Descriptive Gazetteer Entry for HARTLAND

HARTLAND, a village, a parish, a sub-district, and a hundred in Devon. The village stands on a cape on the S side of Barnstaple bay, 3½ miles SE of Hartland point, and 13 ½ W by S of Bideford r. station; is said to have got its name from the ancient abundance of stags in its neighbourhood; was once a borough and a markettown; is now governed by a portreeve and other officers appointed annually; and has a post office‡ under Bideford, and fairs on Easter Wednesday and 25 Sept. The parish contains also the villages of Hartland Quay and Stoke, and the hamlets of Cheristow, Elmscott, Meddon, Milford, and Pilham. Acres, 16, 700. Real property, £10, 243. Pop. in 1851, 2, 183; in 1861, 1, 916. Houses, 401. The property is much subdivided. The manor belonged to an Ancient convent, founded on it in the time of Edward the confessor; passed to the families of Dinham, Bouchier, Fitzwarren, Zouche, Carew, Arundell, and Buck; and belongs now to Sir George Stuckley, Bart. The convent was founded by Githa, the wife of Earl Godwin, and dedicated to St. Nectan, whom she imagined to have preserved her husband from shipwreck; and was refounded, in the time of Henry II., by Jeffrey de Dinham, for canons secular of the order of St. Angustine. A mansion on its site was built about 1790; retains, in the basement story of the E and W fronts, portions of the original buildings, particularly the cloisters, which are early English; stands in a beautiful vale, surrounded with woodland; contains old carving and pictures; is approached by a romantic private road, open to the public; and is the seat of Sir G. Stuckley. The surface of the parish is diversified; the rocks are chiefly of the carboniferous formation; and the coast abounds in cliffs, of dreary scenic character, showing black and rusty bands of slate, and remarkable contortions. St. Catherine's Tor, in the neighbourhood, is a conical hill, surmounted by vestiges of a Roman building, and connected with adjacent heights by a massive Ancient wall. Hartland point is 350 feet high; was the Hercules' Promontory of Ptolemy; and has been thought to retain some shadow of artificial Antiquity. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Exeter. Value, £97.* Patron, the Rev. T. How Chope. The church stands upon an eminence, 1½ mile W of the village; serves as a landmark for mariners; is the church of the ancient abbey; has Norman and early English parts; comprises nave, chancel, and two aisles, with a magnificent pinnacled tower 128 feet high; includes four ancient chapels, which still retain their distinctive names; underwent recently a careful restoration; and contains a superb oak screen, a black oak pulpit, a quaintly sculptured Norman font, and a number of old monuments. There are a chapel of ease in the village, chapels for Independents there and at South Hole, chapels for Wesleyans at Town End and Elmscott, chapels for Bible Christians at Bideford and Eddistone, a national school, and charities £75. Eleven ancient chapels were in the parish; but traces of only two of them now exist.—The sub-district contains also three other parishes and an extra-parochial tract; and is in the district of Bideford. Acres, 28, 671. Pop., 3, 774. Houses, 800.-The hundred contains the same four parishes as the sub-district, includes another parish, and excludes the extra-parochial tract. Acres, 31, 718. Pop., 4, 197. Houses, 882.


(John Marius Wilson, Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (1870-72))

Linked entities:
Feature Description: "a village, a parish, a sub-district, and a hundred"   (ADL Feature Type: "populated places")
Administrative units: Hartland AP/CP       Hartland Hundred       Hartland SubD       Devon AncC
Place: Hartland

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