Manor of King's Nympton


The Manor of King's Nympton was a manor largely co-terminous with the parish of King's Nympton in Devon, England.

Descent of the manor

At the time of the Domesday Book of 1086, the whole manor of Nimetone, in the hundred of Witheridge, belonged to the King and was held by him in demesne, but King Henry I granted the manor, together with that of Black Torrington, in Torrington hundred, to Joel de Mayne. He appears to have been a resident of Normandy, as when that former possession of the English kings became separated from England, King John seized it back into royal ownership.

de Luscy

The manor was probably re-granted by King John, as is known to have been the case with Black Torrington, to Geoffrey de Luscy. The manor subsequently escheated to the crown by cause unknown.

de la Zouche

King Henry III granted the manor, again together with Black Torrington, to Roger la Zouche, lord of the manor of North Molton. Risdon states that la Zouche granted the manor to Godfrey Lucy.

de Cornwall

Sir Geoffrey de Cornwall was lord of the manor tempore King Edward III. His heir was a minor and became the ward of Enguerrand VII, Lord of Coucy, Earl of Bedford. He was succeeded successively by Sir Bryan de Cornwall and Sir John de Cornwall, temp Kings Henry IV and Henry V.

Pollard

Sir Lewis Pollard (died 1526)

The manor of King's Nympton was eventually purchased by Sir Lewis Pollard, of Grilstone, Bishop's Nympton, Justice of the Common Pleas from 1514 to 1526 and MP for Totnes in 1491 and JP in Devon in 1492. He enclosed a deer park in the late 15th century. His heir was his eldest son and heir Sir Hugh Pollard.

Sir Hugh Pollard (fl. 1545)

Sir Hugh Pollard, eldest son and heir, great-grandfather of Sir Lewis Pollard, 1st Baronet of King's Nympton. He was Sheriff of Devon in 1335/6 and Recorder of Barnstaple in 1545.
He married twice:
In 1539 Hugh Pollard acquired a 21-year lease of the site and demesne of Torre Abbey at the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and in 1543 acquired the freehold from John St. Leger of Annery.

Sir Lewis Pollard (died before 1569)

Sir Lewis Pollard, eldest son and heir, was a serjeant-at-law and served as Recorder of Exeter from 1548. He married Joan Prust, daughter and heiress of Hugh Prust, Esquire, of Thorry, near Hartland, who married secondly Sir John Perrot, Lord Deputy of Ireland. The Prust family were settled at "Gorven" from at the latest 1199, a deed of which date is recorded in the Heraldic Visitations of Devon as mentioning John Prust of Gorven. Hugh Prust was the second son of John Prust of Thorry by his wife Agnes. Thorry had been held by an unnamed tenant in 1299 from the Abbot of Hartland for the rent of 1 lb of pepper, due annually at Michaelmas. It was still held in 1566 at the same rent, by the "heirs of Hugh Prust", i.e. the Pollards. In 1530 Hugh Prust gave to St Nectan's Church, Hartland, the set of surviving bench-ends showing his initials "H P" each in its own shield. Hugh Prust was one of the largest tenants of the lands of Hartland Abbey as revealed by the Valor Ecclesiasticus made in 1535 preparatory to its dissolution. Amongst his lands were the lease of the manor of Bykyngton which he had leased from the Abbey for 40 years paying £12 per annum rent. This manor became the seat of his descendant Sir Amyas Pollard, 3rd Baronet. Hugh Prust was described in a contemporary document as "a man of great wealth and of fair land and living" and had a private chapel at Thorry served by the cleric John Horwell, the prior of Hartland Abbey before its dissolution in 1539, who also served as mass-priest in St Mary's Guild, at the sole expense of Hugh Prust. Hugh Prust's other lands held from Hartland Abbey in 1566 were: the whole of: Friar's Hill, Holepark, Thorry and Wembsworthy; part of Elmscott, Hardisworthy, Pitt and Higher Velly. In addition the widow Katherine Prust held possibly as her dower: part of Fursdon and Natcott. Lewis Pollard died before 1569 and his infant sons became wards of Sir John Chichester of Raleigh. He left the following children:
Sir Hugh Pollard, eldest son and heir, married twice:
Church
"My Jacob had by mee

As many sonnes as hee,

Daughters twice three"

Above her portrait is a chronogram in verse:

"See heer In ChrIst sLeeps shee,

FroM paInefVLL Labors free,

Her VVorks henCe foLLoVV on,

To resVrreCtIon"

If the capital letters in red are added together as Roman numerals the sum of 1634 results, Susanna's date of death. The remaining unused letters are SFHT, the initial letters of each line, of uncertain cryptic meaning.
Below the chronogram is a heraldic escutcheon showing the arms of Northcote impaling Pollard: Argent, a chevron sable between three escallops gules. Below her portrait inscribed on a black stone tablet is the following verse:

"Jehovah first compos'd us two in one,

Then made one two, till strong affection

Did reunite us one; Death tried his skill

To part's us againe, but could not worke his will

One was our hope, faith, comfort, one's or tombe

One place our soule hath, till the day of Dome

Regia pacifisae commisit chartula libram

Justitiae lustris aetatis quinque peractis

Libravit rectum pura cum mente probatus

Stellata camera spectatur ut ignibus aurum"
, eldest son and heir. He was created a baronet on 31 May 1627. He married Margaret Berkeley, daughter of Sir Henry Berkeley of Bruton.

