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The Early History
of Lympstone in Devon
Edited by Rosemary Smith
L Y
M P S T O N E
From Roman Times to the
17th Century

Lympstone
as we know it today has been formed from
the amalgamations and permutations of
three small Domesday manors, Leveneston
(Lympstone), Notteswille (Nutwell) and
(almost certainly a Domesday manor)
Sowden. Over the last hundred years it
has been thought of as Upper Lympstone
(from near the Exeter main road up
through the farms to the Common), Lower
Lympstone, and Sowden. It is curious how
the 'little manor' of Lympstone has been
linked with many famous or notorious
persons over the centuries.
Lympstone
has a traceable history going back to the
Romans (but see section on Geology). A
Roman coin of Gordianus Pius III
(238-244) was found in the churchyard in
1870 which can be seen in Exeter's Royal
Albert Museum.
There was
a Saxon thegn here as lord of the manor
of Levenestone before the Conquest
(1066). We know this from the Domesday
Book of 1086: he was called Saeward. The
Domesday Book also records a mill, which
still stands and was working sixty years
ago (this in 1995) as part of the taxable
manor: this too is Saxon in origin. A
county archaeologist has recently said
Lower Lympstone has the typical layout of
a Saxon manor; it is likely that the half
dozen larger houses either side of the
railway bridge are on the site of ancient
dwellings of the Saxon village.
'Lympstone' is thought to be derived from
a word of Saxon origin, and has been
variously spelt throughout the ages -
Leveneston, Leustona, Veneston, Weleston,
Limpston etc. - until about 1726 when the
usage of 'Lympston', then 'Lympstone'
began. 'Sowden', now part of the parish
of Lympstone, but almost certainly a
Saxon and Domesday manor and certainly a
separate manor in 1330 (in the lay
subsidy Rolls), lies in a parallel valley
south of Lympstone. The name is a
corruption of 'south of the down' or
Southedon. It became part of the manor of
Nutwell, subsequently of Lympstone, in
1357, when the manor was given to Sir
John
Dynham by charter. The Dynham family held
the manor of Nutwell and Nutwell Court
from about 1327. There was a fortified
castle there and from about 1371, a
private chapel.
During
Saxon times, villagers kept a look-out
for Danish raiders and many times had to
flee with their families and cattle up
the old drove roads (Summer Lane -the
Parish boundary - and Wotton Lane) to
Woodbury Common.
With the
Conquest, William the Conqueror imposed a
Norman overlord on Lympstone called
Richard, son of Count Gilbert (brother of
Baldwin the Sheriff). A William Capra
then held from him, an absentee lord, and
the manor was held in farm.
The next
overlord of Lympstone manor of note was
one William de Tracey. William de Tracey
was one of the four knights who murdered
Archbishop Thomas a Becket in Canterbury
Cathedral in 1170, motivated by some
words of Henry 11. William de Tracey had
to give away many of his lands and manors
in penance for his act, mainly to
churches and monasteries. However, in
1174 the manor of Lympstone passed with
Tracey's daughter Eva to William de
Courtenay.
The next
family to feature here, after many
changes, were the de Albemarles from 1215
(de Alba Mara, d'Aumarle, Damarell,
etc.), originally French knights. The de
Albemarles also held the manor of
Woodbury, and in 1228 the long connection
of Lympstone and Woodbury began. In 1251,
Reginald de Albamara divided the manor of
Lympstone and created the Manor of
Lympstone Rectory, an unusual step. The
Albemarles were a litigious family,
always to be found in court at Exeter or
Westminster. They were also
entrepreneurs: they fostered Lympstone as
part of the port of Exeter, for
'veneston' is mentioned in a letter of
1310 as a member of the port. Evidently,
perhaps emulating the Courtenays, they
tried to establish a town here for in
1288 burgesses are recorded paying 9s. to
William, de Aumarle. This venture would
have been lucrative, but was seemingly
unsuccessful.
The
Albemarles were resident Norman lords but
it is not known exactly where. Woodbury
seems most likely, but no Manor House has
been identified for certain. They used
Lympstone church, for the church of
Woodbury had passed from them in 1205 to
Otterton, thence to the monastery of St.
Michel, as the result of a lawsuit.
(Another one.)
When the
last Albemarle died (from the Black
Death?), his sisters inherited his
estates. Here it seems the connection of
Lympstone and Woodbury ceased. The eldest
sister took Lympstone; she married a
Bonville of Shute. In the Wars of the
Roses, father, son and grandson perished,
leaving the one-year old baby Cecily
Bonville the richest heiress in England.
