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Covent Garden, Cambridge

Blue plaquesStreets in CambridgeUnited Kingdom road stubsUse British English from February 2018
A typical Cambridge terrace geograph.org.uk 1162711
A typical Cambridge terrace geograph.org.uk 1162711

Covent Garden is a street in Cambridge, England, off Mill Road and near The Kite district. The street takes its name from the London market of the same name as there used to be a market garden there.The street has one pub The Six Bells, where cricketer Israel Haggis was landlord from 1837 to 1844.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Covent Garden, Cambridge (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Covent Garden, Cambridge
Covent Garden, Cambridge Petersfield

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Wikipedia: Covent Garden, CambridgeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.200416666667 ° E 0.13430555555556 °
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Address

Six Bells

Covent Garden 11
CB1 2HS Cambridge, Petersfield
England, United Kingdom
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A typical Cambridge terrace geograph.org.uk 1162711
A typical Cambridge terrace geograph.org.uk 1162711
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Nearby Places

Mill Road Cemetery, Cambridge
Mill Road Cemetery, Cambridge

Mill Road Cemetery is a cemetery off Mill Road in the Petersfield area of Cambridge, England. Since 2001 the cemetery has been protected as a Grade II Listed site, and several of the tombs are also listed as of special architectural and historical interest.The cemetery was established in 1848 on a site formerly occupied by a cricket ground, as a collection of burial grounds for 13 city parishes (now 10 through amalgamation) whose churchyards had become full. A chapel built by George Gilbert Scott was demolished in 1954. An outline of the chapel in carved stone was completed in 2017 as a record and memorial, made possible by the National Lottery Heritage Fund. All the plots are now closed for burials, and the cemetery as a whole is by law maintained by the City Council and managed on behalf of the parishes by the Parochial Burial Grounds Management Committee. The Commonwealth War Graves Commission maintain the graves of 33 Commonwealth service personnel from World War I and 4 from World War II.The cemetery can be accessed from Mill Road, from Norfolk Street, or through the industrial estate on Gwydir Street. In February 2014 an art work entitled Bird Stones by Gordon Young was installed in the cemetery. Its one wooden and six stone columns celebrate the bird species found in the cemetery and their birdsong.The cemetery is also listed as a City Wildlife Site, containing many indicator plant species for undisturbed neutral/calcareous grassland amongst the 110+ species identified. At least 35 species of bird, 23 species of butterflies and several species of mammal have also been reported, including the European dormouse and weasel.