The village of Cottenham fell victim to a great many fires over the centuries, but none so devastating as that which occurred on 4 April 1850, and is reported here in this cutting from the Illustrated London News preserved among the Cottenham parish records.
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Great Fire...
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Starting in the High Street around 8.30 in the evening, the flames spread rapidly and though there was no loss of human life "a vast quantity of poultry and pigeons and a good many pigs were destroyed." Forty to fifty cottages burnt down as well as the Black Horse and White Horse inns and the Wesleyan Chapel which was housed in a barn on what is now Telegraph Street.
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The devastation wreaked by the fire as viewed from Lambs’ Corner.
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The arsonist was believed to be one William Hayward, who was lodging at the Lamb Inn whilst doing casual labour for Thomas Graves on the boundary of whose property the fire had started. The landlord of the Lamb was quick to report that Hayward had said to him "I have been a match for old Graves ... damn and blast the fire: I wish it would burn half Cottenham down." Suspicions were fuelled the morning after the fire when the landlord woke to discover Hayward had left town.
A rather trumped up case was brought against Hayward for referral to the coming assizes but, presumably for want of hard evidence, the bill was ignored by the Grand Jury.
Source:
The original news cutting is held among the Cottenham parish records at Cambridgeshire Archives, document reference P50/28/49.