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5 St James Terrace
For the greater part of its existence this property was associated with the food trade. In 1841, when St James Terrace was quite new, this was a pork butchers belonging to Mr Joseph Lambourn. He lived on the premises with his wife Hannah and two sons Joseph (junior) and William and a daughter named Caroline. In due course the two boys were included in the business, which then became Lambourn and Sons.
In December 1843 a young man called Edward Williams was convicted of stealing 4 lbs of pork from the shop and was sentenced to 5 months in the penitentiary, whilst in January 1857 a woman called Emma Buttriss, from Montpellier Retreat, was found guilty of stealing about 4 lbs of pork from the shop and was remanded for a week in gaol at Gloucester.
The southern area of Cheltenham was developed in a rather piecemeal fashion in the mid 19th century and the urban landscape we perceive today evolved gradually, with large tracts of agricultural land existing within the built up area. This is indicated by the fact that in 1858 Joseph Lambourn was summoned before magistrates for creating a public nuisance, by keeping pigs on his land near to Angle Villa in Grafton Road, Leckhampton. A month later, he had still not resolved the problem and was allowed two weeks to sort it out. The lack of modern refrigeration meant that the slaughtering of animals was carried out relatively close to the butchers shop.
Hannah died in 1875, followed in 1877 by their son Joseph (junior), at the very young age of 44. His inquest was held at The Beehive in Montpellier Villas, where it was decided that he had died from “natural causes”, although newspaper reports of the time are very suggestive of a fatal heart condition. The shop changed hands later in the 1870s and the father Joseph died in 1884, at the age of 78.





