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49 New Square

Also known as Rhadegund House. Was sold by the College in 1990

5 Fair Street

Letter from the Bursar to Messrs J. Carter Jonas & Sons informing them that the College Council had approved the purchase of the property for £500; asking them to supply Francis & Co with the necessary information for them to proceed with the purchase and informing them that the College had agreed to let the house to Mrs Mickleborough on a monthly tenancy at a rent of £3 per month

5 Station Road

  • JCCA/JCAD/3/CAM/STA/5/3/1
  • Item
  • 6 July 1936 - 22 October 1936
  • Part of College Archives

Two letters: (1) From Gray, Son & Cook setting out the position with regard to the leases of 5, 7, 9 and 11 Station Road; (2) Letter from the Bursar to J. Carter Jonas & Sons with regard to the dilapidations to be paid on the above properties at the end of their leases

Gray, Son & Cook

5 Tenison Avenue

Known as 'Ranmoorhurst' in the lease of 1897 and 'Ranmoore' in the lease of 1932

Leased to Charles Armstrong along with Normanhurst [No. 7] and Elmley [No. 29] for 99 years from 25th March 1895

50 Jesus Lane [Rhadegund Buildings]

Nos. 50-61 Jesus Lane make up Rhadegund Buildings

Originally part of Butt Close and known as 12 Rhadegund Buildings when it was first built

A building lease for 9-12 Rhadegund Buildings [now 53-50 Jesus Lane] was granted in 1815. Each house had a 25 foot frontage

51 Jesus Lane [Rhadegund Buildings]

Nos. 50-61 Jesus Lane make up Rhadegund Buildings

Originally part of Butt Close and known as 11 Rhadegund Buildings when it was first built

A building lease for 9-12 Rhadegund Buildings [now 53-50 Jesus Lane] was granted in 1815. Each house had a 25 foot frontage

52 Jesus Lane [Rhadegund Buildings]

Nos. 50-61 Jesus Lane make up Rhadegund Buildings

Originally part of Butt Close and known as 10 Rhadegund Buildings when it was first built

A building lease for 9-12 Rhadegund Buildings [now 53-50 Jesus Lane] was granted in 1815. Each house had a 25 foot frontage

53 Jesus Lane [Rhadegund Buildings]

Nos. 50-61 Jesus Lane make up Rhadegund Buildings

Originally part of Butt Close and known as 9 Rhadegund Buildings when it was first built

A building lease for 9-12 Rhadegund Buildings [now 53-50 Jesus Lane] was granted in 1815. Each house had a 25 foot frontage

54 Jesus Lane [Rhadegund Buildings]

Nos. 50-61 Jesus Lane make up Rhadegund Buildings

Originally part of Butt Close and known as 8 Rhadegund Buildings when it was first built in 1817. It was built with surplus money from the Rustat Chest and cost £818 5s 0d. It was let to A. E. Gregory, a Fellow-Commoner of the College at £55 p.a. In 1819 a coach house and stables were added at the back at a cost of £96 19s 7d and the rent was raised to £62 p.a.
It was possible to keep horses and carriages because the College had reserved a 20 ft. service road between the gardens of the Jesus Lane houses and the back premises of those in King Street. This lane was strictly reserved to the use of the Jesus Lane tenants and was closed at both ends by iron gates which were locked at night

55 Jesus Lane [Rhadegund Buildings]

Nos. 50-61 Jesus Lane make up Rhadegund Buildings

Originally part of Butt Close and known as 7 Rhadegund Buildings when it was first built in 1818. It had a frontage of 27ft

56 Jesus Lane [Rhadegund Buildings]

Nos. 50-61 Jesus Lane make up Rhadegund Buildings

Originally part of Butt Close and known as 6 Rhadegund Buildings when it was first built

Built by the College in 1820 for Joseph Gray, bookseller, for £800

57 Jesus Lane [Rhadegund Buildings]

Nos. 50-61 Jesus Lane make up Rhadegund Buildings

Originally part of Butt Close and known as 5 Rhadegund Buildings when it was first built

