I was looking at deceased pubs in Cambridge a little while ago; my interest was spurred by the fact that my great-grandfather had a pub, the Fitzroy, which disappeared before I can remember it. There are some mighty interesting names on the list, some of which are readily understandable such as those which denote an occupation, baker, brewer, butcher, carpenter, carrier, coachmaker, cook, cooper, gardener, miller, maltster, engineer and wheelwright… and these show a fascinating glimpse into a bye-gone age with trades which no longer exist, or no longer exist with as much popularity as to give their names to a pub! I wonder who the Ancient Shepherds were, there were two pubs called that – maybe thy were those shepherds who were watching their flocks by night, all seated on the ground? And how nice it would be if as well as a Light Dragoon there was a Slight Dragon!
Then there are the pubs named after people, Burleigh, Churchill, Fitzroy and various dukes and queens and kings, and then there are the intriguing ones, the Bleeding Heart, The Man With The Load of Mischief, and The Still and Sugarloaf; the latter was advertised in local cinemas, “meet your friends at the Still and Sugarloaf, the city’s smartest rendezvous”!
- Airport Hotel
- Alhambra
- Bakers Arms
- Barley Mow
- Bell & Crown
- Bentinck Arms
- Bishop Blaize
- Blackamoors Head
- Bleeding Heart
- Boot Inn
- Borough Boy
- Bowling Green
- Brewers Arms
- Brewery Tap
- Britannia
- British Queen
- Brookfield Tavern
- Bun Shop
- Bun Shop
- Burleigh Arms
- Butchers Arms
- Cambridge Arms
- Carlton Arms
- Carpenters Arms
- Carriers Arms
- Chequers
- Churchill
- Claremont Arms
- Coachmakers Arms
- Cooks Arms
- Coopers Arms
- Criterion
- Cross Keys
- Crown
- Crown Inn
- Crown & Harp
- Crown & Compasses
- Crown & Sceptre
- Crystal Palace
- Duke Of Argyle
- Duke Of Cambridge
- Duke Of Wellington
- Earl Of Durham
- Earl Grey
- Five Bells
- Five Bells
- Fitzroy Arms
- Fleur De Lys
- Foresters
- Freemasons Arms
- Gardeners Arms
- George
- Globe Inn
- Golden Cross
- Golden Rose
- Grafton Arms
- Granville
- Great Eastern Tavern
- Great Northern
- Grove
- Gwydir Arms
- Half Moon
- Hat & Feathers
- Haymakers
- Hearts Of Oak
- House Of Commons
- Indian Chief
- John Gilpin
- Jolly Butchers
- Jolly Millers
- John Gilpin
- Jubilee
- Kings Arms
- King William IV
- Little Rose
- Locomotive
- Lord Nelson
- Malt & Hops Inn
- Maltsters Arms
- Man Loaded With Mischief
- Marquis Of Granby
- Masons Arms
- Merry Boys
- Merton Arms
- Midland Tavern
- Mill
- Nine Pins
- Norfolk
- Norwich Arms
- Oak
- Old Abbey
- Old English Gentleman
- Old Guinea
- Plough Arms
- Plume Of Feathers
- Prince Albert
- Prince Of Wales
- Prince Of Wales
- Prince Of Wales Hotel
- Queens Arms
- Queen Edith
- Rose
- Rose & Crown
- Royal Arms
- Royal Engineers
- Royal Standard
- Royston Arms
- Seven Stars
- Ship
- Sovereign
- Spade & Beckett
- Star
- Station Hotel
- Still & Sugar Loaf
- Sun Inn
- Suffolk Hotel
- Tailors Arms
- Three Tuns
- True Blue
- Victoria
- Volunteer
- Volunteer
- Wheatsheaf
- Wheatsheaf
- Wheelwrights Arms
- Willow Tree
- Woods
I wrote about the Bleeding heart once before:
was intrigued by the pub which I had never ever heard of before, and researched it a little; it was in Chesterton, once a little village now a suburb of Cambridge, and it became the Co-Op; however it was demolished and there is modern housing on the site. I then came across an article on The Cambridge Time Traveller site, which wondered if Conan Doyle was thinking of the Bleeding Heart in Chesterton, when he was writing his short story ‘The Adventure of the Missing Three-Quarter’,
In the Adventure of the Missing Three-Quarter, Sherlock Holmes tells Dr Watson:
“I have had a blank day, Watson. Having got the doctor’s general direction, I spent the day in visiting all the villages upon that side of Cambridge, and comparing notes with publications and local news agencies. I have covered some ground: Chesterton, Histon, Waterbeach and Oakington have been explored, and have each proved disappointing.”
What public houses Arthur Conan Doyle was thinking about in this short story, which is believed to have been set in about 1896, we will never know. Could he have been thinking of the Bleeding Heart in Chesterton, that was converted into a Co-op Shop in the 1920s and has now been demolished?
In actual fact, Doyle could have been thinking of any of the many 1900’s pubs, the Green Dragon, the Pike and Eel, the Haymakers, the Wheatsheaf or the Bowling Green, however, what struck me was the coincidence of mentioning of Holmes and the Bleeding Heart in one article!

There is a bar in Michigan just across the border from us called The Running Pump that sits on a nature preserve. The owner leaves the back door open and wild deer and other critters walk right in and mooch for food at your table. Naturally he sells apples and other treats to feed them. I gave a deer a drink of my beer once and it sure let me know that it wanted more. I had the bruises to prove it. Lots of fun though.
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It sounds wonderful! My daughter would just love it!
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