Fremington, Devon

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Fremington
Fremington Village Sign - geograph.org.uk - 1595945.jpg
Sign on the village green
A Path for Everybody - geograph.org.uk - 315627.jpg
The Tarka Trail is a direct part-coastal path following the former railway
Fremington is located in Devon
Fremington
Fremington
 Fremington shown within Devon
Population 4,310 2011 census[1]
District North Devon
Shire county Devon
Region South West
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town BARNSTAPLE
Postcode district EX31
Police Devon and Cornwall
Fire Devon and Somerset
Ambulance South Western
EU Parliament South West England
List of places
UK
England
Devon

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Fremington is a very large village, civil parish and former manor in North Devon, the historic centre of which is situated three miles (5 km) west of Barnstaple. There is an electoral ward with the same name. The ward mainly covers the village and the population at the 2011 census was 4,310.[2] Fremington is situated between the south bank of the tidal estuary of the River Taw and a small inlet of that river known as "Fremington Pill". Fremington Quay was formerly a port on the River Taw, half a mile north of the village centre. Fremington was formerly a borough which sent members to Parliament in the reign of King Edward III (1327-1377). The parish includes the neighbouring former hamlets (greatly expanded in the 20th century) of Bickington to the east and Yelland to the west. Fremington hundred was one of the 32 historic hundreds of Devon. Fremington, Bickington and Yelland, all on the B3223 main road from Barnstaple to Instow have, according to Hoskins (1959), been spoilt by almost uninterrupted ribbon-building to provide housing for commuters to Barnstaple, but some old houses survive near the Church of St Peter, the parish church.[3] and plenty of residential property on all sides of its roads between Bideford and Barnstaple. Little Bridge House in the village is a children's hospice run by Children's Hospice South West.

Landmarks

St Peter's Church

The parish church, dedicated to St Peter, was subject to thorough Victorian restoration in 1867 to the designs of the leading architect Sir George Gilbert Scott.[4] The stone pulpit was buried during the Reformation and retains traces of the colour of the earth. St Peter's medieval tower unusually is positioned at the east end of the church, to the north of the chancel.

Fremington House

The large early Georgian red-brick mansion known as Fremington House, situated 50 metres east of St Peter's Church, and clearly visible from the main road, is the former manor house built by Richard II Acland (1679-1729), MP for Barnstaple 1708-13. It was re-modelled in the 19th century by his eventual heirs the Arundell-Yeo family. It is now a retirement home.

Commercial premises

Fremington has two public houses, The Fox and the New Inn, situated almost next door to each other.

Clay works

Fremington is famous for "Fishley Pottery", made by the family of that name in the Combrew area, examples of which are in the collection of the Museum of Barnstaple and North Devon. Excellent, stone-free clay pits (now mainly worked out) exist in the eastern half of the parish and were also owned by Brannam's Pottery and used for their "Barum Ware". The clay may have formed in varve lakes, near an ice deposit which lay over Fremington during the Last Glacial Maximum or previous glaciations such as the Anglian (MIS12) or the Wolstonian glaciation (MIS6)[5] Unusually, glacial deposits are found here in the county of Devon. Two patches of boulder clay lie over the centre of the parish's bedrock. The next nearest boulder clay deposits are in the Gower Peninsula, South Wales, approximately 45 miles (72 km) due north of Fremington across the Bristol Channel. The nearest deposit of boulder clay in England is in the central Cotswolds, 6 miles (10 km) due east of Bourton-on-the-Water and approximately 140 miles (225 km) north-east of Fremington. The existence of the boulder clay is puzzling as the southernmost limit of the Devensian glaciation is believed to have been located over South Wales. There are few other signs of glaciation in North Devon to support an extension to a more southerly limit. It has been suggested that the surface covering was in some way attached to an ice-mass that drifted across the Bristol Channel and deposited the till over Fremington. However this does not fully explain the presence of the nearly co-located varve clay beds.