It is not surprising that when she was
13, she was married off to Edward IV's
stepson, Thomas Grey, then Marquis of
Dorset. Lympstone was part of the
marriage settlement made to his
granddaughter-in-law, Frances Brandon,
mother of Lady Jane Grey, and for this
reason was not forfeit to the Crown when
she was beheaded. Lympstone now ceased
its connection with the very famous for a
while, and was sold, with Woodbury, in
1557 to John Prideaux of Nutwell,
Sergeant-at-Law.
However,
in Elizabethan times there were people of
note in Lympstone. Ralph Lane, a soldier
and equerry of the Queen, went on
Ralegh's second expedition to the New
World in 1585, and founded a colony on
Roanoke Island amidst great hardship and
deprivation. Later he was present at the
Armada. He came from Lympstone. (A direct
descendant, Samuel Lane, a fisherman,
went to London from Lympstone in 1821 and
became a publican and music-hall
proprietor; Lupino Lane was descended
from him!)
In the
Civil War, still under the Prideaux at
Nutwell, Lympstone was on the side of the
Parliamentarians (in opposition to the
Royalist Courtenays), and it is thought
cannon were fired from the Cliff Field,
trying to prevent supplies and
reinforcements getting through to
Royalist Exeter. Some cannon balls have
been found locally. (Cliff Field, above
the Boat Shelter, is now cared for by the
National Trust, and has a wide view over
the estuary to the Haldon Hills and up
the river to Exeter. It can be approached
by a footpath behind the Swan Inn).
Piracy was
rife off the coast of Devon in the 16th
and 17th centuries. In 1573 there were
complaints against 'Prideaux' and 'Cole':
English pirates might protect traders
threatened in the Channel by Moorish
pirates or interfere with foreign vessels
to pay their crew. John Nutt of Lympstone
is recorded in State papers of 1623 as
one such; he enjoyed the patronage of one
Secretary of State, while he was arrested
on the orders of the other! Foreign
pirates, too, were very active.
Throughout the Stuart period, West
Country shipping suffered severe losses
through Turkish pirates from Algiers, and
the dreaded rovers of Sallee. At one
period in 1638, no less than 15 Turkish
pirate vessels were cruising off the
South Coast of Devon, and were able to
anchor with impunity in Torbay and under
the lee of Start Point. Seamen, facing
capture, being sold in the slave-markets
along the Barbary Coast, becoming
galley-slaves and having their tongues
cut out, were understandably reluctant to
man West Country ships. Lympstone men
were of their number. The 'Lark' of
Topsham was captured in 1638 and the
'Swan' of Topsham only just escaped.
Collections for the ransom of men
captured by the Moors in Algeria are
mentioned in Honiton Churchwardens'
Accounts in 1618-19, by the High Sheriff
of Exeter 1631-43, and by the
Churchwardens' Accounts for the parish of
Littleham, 1679, and by those of East
Budleigh in 1681. In 1678, an Exeter boy
of 14 joined the 'Speedwell' at Lympstone
and was captured with the crew by an
Algerian rover. The ship was sunk; the
crew were sold by auction in the market
as slaves.
In 1675,
the manor of Lympstone was sold
eventually by Sir John Prideaux'
great-grandson to Sir Thomas Putt of
Combe (after whom the apple 'Tom Putt' is
named). His son, another Sir Thomas, was
well in advance of his times, for when
most villagers were still part of a
feudal estate, he gave instructions that
on his death his tenants might buy the
freeholds of their properties with full
manorial rights - an unheard of step,!
Several of the houses built on land
bought at his death in 1721 still bear
the name of independent villagers -
Basses', Manston's (the former Smith's,
Teed's) and others. (Indeed, then and
later. many of the houses in the village
have retained the name of former owners -
"Hares", for instance,
"Mitchell's", "Stafford
House", "White's
Cottages", "Metherell's"
and "Shepherd's").
The
Basses, who were important shipwrights,
owned a huge property, from the end of
Quay Lane to the limekiln now by the boat
shelter and on back into the hinterland
at least as far as Strawberry Hill. with
its many orchards. Boat-building was very
big business in Lympstone in the 18th
century and continued into the 19th.
A fascinating
history continued to unfold in the tiny
village of Lympstone, between Exmouth and
Exeter in Devon, in subsequent centuries.
Details can be read in the Lympstone
Society's Book, 'The
Lympstone Story: The Red Cliffs of
Lympstone,' from which the above extract
is taken. This can be purchased
online from Lympstone Post Office.
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