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Countess Wear

The village like parish of Countess Wear was originally a part of a greater Topsham, which in itself, was a part of the St Thomas Union. The village had gained some importance when it became the subject of a disputed weir in the thirteenth century, and as such, became the cockpit in the disputes between Topsham and the City of Exeter. It was not until 14th September 1844 that it became a parish in its own right. The church of St Lukes had been built a few years earlier in 1837-8 at a cost of £900; it was extended in 1895 for £1,200.

The area was named after the Countess of Devon, Isabella de Fortibus, who in the time of Henry III, built the weir to power her mills in 1284 across the Exe at Countess Wear - or so the story goes. There are several discrepancies in the story of the first weir, and it may have been constructed before 1272 with a thirty foot gap in the middle to allow vessels to pass or at the later date as a solid structure and reopened in 1290. What is known is that the salmon fishery at Exeter was damaged which caused friction between her successor Hugh Courtenay and the city. Hooker states that Hugh Courtenay deliberately blocked the gap with tree trunks between 1317 and 1327, and in effect, cut the port of Exeter off from the sea and enabled Topsham to steal the maritime trade of the Port of Exeter.

For more than 250 years the dispute dragged on, with the city petitioning the King to have the waterway reopened. In 1550, Edward VI granted permission for the weir to be breached, but it was too late; the river channel had silted up. The Exeter Ship Canal was built in 1564 and opened in Autumn 1566, by John Trew to circumvent the weir. This was England's first canal with pound locks. Its original entrance was at Countess Wear, before the canal was extended further down the Exe estuary, initially in 1676 to Topsham, and to Turf Locks in 1827, to allow larger ships to enter.

Countess Wear Bridge

The Countess Wear bridge across the Exe bisects Countess Wear, with the main village to the north and the Glasshouse estate to the south. An Act for the road "... from Bear's Hill Oak Corner, in the Exminster Road, to the Red Post in the Topsham Road and  building a bridge at the Ford at Countess Wear" was obtained and on 1st June 1769, the first planning meeting took place at the Salutation Inn, Topsham. The bridge was built of limestone at the lowest fording place of the river and opened on 14th September 1774. Despite the cost of 1 shilling for a coach and six horses, 10 pence for a score of oxen and a penny per person, it would not be until October 1874 that the last creditor would be finally paid off.

The swing bridge across the canal has been a feature of Countess Wear from at least 1821, when James Green extended the canal, and probably from when the canal was extended to Topsham in 1676. The present swing bridge dates from 1936 while the parallel bascule bridge is from 1972.

The Topsham Road which forms the traditional north-eastern boundary of the parish dates back to Roman times. It was an important route for pack horses and carts both before the canal, and during the canal's working life. The road was first macadamed in 1819 when a contract was signed between the Turnpike Trust and Mr J L McAdam. Where the Wonford stream at Northbrook crosses the road was first bridged in 1839/40.

Wear Park

Originally, the greater part of Countess Wear was occupied by Weir Park, which had been known in the time of Henry III as Heneaton, and then Hineton or Honiton Seige. The estate had belonged at first to the Bukenton family, then the Bathonias, Medsteads and last, John Holland the nephew of Sir Thomas Holland. It passed to the Foulkes and was purchased in 1760, from the Rodds of Cornwall, by the Exeter merchants, the Spicers, who sold it in 1804, to the late admiral Sir Thomas Duckworth (d 1817) who took on the estate and rebuilt Wear House, the main residence. Captain Sir George Henry James Duckworth-King was the last to be listed at the house in 1919, and by 1923 Ernest Charles Eveleigh was in residence.

It was put up for sale in 1927 and in 1929 the house and remainder of the estate was sold to the Exeter Golf and Country Club. When the Americans entered the war, and preparations were being made for D-day, the house and half of the golf course were occupied by the US Navy Supply Depot, the largest such facility in the south of England. After the war, the house and part of the land were returned to the golf club, while a large swathe was retained for use by an MOD Naval Store.

The Glasshouse

Glass making was established at a site in the south of Countess Wear in 1681. A glass cone almost a hundred feet high was constructed for the production of bottles for the wine trade. By 1691, William Rennel, his son, Jos. Marshall, John Hopping, Richard Hele and John Ridler were listed working the glasshouse, while the owner was Richard Renell in 1701.

Glass making may have continued until 1793, but records are very sketchy. Of course, the lasting heritage of the factory is the name of Glasshouse Lane and Glasshouse Cottage.

In 1684, a sugar-house was also built in the same area, with hogshead of sugar unloaded by crane from lighters. The factory was supplied from a slave plantation in Barbados owned by Charles Buttall. His brother Samuel Buttall, also the owner of a slave plantation in South Carolina, opened the factory and later took his sons, Benjamin and John into partnership. Samuel died in 1723 and his son-in-law, Sir Nathaniel Hodges took a half share in the business during 1725. In 1744, Sir Nathaniel's wife, Lady Hodges sold the works as instructed by his will.

