Speccot is an historic estate in the parish of Merton in Devon, England.[2][3] It was the seat of the de Speccot family, one of the oldest gentry families in Devon, which founded almshouses at Taddiport, near Great Torrington, Devon, in the 13th century.[4] It is situated about one mile south-west of Potheridge, the seat of the Monck family from before 1287[5] to the late 17th century, who were thus close neighbours of the de Speccot family for many centuries.[6] The present farmhouse known as "Speccot Barton" is Victorian and although no obvious traces of an earlier house survive, is marked "On Site of a Mansion" on the First Edition Ordnance Survey 25 inch map of 1880-99.[7] The estate is today operated as a family-run sheep farm with six holiday cottages to let.[8] A smaller house known as "Little Speccot" is situated on the approach lane to Speccot Barton.

Speccot Barton, front view, in 2014
Speccot Barton, rear view, in 2014, showing 19th. c. rebuilding[1]
Speccot Barton in 1765, detail from map by Malachy Hitchins

Descent edit

Theobold FitzBerner edit

 
Domesday Book entry for Spececote

The manor of Spececote is listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 as one of the 27 Devonshire holdings of Theobald FitzBerner (fl. 1086), (Anglicised to "Theobald son of Berner",[9] Latinized to Tetbaldus Filius Bernerius[10]) an Anglo-Norman warrior and magnate, one of the Devon Domesday Book tenants-in-chief of King William the Conqueror. His tenant was a certain "Gosbert", who also held from him the Devonshire manors of South Hole, Milford (both in the parish of Hartland) and Little Marland (in the parish of Petrockstowe), listed with Speccot as successive entries in the Domesday Book.[11] Before the Norman Conquest of 1066 it had been held by a Saxon named "Elaf".[12] His lands later formed part of the Feudal barony of Great Torrington.[13] The Domesday Book entry is as follows:

Ide(m) G(oisbertus) ten(et) de T(etbaldo) Spececote. Eilaf teneb(at) T(empore) R(egis) E(duardi). Geld(e)b(at) p(ro) una v(irgata) t(e)r(ra)e. T(e)r(r)a e(st) III car(ucis). Ibi e(st) I vill(anu)s, XV ac(rae) p(r)a(tuli), XL ac(rae) pastur(a)e. Olim modo va(le)t VII solid(ii) VI denar(ii). ("The same Gosbert holds Speccot from Theobald. Elaf was holding it in the time of King Edward. It was paying tax for one virgate of land. There is land for three ploughs. There is one villein, 15 acres of meadow, 40 acres of pasture. Formerly (and) now it is worth 7 shillings 6 pennies").

In the Book of Fees (c.1302) Spekcoth is listed as held from the Feudal barony of Great Torrington.[13]

de Speccot edit

 
Arms of Speccot of Speccot: Or, on a bend gules three millrinds argent[14]
 
Detail from mural monument in Weare Giffard Church, Devon, to John Fortescue (d.1605) lord of the manors of Filleigh and of Weare Giffard, and his wife Mary Speccot (d.1637), a daughter of Humphry Speccot (1532-1598) of Thornbury and Speccot, MP.[15] It displays the arms of Fortescue and Speccot. Their great-great-grandson was Hugh Fortescue, 1st Earl Clinton, 14th Baron Clinton (1696–1751), who built the surviving stately home of Castle Hill, Filleigh

In the mediaeval era it was the seat of the de Speccot family, which had taken its surname from their seat.[16] The earliest member of this family identified by Pole was Nicholas Speccot, at the beginning of the reign of King Henry III (1216-1272).[2] In 1438 a licence to hold services in the manor of Speccott was granted by Edmund Lacey (died 1455), Bishop of Exeter.[7]

John Speccot (born 1425) of Speccot inherited the manor of Thornbury in Devon on the expiry of the last male of the Cornu family, as his great-grand-mother was Margaret Cornu, a daughter of Roger Cornu of Thornbury, and wife of Richard Speccot of Speccot.[17] He abandoned Speccot and moved his primary residence to Thornbury, where his descendants remained until the family expired in the senior male line in 1655. The family retained possession of Speccot until after Sir John Speccot (c.1561-1644), MP, of Thornbury, who had a dispute with the Rector of Merton concerning the tithes due from Speccot.[18]

Subsequent holders of Speccot belonging to the family included:

Rolle edit

Before 1737 Speccot was owned by the Rolle family of Stevenstone near Great Torrington, one of the largest land-owners in Devon.

