John Stowford

Detail of effigy of Sir John Stowford, West Down Church, Devon
Effigy of Sir John Stowford, West Down Church, Devon

Sir John Stowford (c.1290[1] c.1372[2]) of Stowford, West Down in Devon, was Chief Baron of the Exchequer[3] in 1346. He is one of John Prince's Worthies of Devon.

Origins

He was born at the family estate of Stowford in the parish of West Down in North Devon.[4]

Career

It is not known at which Inn of Court he trained as a lawyer, but he was called to the bar and became a serjeant at law. In 1341 he was appointed King's Serjeant to King Edward III.[5] In 1346 he was knighted and was appointed Chief Baron of the Exchequer.[6] In 1349 he was appointed one of the Justices Itinerant for the county of Kent.

Builds Pilton Causeway

Bridge over River Yeo at northern end of Pilton Causeway linking towns of Barnstaple and Pilton. Built by Sir John Stowford
Pilton Causeway, looking towards Barnstaple. Here it crosses the tip of one of the meanders in the River Yeo. Built by Sir John Stowford

Stowford built Pilton Causeway which links the towns of Barnstaple and Pilton, which were then separated by the treacherous marshy ground in which flowed the tidal meanders of the small River Yeo. It is recounted by Prince that Stowford decided on building the causeway when on his way from his home at Stowford to Barnstaple, he met whilst fording the Yeo, the drowned bodies of a woman with her child.[7] He is also believed to have contributed to the financing of the long-bridge in Barnstaple.[8]

Marriage

He married Joan Tracy, a co-heiress of the Tracy family of Woolacombe Tracy, Devon.[9]

Death & burial

He died at Stowford and was buried in the Stowford Chapel in the north transept of West Down Church, where survives his much-worn[10] life-size effigy carved in oak, dressed in his robes of office,[11] set on the floor under a low recessed arch set into the north wall.[12] The colouring of the effigy was renewed in 1873,[13] but no trace survives today.

Further reading

Sources

References

  1. Prince, p.727
  2. Hoskins, W.G., A New Survey of England: Devon, London, 1959 (first published 1954), p.390
  3. Prince: "Lord Chief Baron"
  4. Prince, p.727
  5. Prince, p.727
  6. Prince, p.727, quoting Dugdale
  7. Prince, p.728
  8. Prince, p.728
  9. Prince, p.729
  10. Pevsner, Nikolaus & Cherry, Bridget, The Buildings of England: Devon, London, 2004, p.900
  11. Hoskins, p.390
  12. Pevsner, p.899
  13. Hoskins, p.390
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