Cambridge was enslaved alongside at least seven others by Dr. William Gould, a prominent Branford resident and one of the town’s earliest physicians. After Gould’s death in 1757, the individuals he enslaved were dispersed among his heirs, with Cambridge becoming the property of Gould’s widow, Sarah Wilson Fanning Gould. A record showing the distribution of the estate shows that at least two others, Dinah and Cloe, were to have remained with Mrs. Gould and Cambridge, but their names do not appear in subsequent records. We only see Cambridge, who seems to have moved to New London with Mrs. Gould, living in her household until her death in 1788. Financial records in Sarah Gould’s estate settlement show Cambridge periodically performing labor for others. They also show her having shoes made or mended for him on a regular basis, perhaps an indication that Cambridge engaged in activities that required him to walk a lot. Her inventory also included an array of medicinal herbs and glass vials and bottles, suggesting that perhaps she and Cambridge continued making and distributing medicines as her husband appears to have done, based on his inventory 31 years earlier. Also listed in Sarah Gould’s 1788 inventory beneath a couch bed and pillows valued at 18 pounds is the following line: “1 Negro man old called Cambridge.” He is valued at 3 pounds. The record does not state what became of Cambridge after 1788.