In 1746 the site of the sugar-house was taken over for housing French prisoners-of-war. Documents indicate that a Collector of Customs named Crew was directed by the Admiralty to adapt a house at the glasshouse to take the prisoners; research suggests that it was the sugar-house that was actually used. In late 1746, 1,000 prisoners were held by Crew, but not all in the house as it was not complete. Soon after the prisoners-of-war left the sugar-house, it was demolished and Retreat House built on the site.

Paper Mills

In the nineteenth century, Exeter had 30 paper mills, one of which was established in 1638 on the river at Countess Wear, on the site of an existing grist mill. The leat had been in existence since the establishing by the Cluniac Priory on the land of Isca College of Media Arts, of a mill at St James Weir. The paper mill was noted for its quality writing paper and specially watermarked paper for five pound notes, as well as its contract to supply the Times of India in the nineteenth century. On the 29th May, 1816, the mill was destroyed by fire, only to be rebuilt. In its heyday, it employed as many as 200 worker, with many walking in from Exeter. In 1880, an advertisement shows the proprietor as one Mr Henry Matthews Martyn. Not only did it use water power for making paper, but it burnt a prodigious quantity of coal - for one two month period in 1855, 800 tons of coal was landed by barge for the mill.

In 1842, Thomas Whitaker merged two of the arches of Countess Wear bridge for Robert Davy, a part owner of the paper mill. The extra width was needed to allow larger barges to pass up river to the mill. The paper mill continued production until 1885 when it closed and the site was dismantled. In 1899 the remaining buildings were purchased by Mr W Percy Sladen. A water driven generator was installed for a time to provide power to the mill house and other buildings, while the City Council considered the site for a new sewage farm before they constructed one at Belle Isle. Now, the remains of the buildings on the leat and the still occupied mill house and associated cottages can be viewed from Mill Drive.

Shipbuilding and Lime burning

Robert Davy was also involved in shipbuilding at Gulpit, between the bridge and Glasshouse. The Glasshouse yard was established around about 1792, and the two yards in total registered 13 ships up to 1812. He built ships for the East India Service, the West India trade and navy frigates, as well as the Batavia of 600 tons. Both his yards closed in 1820.

To supply both his ship building and lime burning businesses, up to a 1,000 barges per year would bring in timber from the Baltic, coal from Wales and limestone from Babbacombe and Berryhead. In 1855, his son employed 10 lighters to import 7,000 tons of coal and 10,000 tons of limestone. However, the river was prone to silting, and often the barges had to be hauled upstream by man power. By the end of the nineteenth-century the trade was gone. Of the three limekilns in Countess Wear, two were below the bridge, while the last one to close in 1914, was situated in the village, leaving just Limekiln Lane as a memory of more industrious times. There was a stone on the last limekiln that was marked Richard Greenslade 1728.

Before the expansion of Exeter into its suburbs, Countess Wear was largely an agricultural area, growing wheat, barley and root vegetables with, as already acknowledged, some industrial activity along the margins of the Exe estuary. The family of Chris Martin of Coldplay originated in Countess Wear, with his grandfather John Martin becoming Mayor of Exeter in 1968. The family acquired a fortune from the sale of Martins Caravans and farmland in Countess Wear.

The parish became part of Exeter in 1966 when Topsham was absorbed into the city boundary. Now Countess Wear is in the political area of Priory, which contains much of Wonford including Burnthouse Lane. Although Exeter has grown and encroached on all its rural neighbours during the last two hundred years, the village of Countess Wear has not changed to the same extent, as some other parts of Exeter. It is still very much a village between Topsham and the city.

Sources: The Story of Countess Weir by L E Bartlett (1915), The Ports of the Exe Estuary 1660-1860 - E A G Clark, French Prisoners of War by S Bhanji (Transactions of the Devonshire Association), Exeter City Council and various County Directories, Aileen Fox’s article on The Retreat in Devon Archaeological Society Proceedings  and wills of the Hodges family.


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Countess Wear Limekiln Lane
Limekiln Lane.Countess Wear bridge
Countess Wear bridge.Countess Wear paper mill
The remains of the paper mill.

Pubs of Countess Wear

Tally Ho - originally named the Globe Inn, it became the Oddfellows Inn before 1894 and the Tally Ho before 1956.
Premier Travel Inn - The first record of this inn's existence was a To Let notice in 1818 as the Countess Wear Inn, when it was much closer to the river, near the bridge. Eight graves were discovered at the inn in 1850 which are possibly those of French prisoners-of-war from the Glasshouse close by. Relocated circa 1935 to its present site, when the A379 was improved to take traffic around Exeter. Also known as the Exeter Moat House and Countess Wear Hotel.
Country House Inn - First listed in 1816, this public house is situated on the edge of Countess Wear on the Topsham Road.