Stevens edit

 
Christiana Maria Rolle (1710-1780), wife of Henry Stevens (1689-1748) of Cross and Smythacott. Portrait by Thomas Hudson, Great Torrington townhall
 
1765 map of Speccot, by Malachy Hitchins (1741–1809) for its then owner Richard Stevens of Winscott, Peters Marland[25]

In 1737 Speccot was purchased from the Rolles by their relatives the Stevens family of Cross, Little Torrington. Henry Stevens (1689-1748), described in his will as "of Smithcott" in the parish of Frithelstock, but who built the existing mansion of Cross between 1744 and 1748,[26] married Christiana Maria Rolle (1710-1780), a daughter of John Rolle (1679-1730), MP, of Stevenstone, in the nearby parish of St Giles in the Wood, and sister of Henry Rolle, 1st Baron Rolle (1708-1750). Portraits of Christiana and of her brothers John Rolle Walter (1712-1779), and Denys Rolle (d.1797), successively owners of the Stevenstone estates, were painted by Thomas Hudson and were given in the early 1900s by Lord Clinton to the Great Torrington Town Lands and Poors Charity. They are on public display in Great Torrington townhall. A "beautifully drawn map" was made of Speccot in 1765 by Malachy Hitchins (1741–1809) for its then owner Richard Stevens of Winscott, Peters Marland.[25] Richard II Stevens (1702-1776) of Winscott, was MP for the Rolle family's pocket borough of Callington in Cornwall between 1761 and 1768. His mural monument exists in Peters Marland Church. He was one of the two sons of Richard I Stevens by his wife Elizabeth, and his brother was Henry Stevens (1689-1748) of Cross, in the parish of Little Torrington. Richard II Stevens (d.1776) married Elizabeth (1707-1760), of unknown family, by whom he had three sons who pre-deceased him without progeny and two daughters who were also without progeny. His daughter Elizabeth Stevens (1727-1792) married firstly Robert Awse of Horwood House in the parish of Frithelstock, and secondly John II Clevland (1734-1817), seven times MP for Barnstaple, of Tapeley near Bideford. Winscott passed after Cleveland's death to the descendants of Richard's elder brother, Henry Stevens (d.1748), of Cross, thus re-uniting the three Stevens estates.

Mallet edit

In 1810 Speccot was the property of John Mallet.[27]

Risdon edit

In 1845 Speccot was the residence of Joseph Risdon, Esq.[28]

Luxton edit

According to a report in the North Devon Journal, in 1860 Speccot was the residence of John Luxton, yeoman.[29]

References edit

  1. ^ Hoskins, W.G., A New Survey of England: Devon, London, 1959 (first published 1954), p.435
  2. ^ a b Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.381
  3. ^ Spelled "Speccott" by the owners in 2018
  4. ^ "Cornwall | History of Parliament Online". www.historyofparliamentonline.org.
  5. ^ Pole, p.382 regnal date 16 Edward I
  6. ^ The Speccot and Monck families appear never to have intermarried (Vivian, pp.568-9, pedigree of Monck)
  7. ^ a b "Heritage Gateway - Results". www.heritagegateway.org.uk.
  8. ^ "Home".
  9. ^ See Fitz, "son of"
  10. ^ Genitive case per Domesday Book: Tetbaldi Filii Bernerii
  11. ^ Thorn, 36:3-6; & notes, list of names.
  12. ^ Thorn, Caroline & Frank, (eds.) Domesday Book, (Morris, John, gen.ed.) Vol. 9, Devon, Parts 1 & 2, Phillimore Press, Chichester, 1985, Part 1, Chapter 36:5
  13. ^ a b Thorn, part 2 (notes), Chapter 36
  14. ^ Pole, p.502; Vivian, p.706
  15. ^ Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L., (Ed.) The Visitations of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, p.354
  16. ^ Risdon, p.249
  17. ^ Pole, pp.364,381
  18. ^ History of Parliament biography [1]
  19. ^ a b Vivian
  20. ^ a b "SPECCOTT, John (c.1561-1644), of Thornbury, Devon. | History of Parliament Online". www.historyofparliamentonline.org.
  21. ^ National Archives Cornwall Record Office BW/18/1
  22. ^ Risdon, Tristram (died 1640), Survey of Devon, 1811 edition, London, 1811, with 1810 Additions, p.362
  23. ^ a b Vivian, p.707
  24. ^ See image
  25. ^ a b Merton local history, Photograph, Object number 230.1
  26. ^ Slate tablet erected by present owner of Cross, Mrs Rowena Cotton
  27. ^ Swete, Rev. John, Gentlemen in the County of Devon, published in Risdon, 1810 Additions
  28. ^ List of subscribers, 1845 edition of A View of Devonshire in MDCXXX: With a Pedigree of Most of Its Gentry By Thomas Westcote [2]
  29. ^ Lindsey Withers, ed. (2015). "Inquests Taken Into Suspicious Or Unexplained Deaths For the County of Devon 1855-1864". Genuki. Retrieved 17 November 2020.