Sir Hugh Pollard, 2nd Baronet

, eldest son and heir. During the Civil War the Pollards were staunch Royalists but Sir Hugh Pollard was fined £518 for his "delinquency”. It may have been the severity of this fine which caused him to sell the manor to his cousin Sir Arthur Northcote, 2nd Baronet, whose large inscribed slate ledger stone and funeral helm survives in King's Nympton Church, the place of his burial.

Northcote

The manor remained in the Northcote family until 1740 when it was sold to James Buller of Morval, Cornwall.

Buller

was MP for East Looe 1741–1747 and for Cornwall 1748–1765. His first wife Elizabeth Gould was the heiress of the estate of Downes near Crediton in Devon, which became at some time the principal seat of the family. He married secondly in 1744 to Hon. Jane Bathurst, second daughter of Allen Bathurst, 1st Earl Bathurst, of Cirencester Park, and sister of Henry Bathurst, 2nd Earl Bathurst, Lord Chancellor 1771–1778. It appears she did not wish to live in the house of her husband's first wife, or else had a liking for the new Palladian fashion in architecture, as James built for her a new house at King's Nympton. He demolished the previous mediaeval manor house at King's Nympton and built in its place between 1746–9 the fine Palladian mansion which was then known as "New Place", which survives today known as "King's Nympton Park". His architect was Francis Cartwright of Blandford in Dorset and the design was based on Marble Hill in Twickenham, one of the earliest Palladian houses in England built between 1724–9. In 1756 James Buller donated to the parish church a magnificent set of silver-gilt vessels, being a thanks-offering for the survival of himself, his children and over 80 parishioners after an inoculation against smallpox. The set comprises a chalice, paten, flagon and alms dish. The Bullers eventually withdrew to Downes in about 1839 and in 1842 sold the estate to James Tanner, who added the existing low Tuscan porch.

Tanner

The Tanner family of yeoman status had been established at Rose Ash and at Creacombe since at the latest the 17th. century. John Davy of Flitton, North Molton, one of the leading pioneers in the breeding of North Devon cattle, married Elizabeth Tanner, and had by her a son John Davy Tanner, living in 1824.

James Tanner

James Tanner, JP, DL, of King's Nympton Park, was the son of Robert Tanner by his wife Mary Melhuish, daughter of Thomas Melhuish. He was the grandson of Jonathan Tanner of Rose Ash.
In 1827 James Tanner of King's Nympton married Elizabeth Vowler, the daughter of John Vowler of Parnacott. James Tanner appears to have held a lease of King's Nympton Park before he purchased the property in 1842, as the Trewman's Exeter Flying Post of Thursday, October 2, 1823 made the following report of his hospitality towards his farm-workers:

On Wednesday last, Mr James Tanner, of King's Nympton, one of the largest agriculturists in the North of Devon, on the completion of his harvest, and according to his annual custom, gave his labourers, amounting to upwards of 100, on the lawn in front of his residence, a good and plentiful repast of true old English Fare - roast beef and plum pudding, with an abundance of beer and cider. The joyous feast presented a most gratifying sight, particularly so when the customary neck was given, after which the merry dance commenced with a good band of music and glee and merriment prevailed; until night spread her sable mantle, and closed the festive scene; the jovial groups before retiring gave 3 hearty cheers to their benevolent employer and sung 'God Save the King'. A party of gentlemen, friends of Mr Tanner, met on the occasion at his hospitable mansion and with Mr Radford's capital pack of harriers enjoyed a good mornings sport; an excellent dinner welcomed them on their return, which met with a warm reception from the hunters and the remainder of the day was spent in mirth and harmony.

James Tanner had the following children by his wife Elizabeth Vowler:
Rev. John Vowler Tanner, of King's Nympton Park, eldest son and heir, rector of Chawleigh. In 1871 he married Eliza Thompson elder daughter of Sir Matthew William Thompson, 1st Baronet, of Parkgate, Guiseley, Yorkshire.

Charles Peile Tanner

Charles Peile Tanner, eldest son, of King's Nympton Park. He was educated at Charterhouse and Pembroke College, Cambridge. He married in 1914 Frances Isabel Atkinson, daughter of William Fletcher Atkinson of Ilkley, Yorkshire.