Fremington Quay

Fremington station and quay in 1970 shortly after the steam cranes were removed

Fremington Quay was once significant in the import and export of many goods. It had railway sidings, cranes, and other apparatus used for the export of ball clay and import of coal. Between the early to mid-twentieth century it was the busiest port (based on tonnage) between Bristol and Land's End. An abattoir was formerly located here. The quay has been redeveloped as an amenity facility with restaurant and provides wide views over the River Taw estuary. It has been a Conservation Area since 1996.

Demography

The population of Fremington, according to the census of 1801, was 875. This number increased gradually in the forty years to 1841, to 1,326 however the rate of increase slowed during the next 10 years and coinciding with the arrival of the railway fell from 1,351 in 1851 to 1,194 in 1901 and slightly lower in 1931. Population growth resumed after World War II and saw more than a doubling between 1961 and 2011, to 4,310 people. Data for 1801–1961 is available at Britain Through Time.[6] The 2001 and 2011 Censuses give detailed information about the village.

Population of Fremington
Year 1801 1811 1821 1831 1841 1851 1881 1891 1901
Population 875 941 1,099 1,180 1,326 1,350 1,235 1,195 1,194
Year 1911 1921 1931 1941 1951 1961 2001 2011
Population 1,200 1,120 1,172 n/a 2,734 4,409 3,923 4,310

The 1848 Samuel Lewis national survey shows the parish had 6,810 acres (2,755.91 ha), of which 999 acres (404.28 ha) were waste or common land.[7]

The number of dwellings in the village was relatively static between the first Ordnance Survey series in the 1880s until the World War II. Fremington has since multiplied in population. By 2001, the population of the village (rather than the parish) was approximately 4,250.

Transport

The A39 trunk road, which forms the main route to north-west Devon and north-east Cornwall, was diverted 2 miles (3 km) south of the village in 1989, relieving the village of its annual summer traffic jams.

Fremington is served by:

  • Stagecoach Devon 21/21A - The North Devon Wave - Barnstaple - Bideford, Westward Ho! and Appledore
  • Stagecoach Devon 315 - Barnstaple - Exeter

Education

The West Fremington Presbyterian School for Boys was set up in 1873 by Presbyterian minister The Reverend William Morgan Topps with the assistance of his father, local landowner William Desmond Topps. The old school house was sold by Devon County Council in 1982 and converted to private dwelling. The school, that exists today as Fremington Community Primary & Nursery School, is near the centre of the post-war village expansion.

Culture

The Fremington great meat pie is described in a song included in Devon Tradition (Topic Records 12TS349), 1979. Sporting and open land facilities are provided by Fremington civil (administrative) parish council across all of the localities of the village, as well as having a village hall that may be hired by any of the residents of the whole parish. Allied is a Community Group who engage in charitable fundraising.[8] The 1st Fremington Air Scouts group is also in the village.

History

Owing to its quay and right to hold certain fairs or markets it was briefly a borough that sent members to Parliament in the reign of Edward III.[7]

Manor

The descent of the manor of Fremington followed the descent of the feudal barony of Barnstaple, of which it was a member. Having reverted to King Richard II (1377-1399) following the death of Nicholas Lord Audley without progeny, the king granted it to his half-brother John Holland, Earl of Huntingdon (c.1352-1400).[9] Following Holland's execution in January 1400 for his rebellion against King Henry IV, who had usurped the throne from King Richard, the keeping of the manor of Fremington was given in May 1400 to John Stourton (died 1438) of Preston Plucknett in Somerset, 7 times MP for Somerset, together with William Yerde, MP.[10]

