Grantchester Meadows

Coordinates: 52°11′23.76″N 0°6′13.63″E / 52.1899333°N 0.1037861°E / 52.1899333; 0.1037861
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The River Cam at Grantchester Meadows

Grantchester Meadows is an open space in

Stourbridge Common.[1]

Grantchester Meadows can be reached by walking across Lammas Land by the

butterbur and as habitat of the musk beetle, along a residential road (also called Grantchester Meadows), to the river and footpath to Grantchester.[2]

The meadow features in the poem "Watercolor Of Grantchester Meadows" by Sylvia Plath,[3] and a 1969 song by the British rock band Pink Floyd.[4]

As of June 2021, King’s College installed signs which prohibited swimming in the River Cam from Grantchester Meadows. This change was met with controversy.[5][6] A King's spokesman said: "Sadly it has become increasingly apparent that this not only causes significant problems for the emergency services, but also brings with it a serious risk to life. As such it would be irresponsible for the College to continue to encourage swimming in an area where it is unsafe to do so".[7] Camila Ilsley launched a petition against the closure, criticizing it as a "drastic action" that would "shut down traditions dear to the people of Cambridge, and choke our connection with its beautiful natural surroundings".[7]

References

  1. ^ Martin Garrett - Cambridge: A Cultural and Literary History 2004 -- Page viii 1902669797 "Its propensity to flood has threaded through Cambridge from the pubs in Grantchester to the Ditton Plough, a broad green ribbon of flood plain — Grantchester Meadows, The Lammas Land, the Backs, Jesus Green, Midsummer Common, ... "
  2. ^ Cambridgeshire Regional Planning Report - Page 82 "The fields adjoining the river from Sheep's Green down to Grantchester should form a continuous open belt, as already Grantchester Meadows are one of the most fully enjoyed stretches of rural country in the vicinity of Cambridge."
  3. ^ Gothenburg Studies in English Ingrid Melander - 1972 - Volume 25 - Page 70 "Dyson's remark "Walking in Grantchester Meadows, since Rupert Brooke the very touchstone of English nostalgia, she [Sylvia Plath] notes ..." (p. 205) is indeed relevant. It should be pointed out, however, that Brooke's poem, as the title clearly ...
  4. .
  5. ^ Weaver, Matthew (2 July 2021). "Cambridge college bans swimming at literary skinny-dipping spot". Guardian. Retrieved 4 July 2021. A college has banned swimming in a stretch of the River Cam that has been popular for bathers for centuries and where the writers Virginia Woolf and Rupert Brooke went skinny-dipping. King's College Cambridge, which owns Grantchester Meadows, a riverside beauty spot south of Cambridge, erected a noticeboard on Thursday that also bans camping and launching boats from the banks. By Friday lunchtime, within a day of it launching, a petition against the ban on access to the water had been signed by more than 8,000 people.
  6. ^ Ferguson, Donna (11 July 2021). "Troubled waters: the Cambridge river dividing town and gown". Observer. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  7. ^ a b Somerville, Ewan (2 July 2021). "Cambridge college plunged into row with locals over River Cam wild swimming ban". Telegraph. Retrieved 4 July 2021.

External links

52°11′23.76″N 0°6′13.63″E / 52.1899333°N 0.1037861°E / 52.1899333; 0.1037861