Tetcott

Holy Cross Church, Tetcott, Devon, viewed from south. Behind the church is Tetcott Manor House.
The Queen Anne style Tetcott House built by the Arscott family in about 1700 and demolished 1831[1]

Tetcott is a civil parish, small settlement and former manor (once the home of the Arscotts of Tetcott) in Devon, England. The parish lies about five miles south of the town of Holsworthy and is bordered on the north by the parish of Clawton, on the east by a small part of Ashwater, and on the south by Luffincott. It forms part of the local government district of Torridge, and its western boundary is the River Tamar which forms the Cornish border.[2] In 2001 its population was 110, half that of a century earlier (220 in 1901).[3]

The settlement of Tetcott itself consists almost solely of the manor house and parish church of Holy Cross,[4] but there are other hamlets in the parish, the largest of which is Lana about half a mile to the south-east.[5]

Parish church

The parish church was dedicated by the Bishop of Waterford in 1338 or 1339. Before the Reformation it was dedicated to the Trinity. In 1740 the parish feast day was said to have been 3 May (the date of the Invention of the True Cross) probably leading, according to Nicholas Orme, to its present dedication to "Holy Cross", the first record of which dates from 1742.[6]

The present-day church has a Norman font and partly dates from the 13th century with some 16th-century additions, mainly the tower.[1][7] The church was restored in 1890.[1] It has one bell, though three are recorded in an inventory of 1553. A local tradition says that the treble bell at North Tamerton, across the River Tamar, came from Tetcott church and John Taylor the bell-founder having recast North Tamerton's ring of five in the early 19th century sold the treble to Tetcott so that the parishioners at North Tamerton could hear it across the valley and decide to acquire it.[8]

The south transept of the church, known as the Arscott Chapel, contains an ornate pew for the family and notable pew railings dating from around 1700.[1][7] There are also four memorials to members of that family, the most elaborate to John Arscott (died 1675), who was Sheriff of Devon, and his wife.[9] The others are noted below.

Arscott of Tetcott

Arms of Arscott: Per chevron azure and ermine in chief two buck's heads cabossed or[10]
John Arscott (died 1788), the last of the Arscotts of Tetcott. Portrait by James Northcote. National Trust, collection of Saltram House, Devon

W. G. Hoskins described the Arscotts as one of the ancient families of freeholders that rose to the ranks of the squirearchy over a period of 300 years or so by the steady accumulation of property, mostly through marriage.[11] Originating at Arscott (now known as South Arscott, north of the town of Holsworthy),[12][13] a junior branch of the family moved to Tetcott in about 1550.[7]

Arthur Arscott (1554–1618) built a new manor house at Tetcott in 1603,[14] which survives today in expanded form. A new and larger house was built adjacent to it by his descendants during the reign of Queen Anne (1702–1714).[lower-alpha 1] At this time new outbuildings were built in brick, unusual in Devon,[7] some of which survive. The Queen Anne style house was demolished in 1831.[1]

Descent

Molesworth of Tetcott

Tetcott Manor House in 2013, still a seat of the Molesworth-St Aubyn baronets. The brick building to the left with rusticated quoins may have been associated with the mansion demolished in 1831.[1]

Following the Arscotts, Tetcott was inherited by their distant cousins[15] the family of Molesworth, later Molesworth-St Aubyn, of Pencarrow, Cornwall,[1] who continue there until the present day.[25][26] The 7th and 15th Molesworth-St Aubyn baronets had as a first-name "Arscott". In 1831, whilst retaining the original manor house used some time later as a farmhouse,[25] they demolished the adjacent Queen Anne mansion,[15] an act much resented by the local population, and built in its place a "Gothic cottage"[27] to serve as a hunting lodge.[28] This was burned down, apparently by disgruntled locals five years later.[28]

In 1925,[15] as a secondary residence to Pencarrow,[26] the family moved into the original manor house, formerly let as a farmhouse, which survives today.[15] It is a long two storey building built of rubble stone.[1] Above the round arch of the central two-storey porch[1] was reset, in the 20th century, the 1603 datestone taken from Tetcott Mill.[15]

Tetcott hunt

The last of the Arscotts had been a keen hunter, and kennelled his pack of hounds at Tetcott. Later the sporting rights were acquired by Vincent Calmady who in about 1872 formed a pack of otter-hounds. In 1879 he recommenced fox-hunting on the Tetcott country, and the current South Tetcott Hunt and Tetcott Hunt continue today.

