Spencer Combe


Spencer Combe in the parish of Crediton, Devon, is an historic estate. The grade II listed farmhouse known today as "Spence Combe", the remnant of a former mansion house, is situated 3 miles north-west of the town of Crediton. Spencer Combe is given in several traditional historical sources as the seat of Sir Robert Spencer who married Eleanor Beaufort, the daughter of Edmund Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset, KG, and who was father to two daughters and co-heiresses who made notable marriages. The arms of this Sir Robert Spencer were Sable, two bars nebuly ermine, as shown in the Percy window in the chapel of Petworth House and as quartered by Cary, Viscount Falkland. The American genealogist Douglas Richardson suggests however that Sir Robert Spencer was in fact the son and heir of John Spencer, Esquire, MP for Dorset, of Frampton in Dorset, Ashbury in Devon and Brompton Ralph in Somerset, by his wife Jone. The arms given by Pole for Spencer of Spencer Combe, are: Argent, on a bend sable two pairs of keys or, and are shown quartered by Prideaux on the monument in Farway Church, Devon, to Sir Edmund Prideaux, 1st Baronet of Netherton Hall, and are shown in stained glass impaled by de Esse of Thuborough in the Thuborough Chapel of Sutcombe Church.

Descent

Lancells

The earliest holder of the estate as recorded by the Devon historian Tristram Risdon was the Lancells family.
However the Devon historian Sir William Pole stated Comb Lancelles to be a separate estate to Cumbe, held by the Hody then Spencer families. Indeed, the grade II listed farmhouse known today as "Combe Lancey" survives, situated within the parish of Sandford, to the immediate north-west of Crediton. Pole gave the descent of Comb Lancelles as follows:
Combe passed by inheritance to the Hody family.
On inheritance by the Spencer family the manor became known as Spencer Combe or Spencer's Combe. The arms of Spencer of Spencer Combe were given by Pole as: Argent, on a bend sable two pairs of keys or, and were later quartered by Prideaux, as visible in Farway Church and in Sutcombe Church, in the Thuborough Chapel. The descent is given by Pole as follows:
Sir Simon Leach of Cadeleigh, near Crediton, Sheriff of Devon in 1624, purchased Spencer Combe from Beville Prideaux.