Molland

Last updated

Molland
MollandPanorama.jpg
The village of Molland viewed from the south-east
Devon UK location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Molland
Location within Devon
Population203 (2001 Census)
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town South Molton
Postcode district EX36
Police Devon and Cornwall
Fire Devon and Somerset
Ambulance South Western
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Devon
51°02′31″N3°42′14″W / 51.042°N 3.704°W / 51.042; -3.704
St Mary's Church, Molland StMary'sChurch Molland Devon.png
St Mary's Church, Molland

Molland is a small village, civil parish, dual ecclesiastical parish with Knowstone, located in the foothills of Exmoor in Devon, England. It lies within the North Devon local government district. At the time of the 2001 Census, the village had 203 inhabitants. Molland was first referenced as the Manor of Molland in the Domesday Book. The village contains a church dating back to the 1400s.

Contents

Geography

The northern boundary of the parish rises to 1,239 feet at Round Hill on Molland Common; its southern border mostly follows the River Yeo (a tributary of the River Mole), and part of its north-eastern border defines the county boundary with Somerset. [1] The parish is surrounded, clockwise from the east, by the Devon parishes of West Anstey, a small part of East Anstey, Knowstone, Bishop's Nympton and Twitchen. [2] The population of the parish was 203 in 2001, down from 397 in 1901. [1]

The village lies on minor roads about 4 miles north of the A361 road between Bampton and South Molton.

History

A scatter of tumuli near Round Hill on Molland Common provide the earliest evidence of humans in the parish. [1] A pollen analysis published in 2004 suggests that during the Romano-British period Molland Common was dominated by a pastoral economy with woodland, possibly managed, restricted to the steep-sided valleys. The evidence shows that the land continued in use for pasture until the 10th century when there was a marked increase in the cultivation of cereals. The researchers concluded that this change probably indicates an increase in population, and they pointed out that the evidence is consistent with the introduction of convertible husbandry, a type of land-use management not otherwise documented until the 1500s. [3]

Medieval manors

The first documentary evidence for Molland appears in the Domesday Book of 1086. The Manor of Molland was a medieval manor, largely co-terminous with the existing parish of Molland. More accurately it consisted from the earliest times of two separate manors, held from separate overlords, later known as Molland-Bottreaux and Molland-Champson. Molland-Bottreaux was held from the 15th to the 18th centuries by the Courtenay family, while Molland-Champson was held by the Culme family for about 200 years until it was sold to the Courtenays in 1703. The unified manor passed to the Throckmorton family and continued in existence as a large private estate under the ownership of Clare McLaren-Throckmorton (19352017). [4] In 2009 the estate comprised 6,250 acres, 1,700 of which are accounted for by Molland Moor, and includes 40 residential properties forming most of Molland village, 13 farms, the London Inn public house and additional land lettings. [5]

In 1267 the men of Molland fell foul of royal forest laws as the following record relates concerning Thomas le Shetere of "Gourt" and William Wyme of "Bremley" (both names of farms existing in Molland today) who entered the forest (i.e. of Exmoor)

with bows and arrows with intent to do evil to the venison of the Lord King, and shot one hind and afterwards chased her into the wood at Langcombe outside the metes of the forest and there took her and carried her away to their houses in Molaunde...they were given refuge in the house of John then the chaplain of Hauekrigge, who consented to their evil deeds. The same chaplain came and is detained in prison. And the others have not come... [6]

Mining and farming

Mining for iron and copper took place near Bremley and Gourt from the 17th century until 1894, when the last iron was mined. [1] Records of a mine named Brimley show that over 10,000 tons of iron ore were mined between 1881–3 and 1887–9. [7] The surviving records of Molland Mine show that over 1,700 tons of copper ore, valued at more than £9,300 were mined between 1845 and 1867; the same mine produced a total of over 20,000 tons of iron ore, valued at more than £5,000, between 1877 and 1893. [8] In comparison, the total UK output of iron ore in the late 1880s was around 14 million tons per annum. [9]

Both mines were owned by the Molland Mining Co. The maximum number of employees at Brimley was recorded as 26 (18 of whom were working underground) in 1891, and at Molland Mine, 30 (22 underground) in 1889–90. [10]

Around 1800 the farmer Francis Quartly of Great Champson did much to save and improve the breed of red Devon cattle. [1]

Church of St. Mary

Church of St. Mary, Molland, looking eastward over box pews MollandChurchDevonInterior.jpg
Church of St. Mary, Molland, looking eastward over box pews

The church is dedicated to St Mary and is of the 15th century. The Georgian interior is very rare in having escaped any Victorian restoration whatsoever. [11] There is a three-decker pulpit, box pews and the roofs are ceiled. The chancel is divided from the nave by an 18th-century screen, and there are many mural monuments at the east end of the north aisle to the Courtenays of West Molland, lords of the manor. [12] The font is Norman and the altar rails are c. 1700. On the tympanum above the chancel screen is affixed a large triptych of decorated wooden panels, the central one dated 1808 displaying the Royal Arms of King George III with a panel on either side listing the Ten Commandments. [13] The arcade forming the southern boundary of the north aisle is in a precarious state, leaning into the north aisle, and is supported by oak buttresses resting on the outside wall.