Acland

Left: Arms of Acland: Chequy argent and sable, a fesse gules; right: Arms of Richard II Acland (1679-1729) of Fremington impaling the arms of his wife Susanna Lovering (d.1747) (Argent, on a fesse wavy azure a lion passant or). Sculpted heraldic achievement (circa 1700-1729) on pediment of brick archway to stable block, Fremington House. The crest of A demi-wyvern facing to dexter, wings displayed chequy argent and sable is the crest of Acland of Barnstaple and Fremington, which differs entirely from that of Acland of Acland, Landkey and Killerton
Fremington House, south front, with St Peter's Parish Church visible to west (left). Built by Richard II Acland (1679-1729), MP for Barnstaple 1708-13, whose sculpted arms impaling Lovering are visible above the entrance door of the south front
Fremington House, east front. The bow window was added later by The Arundell Yeo family, and displays on three large terracotta relief panels respectively the arms of Acland, Barbor and Yeo quartering Arundell

The manor was held by the Acland family of Barnstaple, a junior branch of the Acland Baronets of Killerton House in Devon and Holnicote in Somerset, which originated in the 12th century at the estate of Acland, Landkey in North Devon, and which by the 19th century was one of the largest landowners in the Southwest of England. The exact relationship of the Acland Baronets to the Aclands of Barnstaple is unclear as the Barnstaple mercantile family of Acland is not mentioned in the Heraldic Visitations pedigree of the Acland family.[11] The coat of arms of the two branches is identical, but the crests differ.[12]

  • Richard I Acland (d.1703), of Fremington, a merchant of Barnstaple, purchased the manor of Fremington in 1683. He was nominated Mayor of Barnstaple in 1688,[13] but did not serve.[14]
  • Richard II Acland (1679-1729), son and heir, of Fremington, was MP for Barnstaple 1708-13. His arms are displayed on the parapet of Queen Anne's Walk in Barnstaple, as one of about twelve such arms representing members of the Corporation of Barnstaple who financed the building, completed in 1713, originally called the "Merchants Exchange", on Barnstaple Quay. In 1700 he married Susanna Lovering (d.1747), one of the two daughters and co-heiresses of John Lovering (d.1686), a wealthy merchant, of Weare Giffard (where he founded a school), Countisbury[13] and Hudscott, Chittlehampton, all in North Devon. At some time after his marriage Richard II Acland built the large and grand manor house known today as Fremington House, as is evidenced by at least two elaborate sculpted escutcheons showing the arms of Acland impaling Lovering. His son John Acland was listed as a freeholder in Fremington in 1733,[15] but it was the latter's sister Susanna Acland who was the heiress of Fremington, and who in 1748 married William Barbor.[16]

Barbor

Detail of funeral hatchment of Barbor family of Fremington House, with sinister background black, probably for Mary Yeo, 1st wife of George Barbor (d.1817).[17] St Peter's Church, Fremington. The quarterings are:[17] 1&6: Barbor; 2:Acland; 3:Lovering; 4:Pointz; 5:Hutchinson

The Barbor family originated at Upcott in Somerset. William I Barbor, an eminent physician[18] educated at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, was the first of the family to settle at Barnstaple. The Barbor family arms, visible in St Peter's Church, Fremington, and in terracotta relief on the bow-window of Fremington House, were: Argent, two chevrons between three fleurs-de-Lys gules.[19] He married the daughter and heiress of the Pointz family of Northcote, Bittadon,[20] a junior branch of that ancient and prominent Norman family formerly seated at Iron Acton in Gloucestershire.