HMS Tetcott a Type II British Hunt class destroyer was built for the Royal Navy during World War II, named after the hunt. In 2013 Mr Paul Martin MFH, master of the South Tetcott Hunt, lives at Tetcott.[29]

Notes

  1. Hoskins states it was "enlarged and remodelled",[7] contrary to Devon Perspectives which states the two houses were on separate sites.[15]
  2. John of Tetcott's eldest brother was John Arscott (died 1563) of Arscott who founded the Arscotts of Dunsland in the parish of Bradford, having married Phillipa Battyn, the Dunsland heiress. The 17th-century mansion Dunsland House was purchased by the National Trust in 1954 and burnt down and was demolished in 1967.[16]
  3. She was the daughter of Sir Shilston Calmady (1585–1645) of Langdon, Wembury, who was killed during the Civil War near Ford Abbey[20] and was buried in the nearby church at Membury where exists his monument.[21]
  4. Son of William Arscott (born 1617, living in 1675) by unknown wife.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Pevsner, p.802
  2. "Map of Devon Parishes" (PDF). Devon County Council. Retrieved 20 June 2013.
  3. Harris, Helen (2004). A Handbook of Devon Parishes. Tiverton: Halsgrove. p. 168. ISBN 1-84114-314-6.
  4. Hoskins, pp.492–3
  5. OS Explorer Map 112 (2011) ISBN 978-0-319-23711-3. Lana is at grid ref SX339962.
  6. Orme, Nicholas (1996). English Church Dedications. University of Exeter Press. p. 208. ISBN 0-85989-516-5.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Hoskins, p.493.
  8. Scott, John; Mack, Frank; Clarke, James (2007). Towers & Bells of Devon. Volume Two. Exeter: The Mint Press. p. 387. ISBN 978-1-90335645-6.
  9. Stabb, John (c. 1916) [published 1908–1916]. Some Old Devon Churches. London: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent, & Co. Ltd. p. 229.
  10. 1 2 3 Vivian, p.16
  11. Hoskins, p.79. He includes the Acland, Furse, Monk, and Edgcumbe families and a "whole host" of others in this description.
  12. Hoskins, p.411. He says the family started here in the time of Henry III.
  13. Day, W. I. Leeson (1934). Parochial Histories of Devonshire, No 2 – Holsworthy. The Devonshire Association. pp. 2 (map facing), 29.
  14. Hoskins, p.493; Pevsner (p.802) states however that the 1603 datestone was removed from Tetcott Mill and affixed to the present house in the 20th century
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Tetcott". Devon Perspectives. Retrieved 2009-05-17.
  16. Lauder, Rosemary, Vanished Houses of North Devon, Tiverton, 2005, pp.34, 29
  17. 1 2 Vivian, p.21
  18. Vivian, p.21, Arscott; p.769, Walrond
  19. Vivian, p.21; at his death as recorded on his monument in Tetcott Church
  20. Vivian, p.130, Calmady of Calmady
  21. Pevsner, p.567
  22. Debrett's Peerage, 1968, pp.264-5, Baron Clinton
  23. http://www.greatfulford.co.uk/about-great-fulford/#history
  24. Per mural monument, Tetcott Church
  25. 1 2 "Jester Walk" itinerary, Tetcott
  26. 1 2 Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.709, Molesworth-St. Aubyn baronets, seats: Pencarrow & Tetcott, Holsworthy
  27. Hawker, Appendix
  28. 1 2 Luke
  29. "Who are we?". South Tetcott Hunt. Retrieved 2014-04-22.

Sources

Further reading

External links

Media related to Tetcott at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 50°44′N 4°22′W / 50.733°N 4.367°W / 50.733; -4.367

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