the 1891 census. John McFalone, Farm Bailiff and widower, originally from Roxborough, Scotland. One daughter and a housekeeper.
The family name is not an immediately recognisable one in this part of the UK.
Also, I am assuming “Farm House, Cranfield Court” is Home Farm, as this is a farm bailiff’s house, (Home Farm in 1901 was a farm bailiff’s house). Although there are no references to Home or Bury in the 1891 census, I am not sure we can be 100% certain this is Home Farm - unless someone with better local knowledge can verify.

Corner Piece
Another of the eight fields that formed The Bury in the 1880s. Corner Piece was arable. “Piece” has a charming ring about it..…like Partridge Piece.





No comments: