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HER Number:MDV11190
Name:Widworthy Barton

Summary

House, former manor house. Part is early 16th century but most was rebuilt in the late 16th and early 17th century; some 20th century modernisations of various qualities.

Location

Grid Reference:SY 213 992
Map Sheet:SY29NW
Admin AreaDevon
Civil ParishWidworthy
DistrictEast Devon
Ecclesiastical ParishWIDWORTHY

Protected Status

Other References/Statuses

  • National Monuments Record: SY29NW6
  • Old DCC SMR Ref: SY29NW/66
  • Old Listed Building Ref (II*): 88824
  • Pastscape: 449614

Monument Type(s) and Dates

  • MANOR HOUSE (XVI to XX - 1501 AD to 2000 AD (Between))

Full description

Foulkes, R. F., Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100690.

Benedictus marwood bought widworthy and made alterations in c.1730 (foulkes).


NMR CITING DOE 1988, Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100718.

Very good example of its date. Main wing with porch, passage, original screen + great hall are all preserved, with large mullioned windows. Date 1591 in fireplace in first floor gallery of side wing. Superseded as a manor house by widworthy court (built 1830) (nmr citing doe 1988).


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100720.

Hicks, c. E. /tda/102(1970)24/proceedings at the 108th annual meeting.


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100721.

Polwhele, r. /devonshire/(1797)318.


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100722.

Hoskins, w. G. /devon/(1954)516.


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100723.

Pevsner, n. /buildings of england: south devon/(1952)310.


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100724.

Osa=sy29nw6.


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100725.

Doe/hhr:honiton rd/(-/7/1950)46.


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100726.

Foulkes, r. F. /dcnq/32(1971-1973)110/the marwoods of honiton and colyton.


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100727.

Doe:hhr/widworthy/(-/3/1988)124-6.


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100728.

Des=devon gardens trust/historic parks and gardens register review/(1999)/in pf.


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100729.

Cherry, b. + pevsner, n. /the buildings of england: devon/(1989)910-11.


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100730.

Gray, t. /the garden history of devon: an illustrated guide to sources/(1995)238.


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV100731.

Des=os 6"(1906)71nw.


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV177625.

1591 on the fireplace in the gallery on the first floor of the side wing. The main wing with porch, passage, original screen and great hall all preserved, with large mullioned windows (pevsner).


HICKS, Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV27389.

Widworthy barton is a tudor manor house, but part is reputed to have been built in 1290. It was bought by mrs john baber, a member of the society for the protection of ancient buildings, who restored much of the house. Material was found to support the 13th century dating. The more interesting features are elizabethan. The house was superseded as a manor house in 1801 when it became a farm (hicks).


Department of Environment, Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV326831.

Xvi century. Built on four sides of a small court. Two storey porch. Mullioned stone windows. Large external chimney at south end. Nbr in nmr (doe).


Untitled Source (Migrated Record). SDV335.

Hall retains its screens and an upper room has a date 1591 above fireplace. There is other elizabethan plasterwork (hoskins).


Exeter Archaeology, 2003-2004, East Devon Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty Archaeological Survey, Site No. 856 (Archive - Survey). SDV351568.

Widworthy Barton. Tudor manor house containing 13th century fabric. Became a farm in 1801. Listed Grade II*.
SMR.


Cox, J., 2011, The Walronds Part 2, 40, Figure 13 (Article in Serial). SDV347496.

Overmantel dated 1591.


Ordnance Survey, 2014, MasterMap (Cartographic). SDV355681.


English Heritage, 2014, National Heritage List for England (National Heritage List for England). SDV355683.

House, former manor house. Part is early C16 but most was rebuilt in the late C16 and early C17; some C20 modernisations of various qualities. Local stone and front rubble with Beerstone dressings and detail; stone rubble stacks topped with C19 and C20 brick; slate roof, probably thatch originally. Plan and development: courtyard plan house. The main front block faces north-east and it has a 2-room plan with through-passage between and 2-storey front porch. The larger room is that to right (north-west); it is the Great Hall with a rear lateral stack. The left room (the dining room) was probably some kind of service parlour, its large projecting gable-end stack has been partly rebuilt in the C20. The left (south-east) wing overlaps the end of the main block. This was service rooms originally and now houses the present kitchen. It has a stack backing onto the dining room/service parlour of the main block. The rear (south-west) wing is the original kitchen wing with a large gable-end stack at the south-east end. The right (north-west) wing also overlaps a short distance the end of the front block. This appears to have been a parlour wing although there are no original fireplaces here. There is, at the upper end of the hall, an alcove between the hall and parlour wing with a first floor "minstrels gallery". Behind the putative parlour, the first room of the wing is a through-passage and the unheated end room of the wing was probably a buttery or dairy adjoining the original kitchen. The first floor is one long room, presumably the principal chamber. There is some evidence that there was a newel stair turret in the angle of the hall and parlour but this has been replaced by a C20 stair block across the back of the passage and hall. The oldest part of the house appears to be the rear kitchen range. Here part of an early C16 roof structure remains. It is smoke-blackened indicating that this block was originally open to the roof and heated by an open hearth fire. It might have been a detached kitchen or even the original open hall house before the front block was built. In the mid or late C16 (either when the main block was built or refurbished) it was converted to a kitchen with its new kitchen stack and it was floored over. There is no internal stair to the first floor here and up until circa 1960 there was an external stair on the back. The main block appears to be a mid C16 build. It appears to have had a 3-room-and-through-passage plan. The roof structure shows that there was once an inner room at the right (north-west) end with a full height crosswall between hall and inner room. The roof is clean and therefore the hall fireplace is probably original. The hall, passaage and service end were open to the roof. In the late C16 the parlour block was built and the main block converted to its present layout. The porch was added at this time and the fenestration seems to be contemporary. The attic over the hall and the gallery is also late C16. It is not clear whether the service end room was floored over at this time. This might have happened in the early C17. The floor goes across the tall front window. The south-east also could be as late as the early C17. Much of early structural history and development of the house has been confused by the C20 modernisations which have involved moving some features round the house and introducing others. The hall is full height with attics over; the rest is 2 storeys. Exterior: regular but not symmetrical 1:1:2 - window front of restored late C16 windows. The main windows are tall full height 4-light Beerstone windows with ovolo-moulded mullions and central transom. There is a 3-light version over the porch and small 2-light window in the right side of the porch. There is a secondary first floor window left of the porch. A continous hoodmould is carried round the porch and the right end. The outer arch of the porch is a Beerstone Tudor arch with moulded surround and directly above it is a panel containing a carved armorial bearing. The passage front doorway is a another Tudor arch with moulded surround (and yet another to the rear doorway) which contains its original studded plank door with moulded coverstrips making a panelled front and it is complete with original ferramenta. There is, on the main front, the remains of a Beerstone ashlar chamfered plinth. There are Beerstone ashlar quoins to the porch and main block. The gable ends of the main block and porch have shaped kneelers and coping, and the porch and right end of the main block have apex finials. The north-west end has a 1:3 window front in the same style as the front block although not all the windows still contain rectangular panes of leaded glass. The end hall window is the largest in the building; 6 lights with central king mullion (with an internal moulded shaft inside) and transom. The parlour block passage front doorway is another Tudor arch with moulded surround. It and the window of the left have hoodmoulds and the continuous hoodmould of the front block was carried across the front of this block as a dripcourse (although it is now mostly cut back flush with the wall face). There is, in the angle of the front and parlour blocks an ornate lead rainwater head inscribed with the initials R and A S with the date 1724. The south-west facing gable-end of the parlour block contains a first floor 4-light Beerstone mullion-and-transom window and a ground floor late C16 oak 4-light window with ovolo-moulded mullions. The rest of this side (the original kitchen) contains only one late C16 window, the rest are C20 casements and one towards the left end is blocking a former doorway. The south-east side also contains mostly C20 casements. The inside of the courtyard contains some original windows including a Beerstone one restored with Hamstone to rear of the main block and some oak windows with ovolo-moulded mullions. The courtyard side of the original kitchen shows a number of blockings. Interior: the upper (hall) side of the passage is an oak-panelled screen. It is late C16 in style but was built in the C20 incorporating one bay of original panelling. On the passage side the small panels are painted to appear like fielded panelling. The close-studded crosswall above the screen has a sill beam over the screen as if it were built on top of an existing screen. The roof shows that the upper crosswall is secondary (late C16). The hall fireplace is Beerstone with a Tudor arch head. The flat ceiling was created in the late C16 probably for ornamental plasterwork. The gallery alcove preserves a remnant of late C16 ornamental plasterwork but otherwise is mostly C20 although, at ground floor level, there is an ovolo-moulded jamb of a Beerstone doorway. The gallery front is C20 made to look like an old arcade by using C19 carved poppyheads from church pews. The plasterwork however is good and includes 2 fine brackets moulded as female angels. In fact these angels are dressed as fashionable young ladies of the period 1600 - 1605 and most interesting is that their hairstyles are Italian. The lower (service parlour) side of the passage is an oak large-framed screen and the first floor crosswall jetties into the parlour, the upper part is another large- framed crosswall closing an arch-braced truss. The service parlour/dining room has a 3-bay ceiling carried on chamfered and step-stopped crossbeams and the fireplace here is a C20 rebuild. The chamber above is lined with small-field oak panelling, some of it late C16 - early C17 and some of it C20. Some of the oak panels of the frieze have a simple geometric panel of inlaid marquetry including a fragment of an inlaid Latin inscription recording the death of one John Chichester (surely not the one who died in 1485 as a C20 plaque in the room suggests). This panelling was reset here in the C20; it came from the parlour wing. Also it is unlikely that the room over the porch was ever a chapel. The mid C16 roof over the main block is substantially intact. It is 7 bays, originally the north-west 2 bays were divided off by a closed truss. The rest were side-pegged jointed cruck trusses with chamfered arch braces. Little early detail remains in the parlour wing. The fireplaces are C20 and no carpentry shows in the parlour. In the long chamber above there is a fine ornamental plasterwork overmantel; it is a strapwork cartouche enriched with flowers and with rustic squirrels each side sitting on top of scrolls. In the centre is an armorial bearing, Bluett impaling Rowe, under a date of 1591. This was moved here from a "farmhouse on the Shute estate, about 5 miles from Widworthy" (see Iris Brook - Sources). The roof is mostly C19 except for the single truss nearest the main block which is late C16; it is an A-frame truss with slots for missing arch braces. The south-west service wing is late C16 - early C17. The ground floor room (present kitchen and C20 stair) has chamfered and step-stopped crossbeams and Beerstone fireplace with chamfered oak lintel (the fireplace appears to have been partly rebuilt in the C20). The chamber above has a small Beerstone fireplace with Tudor arch head, the only early first floor fireplace. The oak plank-and-muntin screen partition here is probably not in situ. The roof of this wing is carried on clean side-pegged jointed cruck trusses. The rear wing contains the late C16 kitchen. The large fireplace here is Beerstone with a chamfered and step-stopped oak lintel and includes a large oven to right. The lintel continues across an alcove to left (its head here is also chamfered with step stops). This was probably a walk-in curing chamber. The ceiling is carried on a series of chamfered and step-stopped crossbeams. The roof structure is mostly C19 but includes one original early C16 truss: it is a side-pegged jointed cruck truss with chamfered arch braces and it is heavily sooted from the original open hearth fire here. The house was owned by the Chichester family in the C15, C16 and C17. In the early C18 it was acquired by Benedictus Marwood. Sources: Devon SMR. Iris Brooke, Riddle of the Devon Plasterers, Country Life, Dec 29, 1950, pp. 2214 - 2216.


Historic England, 2015-2016, NRHE to HER prototype, 445464 (Website). SDV359652.

Summary description
Former manor house, now house. Part is early 16th century but most was rebuilt in the late 16th century and early 17th century; some 20th century modernisations of various qualities. Local stone and front rubble with Beerstone dressings and detail; stone rubble stacks topped with 19th century and 20th century brick; slate roof, probably thatch originally.
Plan and development: courtyard plan house. The main front block faces north-east and it has a 2-room plan with through-passage between and 2-storey front porch. The larger room is that to right (north-west); it is the Great Hall with a rear lateral stack. The left room (the dining room) was probably some kind of service parlour, its large projecting gable-end stack has been partly rebuilt in the 20th century. The left (south-east) wing overlaps the end of the main block. This was service rooms originally and now houses the present kitchen.
Full description
(SY 21369924) Widworthy Barton (NAT) (1)
The manor house, close to the church is a very good example of its date. the main wing with porch, passage, original screen and great hall, are all preserved, with large mullioned windows. The date 1591 is on the fireplace in the first floor gallery of the side wing. It was superseded as a manor house by Widworthy Court (built in 1830). (2)
Widworthy Manor. Grade II*. (3)
Sources
1 Ordnance Survey Map (Scale / Date) OS 6" 1906
2 VIRTUAL CATALOGUE ENTRY TO SUPPORT NAR MIGRATION Bldgs of Eng s Devon 1952 310 (N Pevsner)
3 VIRTUAL CATALOGUE ENTRY TO SUPPORT NAR MIGRATION DOE (HHR )Dist. of East Devon MAR-1988 124-6
Monument types, periods and evidence
Manor House: C16 (1501-1539), medieval. Extant building
Courtyard house: C16 (1501-1539), medieval. Extant building
Manor House: C16-17 (1540-1700), post medieval. Extant building
Courtyard House: C16-17 (1540-1700), post medieval. Extant building
House: C20, 20th century. Extant building
Related monuments: None recorded.
Related events: None recorded.
Related archives/objects
OP21877 View of Widworthy Barton from the north-west
OP21879 View of Widworthy Barton from the north-east
AA49/07151 View of Widworthy Barton from the north-east
AA49/07152 View of Widworthy Barton from the north-west
OP21878 View of Widworthy Barton from the north
Compiler: Norman Victor Quinnell 1953, Rod Fitzgerald 1992
Record created: Prior to 01/04/1999

Sources / Further Reading

SDV100690Migrated Record: Foulkes, R. F..
SDV100718Migrated Record: NMR CITING DOE 1988.
SDV100720Migrated Record:
SDV100721Migrated Record:
SDV100722Migrated Record:
SDV100723Migrated Record:
SDV100724Migrated Record:
SDV100725Migrated Record:
SDV100726Migrated Record:
SDV100727Migrated Record:
SDV100728Migrated Record:
SDV100729Migrated Record:
SDV100730Migrated Record:
SDV100731Migrated Record:
SDV177625Migrated Record:
SDV27389Migrated Record: HICKS.
SDV326831Migrated Record: Department of Environment.
SDV335Migrated Record:
SDV347496Article in Serial: Cox, J.. 2011. The Walronds Part 2. Devon Buildings Group Newsletter. 29. A4 Stapled + Digital. 40, Figure 13.
SDV351568Archive - Survey: Exeter Archaeology. 2003-2004. East Devon Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty Archaeological Survey. East Devon Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty Archaeological Survey. Digital + Mixed Archive Material. Site No. 856.
SDV355681Cartographic: Ordnance Survey. 2014. MasterMap. Ordnance Survey Digital Mapping. Digital. [Mapped feature: #71345 ]
SDV355683National Heritage List for England: English Heritage. 2014. National Heritage List for England. Historic Houses Register. Website.
SDV359652Website: Historic England. 2015-2016. NRHE to HER prototype. https://nrhe-to-her.esdm.co.uk/home. Website. 445464.

Associated Monuments

MDV18562Related to: Widworthy Court, Widworthy (Building)

Associated Finds: none recorded

Associated Events: none recorded


Date Last Edited:Sep 1 2016 3:42PM