[1] It lies in the city of Cambridge in the county of Cambridgeshire approximately 50 miles (80 km) north-northeast of London.
[4] Build of red brick, the original main south front has two storeys and three bays, with mullioned and transomed windows, including a central oriel, all their stone dressings being renewed, and above them round-gabled dormers.
Naylor,[5] to provide a more ornate front to the west, including a new porch and another rectangular stair tower north of the back wing.
At his death in 1804 Wragg left the former Chettoe lands to his eldest son William (d. 1829), who devised them to his widow Mary for her life.
His widow Elizabeth (d. 1884) married the Cambridge lawyer T. H. Naylor, who until the late 1870s acted as patron of many village activities.