  • William II Barbor (1723-1800), son and heir. He attended school at Barnstaple under Mr Lucke for six years, then attended Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, as had done his father and his brother John. He married in 1748 Susanna Acland, heiress of Fremington and other estates.[21]
  • George Barbor (1756-1817),[22] youngest surviving brother and heir.[23] His other two brothers were Richard Barbor, a captain in the British army who fought in the American War of Independence and died in Pennsylvania at the Battle of Brandywine[24] in 1777; and Arthur Barbor, Chaplain to the East India Company, who died in India. George also owned the estate of Croscombe in the parish of Martinhoe, Devon.[25] He served in the army of the East India Company in India and in 1810 held the rank of Major.[26] He married (as his second wife) Jane Jeffreys (1779-1845), eldest daughter of Gabriel Jeffreys of Swansea, Wales, who survived him and died at nearby Rawleigh House, Pilton, as is recorded by her mural monument in St Peter's Church, Fremington. Gabriel Jeffreys, from a family of bankers and lawyers, was a freemason and Master of Beaufort Lodge in Swansea from 1771. In 1770 he drew up plans for a Masonic Hall in Swansea "which will compare to any in England", but which were never implemented. He was a Notary Public in 1780 and was an Alderman and was Portreeve (i.e. Mayor) of Swansea in 1775 and 1786-7[27] and served as County Treasurer for Glamorgan until 1785. In 1770 he was appointed the Deputy Steward of the Manor of Pennard. He was active in the development of the Docks and Canals, and was one of the promoters of the construction of the Mumbles Railway, which in 1804 became the first passenger carrying railway in the world.[28] The arms of Jeffreys as displayed on the mural monument to George Barbor in Fremington Church are: Ermine, a lion rampant a canton checky, which are similar to the arms of ancient family of Jeffreys of Acton, Denbigh, Wales, which has canton sable.[29]
The mural monument to George Barbor (1756-1817) survives on the south wall of Fremington Church, above that of his wife, and his funeral hatchment survives on the west wall, of St Peter's Church, Fremington, both of which display the arms of Barbor with six quarters: 1st & 6th: Barbor; 2nd: Acland; 3rd: Argent, on a fesse wavy azure a lion passant or (Lovering); 4th: Barry of eight or and gules (Pointz of Bittadon (and Iron Acton, Gloucestershire)); 5th: Per pale gules and azure semée of crosses crosslet fitchée argent, a lion rampant or (unknown family).
  • George Acland Barbor, son and heir, of Fremington House. He was nominated High Sheriff of Devon in 1834, but was not pricked. Although a copy of his will dated 1839 survives in the North Devon Record Office,[30] he died intestate at Frankfurt on the Main. A legal suit ensued in 1840-1844 with parties "Mackenzie v Yeo".[31]

Yeo

Arms of Yeo: Argent, a chevron sable between three ducks azure.[32] The Yeos quartered the arms of Sachville, Esse, Pyne, Jewe and Brightley.[33]

A junior branch of the ancient and prominent Devonshire family of Yeo of Huish and Heanton Satchville, Petrockstowe[34] inherited the manor of Fremington from Barbor. Funeral hatchments of the Yeo family survive in St Peter's Church, Fremington, on the west wall, showing quartered arms including Yeo and Arundell, together with other monuments including a stained glass window in the south wall in memory of William II Arundell Yeo (d.1880)

  • William I Arundell Yeo (d.1862). He was the eldest son and heir of William Mounier Yeo (d.1809), (who owned the estate of Hawkridge, Chittlehampton), an apothecary of Clifton, Bristol, (son of Rev. Beaple Yeo, Rector of Atherington and heir to his cousin Edward Rouse Yeo (1742-1782), (who sold the manor of Huish), MP for Coventry (1774–80)[35]) by his wife Phillis Arundell O'Neill (d.1846), only daughter and heiress of Clotworthy O'Neill, of Ireland, by his wife, Mary Arundell, eldest daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Arundell, of Trevelver, in the parish of St. Minver, Cornwall. He was a Deputy Lieutenant for Devon and was High Sheriff of Devon in 1850. He married Eliza Bernard, daughter of Dr. C. E. Bernard, of Clifton.[36] The 1843 tithe award showed the manor of Raleigh (previously owned by Barbor) held between three owners: William Arundell Yeo, 147 acres; Robert Newton Incledon (of Yeotown, Goodleigh), who held 160 acres, together with William Hodge. In 1850 the North Devon Journal reported that John Lillycrap, a servant at Fremington House had shot his fellow servant Robert Symons and then committed suicide.[37]
  • William II Arundell Yeo (d.1880), son and heir, was lord of the manor of Fremington in 1878.[16] He was a Barrister-at-Law. He built Fremington School in 1875 and let it to the parish for 326 per annum.[38] His mistress was Clementine Frantzen (O'Clarey), by whom he had illegitimate progeny, including: Henry William Stanton 26 O'Clarey, born 1 February 1861 in Paddington, London; Jessie Maude O'Clarey, born 3 August 1863; died 1885; Gerard William Yeo O'Clarey, born 15 December 1866 in Battersea, London; Robert John O'Clarey, born 10 December 1869 in Paris, France, who married Gertrude Summers; born 1870. William II Arundell Yeo died unmarried at Ostend in Belgium in 1880, as is recorded in his memorial stained glass window in the south aisle of Fremington Church. His funeral hatchment survives in Fremington Church, showing the arms of Yeo alone.[39] At his death the estates of Fremington and Dinharn passed to his sister, Miss Eliza Bernard Arundell Yeo[40] (d.1919), who sold much of the estate to the tenant farmers and cottagers.[41]

Clarke

Centre: Constance Barbara Clarke (Lady Baird, later Lady Kennedy) (died 1931), of Fremington House. Left: her niece, Barbara Arundell Clarke, (Lady Wood), wife of Sir John Stuart Page-Wood, 6th Baronet (died 1955) (right). Portrait by Bassano Ltd, 1920
  • Major Edward John Arundell Clarke (1868-1932),[42] of Fremington House,[43] and Brookfield House, Fremington, was the eldest son of Edward Clarke (d.1895), a solicitor, of Avishays, Chaffcombe, Chard, Somerset,[44] by his wife Barbara Yeo (d.1898), youngest daughter of William I Arundell Yeo (d.1862).[45] He was a JP for Devon and a Major in the Royal North Devon Yeomanry. He married Violet Press by whom he had a son John Arundell Clarke (born 1899) and a daughter Barbara Arundell Clarke (alive in 1968), who in 1919 married Sir John Stuart Page-Wood, 6th Baronet (1898–1955).[43] The North Devon Journal reported that on Armistice Day 1923 Fremington's war memorial was unveiled by Major Arundell Clarke.[46]
  • Constance Barbara Clarke (1867-1931),[47] (eldest sister), of Fremington House, eldest daughter of Edward Clarke (d.1895), of Avishays, Chard, Somerset,[44] and a granddaughter of William I Arundell Yeo (d.1862),[48] inherited the manor of Fremington and Dinham House in Cornwall[49] (a former Arundell family estate). She married twice, firstly on 6 March 1905 to Admiral Sir John Erskine Kennedy Baird (1832-1908), son of Sir David Baird, 2nd Baronet (1795–1852), of Newbyth, by his wife Lady Anne Kennedy. Secondly on 15 December 1925 she married Charles Kennedy, 5th Marquess of Ailsa (1875-1956).[50] Following the death in Ontario[51] of Constance Clarke in 1931 the remnant of the manor left unsold by Miss Yeo was sold to Mr Fred Holland, including Fremington House and about 60 acres of land.[48]

US Army

Between 1943 and 1945 Fremington House and grounds was used by the US army as "Fremington Training Camp", a hospital and rehabilitation centre.[52]

British Army

On the departure of the US Army in 1945, Fremington House and grounds were used by the British Army as the "School of Combined Operations", commanded by an Admiral. In the late 1950s it was used by Amphibious Squadrons of the Royal Army Service Corps and Royal Corps of Transport. The mansion house served as the officers mess of 18 Company (Amphibian).[52] In the 1970s it served as an Army training camp. In 1980 Fremington House was sold by the Army and became a nursing home.[46] The army camp, which occupied about 50 acres of land, remained, but closed on 1 October 2009. It had undergone a review by Defence Training Estates South West was said by David Harris, South West Army spokesman, to be "past its sell by date". He added: "The Fremington site is worn out and has come to the end of its economic life...Buildings at the camp are 1940s stock, old wooden huts that are very expensive to maintain. It's just not worth pumping any more money into...The camp is largely seasonal, with the majority of occupation taking place in the summer months".[53]

Railway

Fremington railway station in 2008.