Mural monument erected in 1684 in Molland Church by Sir John Berry to his father Rev. Daniel Berry (1609-1654) BerryMonument1684MollandDevon.JPG
Mural monument erected in 1684 in Molland Church by Sir John Berry to his father Rev. Daniel Berry (1609–1654)

An elaborate mural monument survives on the north wall of the chancel of the church to Rev. Daniel Berry (1609–1654), vicar of Molland and Knowstone, erected in 1684 by his son Admiral Sir John Berry (1635–1689), born at Knowstone. [14]

Lecturer of Molland

After her husband's death Margaret Giffard (d.1743), the widow of John V Courtenay (d.1732), the last of the Courtenays of Molland, instituted a lectureship at Molland-cum-Knowstone parish and endowed it with the great tithes of the manor. [15] Recorded holders of the office include:

West Molland Barton

West Molland Barton, viewed from north WestMollandBarton.jpg
West Molland Barton, viewed from north

West Molland Barton was the manor house of the manor of Molland Bottreaux, and was thus the residence of the Courtenay family. It is situated about 1 mile west of the parish church, beyond Champson Barton, and though apparently Georgian has Tudor features incorporated at the back. [19]

Later owned by the Throckmortons, by the late 18th century both Great Champson and West Molland Barton were occupied under leases by the Quartly family, famous for having founded on these two properties the breed of Devon cattle.

Molland Lily

Lilium pyrenaicum growing wild on a hedgebank in the parish of Molland, where it is known locally as the "Molland Lilly" MollandLilly MollandDevon 6June2014.JPG
Lilium pyrenaicum growing wild on a hedgebank in the parish of Molland, where it is known locally as the "Molland Lilly"

Many of the remote hedgerows within the parish contain isolated clumps of Lilium pyrenaicum , which is native to the Pyrenees Mountains and other mountainous regions at a similar latitude. The plant was discovered by the French botanist Antoine Gouan (d.1821) and was officially recorded in 1875. [20] The plant is thought by some to have been introduced by members of a religious community. [20] possibly when local monks brought back seeds from Spain in medieval times. Kneelers in the church include the lily as part of their design. [21]

Game bird shooting

The shoots of Molland and West Molland are deemed amongst the 25 best shoots in the world by Alex Brant, and are renowned especially for high birds, pheasants and partridge. [22] Of the whole 6,250 acres of the Molland Estate, [23] the West Molland shoot uses 2,000 acres. The shoot was leased to the shotgun manufacturer Holland & Holland from 1998 to 2005, [24] and let-out since 2005 [25] to Bettws Hall Shooting Estates, a commercial shoot operator based in Wales. [26]

See also

Related Research Articles

South Molton is a town and civil parish in Devon, England. It is part of the North Devon local government district. The town is on the River Mole.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">East Anstey</span> Village in Devon, England

East Anstey is a village and civil parish in the North Devon district of Devon, England. The parish is located in an area which has been designated as an area of 'Great Landscape Value'. The village falls within the South Molton Deanery for ecclesiastical purposes. The village has a Grade II listed church, the Church of St Michael, which has a 15th-century tower and south porch but which was largely rebuilt in 1871.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Knowstone</span> Village in Devon, England

Knowstone is a village and civil parish situated in the North Devon district of Devon, England, halfway between the Mid Devon town of Tiverton, Devon and the North Devon town of South Molton. The hamlet of East Knowstone lies due east of the village. Knowstone was the birthplace of Admiral Sir John Berry (1635–1691), second son of Rev. Daniel Berry (1609–1654), vicar of Knowstone cum Molland. An elaborate mural monument erected by Sir John in 1684 to the memory of his parents survives in Molland Church.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hartland Abbey</span>

Hartland Abbey is a former abbey and current family home to the Stucley family. It is located in Hartland, Devon. The current owner is Sir Hugh George Copplestone Bampfylde Stucley, 6th Baronet.

James Coleridge was an older brother of the philosopher-poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Simonsbath House</span> Historic site in Simonsbath, Somerset

Simonsbath House is a historic house in Simonsbath on Exmoor in Somerset, England. The Grade II listed building is now the Simonsbath House Hotel, and outdoor activity centre. It lies in the valley of the River Barle and on the Two Moors Way footpath.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tiverton Castle</span> Country house in Devon, England

Tiverton Castle is the remains of a medieval castle dismantled after the Civil War and thereafter converted in the 17th century into a country house. It occupies a defensive position above the banks of the River Exe at Tiverton in Devon.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">North Molton</span> Village in Devon, England

North Molton is a village, parish and former manor in North Devon, England. The population of the parish in 2001 was 1,047, decreasing to 721 in the 2011 census. An electoral ward with the same name also exists. The ward population at the census was 2,206. Bounded on the north east by the border with Somerset, it is the second largest parish in Devon, covering about 15,000 acres. Until the 18th century the village was an important centre of the woollen industry, and mining was also a significant employer in the parish until the 19th century.

Meshaw is a village and civil parish in the North Devon district of Devon, England. Its nearest town is South Molton, which lies approximately 5.9 miles (9.5 km) north-west from the village. The village lies just off the B3137 road. Meshaw also lies on the same B3137 road as Witheridge which is approximately 4.7 miles south-east of the village. In 2001 the population of the civil parish of Meshaw was 151.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">William de Botreaux, 1st Baron Botreaux</span>

William de Botreaux (1337–1391) was a prominent British West-Country baron during the reigns of King Edward III (1327-1377) and King Richard II (1377-1399).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manor of Molland</span> Polity in North Devon, England

The Manor of Molland was a medieval manor in North Devon, England. It was largely co-terminous with the existing parish of Molland, in which is situated the village of Molland. More accurately it consisted from the earliest times of two separate manors, held from separate overlords, later known as Molland-Bottreaux and Molland-Champson.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Newnham Park</span> Historic estate in Devon, England

Newnham Park is an historic estate in the civil parish of Sparkwell, Devon, UK. It was known as Loughtor until about 1700 when the ancient Strode family, long seated at Newnham, about 1 mile south-east of the manor house of Loughtor, abandoned Newnham and moved their residence to Loughtor where they built a new mansion house which they renamed "Newnham Park". In 2014 the mansion house with an estate of about 1,550 acres is still owned by a descendant of the Courtenay and Strode families which held the estate from the 15th century, and which were well established in the county of Devon long before that time. In 2014 part of the estate is operated as a commercial clay-pigeon shooting ground.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wadham, Knowstone</span> Historic manor in Devon, England

The manor of Wadham in the parish of Knowstone in north Devon and the nearby manors of Chenudestane and Chenuestan are listed in the Domesday Book of 1086:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hawkridge, Chittlehampton</span> Historic estate in north Devon, England

Hawkridge in the parish of Chittlehampton in North Devon, England, is an historic estate, anciently the seat of a junior branch of the Acland family which originated at nearby Acland, in the parish of Landkey and later achieved great wealth and prominence as the Acland Baronets of Killerton, near Exeter. The former mansion house is today a farmhouse known as Hawkridge Barton, a grade II* listed building. The Devon historian Hoskins (1959) stated of Hawkridge: "Externally there is nothing remarkable except a decaying avenue of ancient walnuts, so often the first indication of a 16th or 17th century mansion". The interior contains a fine plaster heraldic overmantel showing the arms of Acland impaling Tremayne, representing the 1615 marriage of Baldwin Acland (1593–1659) of Hawkridge and Elizabeth Tremayne.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hugh Squier</span> English benefactor

Hugh Squier (1625-1710) of Petty France, Westminster, was a wealthy merchant best remembered as a generous benefactor to the town of South Molton in Devon, the place of his birth, where in 1684 he founded a "free school".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mayor of South Molton</span>

The Mayor of South Molton in Devon is an ancient historical office which survives at the present time. In the Middle Ages the town of South Molton was incorporated by royal charter into a borough governed by a mayor and Corporation. This enabled the inhabitants to free themselves from the jurisdiction of the lord of the manor of South Molton and to subject themselves instead to the jurisdiction of the king.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Wadham</span> Member of the Parliament of England

Sir John Wadham (c.1344–1412) was a Justice of the Common Pleas from 1389 to 1398, during the reign of King Richard II (1377–1399), selected by the King as an assertion of his right to rule by the advice of men appointed of his own choice, and one of the many Devonians of the period described by Thomas Fuller in his Worthies of England, as seemingly "innated with a genius to study law".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Adelaide (shipwrecked 1850)</span> British ship wrecked off coast of Spain

The Adelaide was a British ship which was wrecked in a storm on 19 December 1850, off Laxe, 32 miles west of A Coruña, Spain, carrying 17 passengers and crew, bound for the West Indies. It is recorded as "Memorial M3147" on the "Maritime Memorials" database of the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich. An illustration of the plan of the ship is shown as folio 90 in Hilhouse Draughts, in 1950 in the possession of Charles Hill & Sons, shipbuilders at Bristol.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Froude</span>

The Reverend John Froude II of Knowstone and East Anstey, both in Devon, England, Rector of Molland-cum-Knowstone, in Devon, was an extreme and notorious example of the "hunting parson", a phenomenon which started to disappear in the late 19th century, for whom "hunting was...the main pursuit of their life, and clerical duties were neglected or perfunctorily performed". During his lifetime the anti-hunting lobby of the evangelicals was gaining ground. In his case this movement was represented by his nemesis Henry Phillpotts, Bishop of Exeter, with whom he had many amusing disputes.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Harris, Helen (2004). A Handbook of Devon Parishes. Tiverton: Halsgrove. p. 114. ISBN   1-84114-314-6.
  2. "Map of Devon Parishes" (PDF). Devon County Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 November 2013. Retrieved 20 June 2013.
  3. Fyfe, Ralph; Rippon, Stephen (2004). "A landscape in transition? Palaeoenvironmental evidence for the end of the 'Romano-British' period in southwest England". Debating late antiquity in Britain AD 300–700 (PDF). British Archaeological Reports International Series. Vol. 365. Archaeopress. pp. 33–42. ISBN   9781841715858. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  4. Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.792
  5. Acreages per Proof of Evidence of C.E. Dixon, FRICS, managing agent to Molland Estate, 8 April 2009 re Airtricity wind farm proposal
  6. http://www.everythingexmoor.org.uk/encyclopedia_detail.php?ENCid=847 Original source not provided
  7. Burt et al. pp. 19–20
  8. Burt et al. pp. 84–85
  9. Burt et al. table 10, p. xxviii
  10. Burt et al. pp. 20, 85
  11. Pevsner, 2004, p.572
  12. Betjeman, John, ed. (1968) Collins Pocket Guide to English Parish Churches; the South. London: Collins; p. 164
  13. Church leaflet: St Mary's Parish Church, Molland: A Short Guide, p.3
  14. Berry, Sir John (1684). Page:BerryMonument1684MollandDevon.JPG  via Wikisource.
  15. Lysons, Magna Britannia (1822), Vol.6, Devon, Parishes: Molland; White's Devon Directory of 1850 stated however: "In 1721, they (great tithes) were vested in trust by Thos. Clarke, for the support of a lecturer (or curate,) and that office is now filled by the Rev. Joshua Bawden, B.A., of South Molton". Thomas Clarke left two houses and 15 acres of land called Leddons, for the relief of the poor and schooling poor children, which were in 1850 producing rental income of about £20 a year.(White's Devon Directory of 1850)
  16. Unsworth, John, The Early Background of S.T. Coleridge, published in The Coleridge Bulletin, No 1, Summer 1988, pp 16–25
  17. "I reside in the Vicarage House at Knowstone being consolidated with Molland. There is a Lecturer at Molland, The Rev'd Richard Bawden, who has the great Tithes of the Parish. He preaches one Part of the Day. I preach one Part of the Day at Creacomb, a very Small Church adjoining Knowstone".Chanter 232A, 25
  18. White's Devon Directory of 1850
  19. Pevsner, N. (1952) North Devon. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books; p. 123
  20. 1 2 North Devon Journal, 2 September 2010 "Alison's attempt to solve the mystery of the Molland Lily"
  21. Thomas, David St John (2005). Journey Through Britain: Landscape, People And Books. Francis Lincoln Ltd. p. 368. ISBN   9780711225688.
  22. Brant, Alex. World's 25 Best Shoots, 2009
  23. Acreage 6,250 stated in Proof of Evidence 8 April 2009 of C.E. Dixon FRICS, managing agent of Molland Estate objecting to proposed Airtricity wind farm adjacent to Molland
  24. Shooting Gazette 12 June 2011
  25. Shooting Gazette 12 June 2007 "High Pheasant Shoots at Molland"
  26. "Bettws Hall - West Molland". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 14 July 2022.

Sources

Further reading

Commons-logo.svg Media related to Molland at Wikimedia Commons