Built by contract by the College for £840 and transferred on Lady Day 1820 to James Cummings, Professor of Chemistry

57, 59 and 61 King Street [Demolished]

From 1872 the records for 57, 59 and 61 King Street are found with 11 Manor Street and 63 King Street [JCAD/3/CAM/KING/41] after the freehold properties were conveyed to Edward Sanderson and when the College lease [11 Manor Street and 63 King Street] was also assigned to him. Demolished as part of the King Street development

58 Jesus Lane [Rhadegund Buildings]

Nos. 50-61 Jesus Lane make up Rhadegund Buildings

Originally part of Butt Close and known as 4 Rhadegund Buildings when it was first built

A building lease for 1-4 Rhadegund Buildings [now 61-58 Jesus Lane] was granted in 1815. Each house had a 25 foot frontage and the ground rent for each was £6 10s 0d

59 Jesus Lane [Rhadegund Buildings]

Nos. 50-61 Jesus Lane make up Rhadegund Buildings

Originally part of Butt Close and known as 3 Rhadegund Buildings when it was first built

A building lease for 1-4 Rhadegund Buildings [now 61-58 Jesus Lane] was granted in 1815. Each house had a 25 foot frontage and the ground rent for each was £6 10s 0d

6 Fair Street

These records include a workshop and garage leased to Mr Vic Davis on both sides of Fair Street. Leases cover different combinations of premises. See also JCAD/3/CAM/FAIR/GEN/1

60 Jesus Lane [Rhadegund Buildings]

Nos. 50-61 Jesus Lane make up Rhadegund Buildings

Originally part of Butt Close and known as 2 Rhadegund Buildings when it was first built

A building lease for 1-4 Rhadegund Buildings [now 61-58 Jesus Lane] was granted in 1815. Each house had a 25 foot frontage and the ground rent for each was £6 10s 0d

61 Jesus Lane [Rhadegund Buildings]

Nos. 50-61 Jesus Lane make up Rhadegund Buildings

Originally part of Butt Close and known as 1 Rhadegund Buildings when it was first built

A building lease for 1-4 Rhadegund Buildings [now 61-58 Jesus Lane] was granted in 1815. Each house had a 25 foot frontage and the ground rent for each was £6 10s 0d

6-16 King Street

The descriptions in the early deeds of 1515 and 1553 approximate to the positioning of the modern numbering 6-16 King Street

62 Jesus Lane

No. 62-72 Jesus Lane had never belonged to the College. Almshouses facing Jesus Lane were built on this site in the 17th century by Knight's Charity and were surrounded by a large garden. By 1798 a house or houses had been built on the corner of Jesus Lane and Belmont Place [now 62 Jesus Lane].
In the 1880s the almshouses were rebuilt on the King Street side of the site, the old buildings facing Jesus Lane were demolished and the existing houses built, one storey higher than Rhadegund Buildings.

In the late 1920s and 1930s the College pursued a policy of buying leaseholds of these as they came onto the market, but never succeeded in obtaining control over the whole block. This policy was reversed in the 1960s and the leaseholds were resold to the ground landlords

63 Hills Road

Formerly known as 19 Eastbourne Terrace

The portion of the road frontage where Nos. 63-99 Hills Road were built was first leased to Richard Reynolds Rowe (the College Agent). He did not take up his option and in July 1865 by a Deed of Assignment he assigned his interest to Arthur John Gray (builder)

In 1870 a lease of 8 dwelling houses called Eastbourne Terrace was granted to Gray for 40 years

3rd January 1871 - Gray assigned two houses (6 and 7 Eastbourne Terrace) to Frederick Oliver

By 1884 (when the lease was due for renewal) he had built 11 more making 19 in total

He kept an interest in 6 houses (Nos. 1, 2, 5, 8, 10 and 11 Eastbourne Terrace)

After his death in 1898 he left his daughter, Elizabeth Jane Bennett, these houses (now called Nos. 79, 81, 85, 91, 97 and 99 Hills Road)

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