The Tarka Trail cycle track (also part of the South West Coast Path), which follows the course of the railway from Barnstaple to Torrington, passes over Fremington Pill via the old London and South Western Railway iron bridge (railway line closed 1982; dismantled 1987) at Fremington Quay on the old Barnstaple to Torrington railtrack bed. The original railway was first planned in an Act of Parliament in 1838, and laid in 1846 connecting the Penhill with Barnstaple at a cost of £20 000. A number of boats are moored here (in the Pill). The 'Quay Cafe' is located here. Whilst rather charmingly built in the style of a railway station, it is not the original one which was located the other side of the Tarka Trail where an original platform still exists. Other features around the Pill include a couple of Lime kilns, now thoroughly fenced off to prevent accidents. The station was one stop after the still active railway station of Barnstaple, to which Fremington is linked directly by the wide scenic path described instead.

Army Camp

Fremington Army Camp was located here to be within easy marching distance (800 m) from the railway station at the Quay. The site was used by the US Army's 313th Station Hospital for post-D-Day rehabilitation, with room for 2,000 patients. It started receiving casualties on 20 July 1944.

It economically was complemented by the still current Marines and Air Force presence at Royal Marines Base Chivenor, a mile (2 km) northwards on the opposite bank of the River Taw, and the Amphibious Trials and Training Unit of the Royal Marines at Arromanches Camp, Instow, 2 miles (4 km) to the west. The camp was closed in autumn 2009.

