Trumpington Village Sign unveiled June 2010, designed by Sheila Betts.
Trumpington Local History Group
Background to the name
Northrop Road
Copyright © Trumpington Local History Group, 2016. Updated 3 January 2016.
Email:
admin@trumpingtonlocalhistorygroup.org
Homes on
Northrop Road
facing Lime
Avenue. Photo:
Andrew Roberts,
22 October 2014.
Northrop Road is part of the Aura development, Clay Farm, to the west of Lime Avenue, south
of Long Road, with footpath access from Long Road. Homes on the arm of the road near Lime
Avenue were occupied from mid 2014 and those on the two east-west arms from autumn 2014.
Northrop Road. Source: © OpenStreetMap contributors (Howard Slatter).
Howard Slatter gave a presentation about the origin of the name
'Northrop Road' at the Local History Group meeting on 12 November
2015. This is among a number of streets named after local families, in this
case the Northrop family.

There is a separate page with information about the
derivation of street
names.
Homes on Northrop Road facing Lime Avenue, Aura development. Photo: Andrew Roberts, 22 October 2014.
Northrop Road. Source: © OpenStreetMap contributors (Howard Slatter).
The 1885 Ordnance Survey map of the Long Road area showed a windmill near the junction
with Trumpington Road (hence the name Mill Road and Old Mill House) and Clay Farm House.
There are three cottages attached to Clay Farm.
Ordnance Survey map for Clay Farm, 1885.
Ordnance Survey map for Clay Farm, 1885.
The 1911 census had a page for 'Manor Farm cottages' (Clay Farm) with information about Eli
and Elizabeth Northrop (the enumerator misspelt the family name as 'Northrup' on the cover
sheet). Eli Northrop was age 47, born Harston, a 'horseman on farm', Elizabeth Northrop was
aged 49, born Dry Drayton, and they had two children, both born in Trumpington.

When the Local History Group and the Residents' Association proposed names as street names
in 2010-11, we were keen to include the ordinary people of the village. Eli and Elizabeth
Northrop were one of those families, nobody special, but they used to live close to where
Northrop Road has now been built. By the time of the family photograph, Eli and Elizabeth
Northrop were living in Mill Cottages on the north side of Long Road. The family tree shows
him and his sister Amelia. The daughters of Eli and Elizabeth Northrop all moved away after
they married, but at least one of Amelia’s descendants lived here until quite recently.

For further information, see the
People in Trumpington database and the Northrop family tree.
Portrait of Eli Northrop, taken sometime in the 1940s when he was in his 70s. Source: Thomas Kill.
Portrait of Eli Northrop, taken sometime in the 1940s
when he was in his 70s. Source: Thomas Kill.
Aerial photograph of Clay Farm from the east, with Long Road to the right and Northrop Road above the junction and road into the Clay Farm development. Countryside/Tamdown, 8 September 2015.
Aerial photograph of Clay Farm from the east, with Long Road to the right and
Northrop Road above the junction and road into the Clay Farm development.
Countryside/Tamdown, 8 September 2015.