References

  • Pauline Brain Some Men who Made Barnstaple N. Devon Art Potters, 2010
  • US Army history R. L. Diveley & M. Cleveland. Surgery in World War II, Volume II, Chapter 6.
  1. 2011 Census Retrieved 2015-02-21
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Hoskins, W.G., A New Survey of England: Devon, London, 1959 (first published 1954), p.399
  4. Hoskins. p.399
  5. (Campbell et al., 1998, Quaternary of South West England). Rare (for south-western England)
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Samuel Lewis (1848) Topographical Dictionary of England, 7th ed.
  8. fremingtoncommunity.com Retrieved 2013-07-15
  9. Risdon, Tristram (d.1640), Survey of Devon, 1811 edition, London, 1811, with 1810 Additions, p.286
  10. History of Parliament biography of John Stourton (d.1438)[1]
  11. Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L., (Ed.) The Visitation of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, pp.3-8
  12. See crest of Acland of Fremington (a wyvern) on archway to rear service yard at Fremington House. The crest of Acland of Acland is a man's gloved hand holding a falcon
  13. 13.0 13.1 http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1690-1715/member/acland-richard-1679-1729
  14. Lamplugh, Lois, Barnstaple: Town on the Taw, South Molton, 2002, List of Mayors, p.157
  15. http://www.foda.org.uk (Devon Freeholders Book, 1733, QS7/14
  16. 16.0 16.1 White's Directory, 1878
  17. 17.0 17.1 Summers, Peter & Titterton, John, (eds.), Hatchments in Britain, Vol.7: Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Gloucestershire, Hampshire, Isle of Wight and Somerset; Phillimore Press, Chichester, Sussex, 1988, p.24, no.3, but with Lovering arms given incorrectly as Hussey
  18. Risdon, p.423
  19. Burke's General Armory, 1884, p.46
  20. Lysons, Magna Britannia, Vol.6: Devon, "Gentry"
  21. http://www.mocavo.com/Biographical-History-of-Gonville-and-Caius-College-1349-1897-Containing-a-List-of-All-Known-Members-of-the-College-From-the-Foundation-to-the-Present-Time-With-Biographical-Notes-Volume-2/605915/68
  22. Dates per his mural monument in St Peter's Church, Fremington
  23. Stated in the 1810 Additions to Risdon's Survey of Devon (p.428) to have owned Rawleigh House, Pilton, but statement withdrawn by Corrigenda, p.443. His widow Jane did however certainly die at Rawleigh House, as is recorded by her mural monument in St Peter's Church, Fremington
  24. "Brandymire" per Risdon, pp.423-4
  25. Risdon, Tristram (d.1640), Survey of Devon, 1811 edition, London, 1811, with 1810 Additions, p.432
  26. Risdon, p.424
  27. Nicholas, Thomas, Annals and Antiquities of the Counties and County Families of Wales, p.617 [2]
  28. Davies, Peter, The History of Beaufort Lodge - No.443
  29. Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 15th Edition, ed. Pirie-Gordon, H., London, 1937, pp.1241-2)
  30. Will at North Devon Record Office
  31. National Archives, Kew, Mackenzie v Yeo, PROB 37/1421
  32. Per research conducted by Sheila Yeo of the Yeo Society [3], based on stained glass depictions of Yeo arms in churches of Petrockstowe (Yeo of Heanton Satchville) and Hatherleigh (Yeo of Hatherleigh) both in Devon. The ducks are described as of various breeds by different sources. Heraldic sources give contradictory tinctures: Argent, a chevron between three shovelers sable (Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L., (Ed.) The Visitation of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, p.834) and Argent, a chevron between three mallards azure (Pole, Sir William (died 1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.510)
  33. Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L., (Ed.) The Visitation of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, p.834
  34. Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L., (Ed.) The Visitation of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, pp.834-839, pedigree of Yeo
  35. Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L., (Ed.) The Visitation of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, p.836, pedigree of Yeo
  36. Vivian, p.836 & www.yeosociety.com
  37. Christie, Peter, A North Devon Chronology. From The Heritage Album: 175 years in North Devon (1824-1999)[4]
  38. Hockey & Michelmore, St Peter's Fremington, Notes on its Historical Associations, 2nd revised edition, 2000, p.17
  39. Summers, Peter & Titterton, John, (eds.), Hatchments in Britain, Vol.7: Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Gloucestershire, Hampshire, Isle of Wight and Somerset; Phillimore Press, Chichester, Sussex, 1988, p.24
  40. [5]
  41. Hockey & Michelmore, St Peter's Fremington, Notes on its Historical Associations, 2nd revised edition, 2000, p.4
  42. date of death per
  43. 43.0 43.1 Montague-Smith, P.W. (ed.), Debrett's Peerage, Baronetage, Knightage and Companionage, Kelly's Directories Ltd, Kingston-upon-Thames, 1968, p.875, Page-Wood Baronets
  44. 44.0 44.1 Montague-Smith, P.W. (ed.), Debrett's Peerage, Baronetage, Knightage and Companionage, Kelly's Directories Ltd, Kingston-upon-Thames, 1968, p.47, Marquess of Ailsa
  45. Walford's The County Families of the United Kingdom, 59th edition, London, 1919, p.266 [6]
  46. 46.0 46.1 Christie
  47. date of birth per
  48. 48.0 48.1 Hockey & Michelmore, St Peter's Fremington, Notes on its Historical Associations, 2nd revised edition, 2000, p.5
  49. Per
  50. http://www.thepeerage.com/p2564.htm
  51. Place of death per
  52. 52.0 52.1 http://18coyrasc.btck.co.uk/HISTORYOF116COY18COYSQNANDFREMINGTONCAMP
  53. http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/jobs-Fremington-army-camp-closes/story-11800661-detail/story.html

External links