Northmoor, Dulverton
Northmoor is an historic estate in the parish of Dulverton in Somerset, England. The Victorian mansion house known as Northmoor House is set amongst steep wooded valleys on the southern edge of Exmoor.[1]
History
Locke
Northmoor House was built in 1856/9[2] by John Arthur Locke, a partner in the lead manufacturing firm of Locke and Blackett of Newcastle upon Tyne. The site was reputedly chosen by his wife.[3] He purchased surrounding lands eventually forming an estate of 2,000 acres.[4] John Arthur Locke (d.1888) of Northmoor married Adèle Caroline Drewe (d.1895), who in 1891 inherited from her brother Major-General Francis Edward Drewe (1830-1891) the historic estate of The Grange, Broadhembury in Devon, the seat of the Drewe family since the 16th century. His eldest son and heir was Arthur Charles Edward Locke, of Northmoor, who sold Grange[5] which thus in 1903 passed from the ownership of the Drewe family and its descendants.[6] John Locke built nearby the "Northmoor Chapel" (burned down in 1900) to service the spiritual needs of the estate, and employed Rev. George Jellicoe as chaplain and tutor to his eight children.[7]
Wills
In 1874[8][9] Northmoor was purchased by Frederick Wills, a member of the Wills family of Bristol, founders of the Imperial Tobacco Company, which in 1966 was the family with the largest number of millionaires in the British Isles, with 14 members having left fortunes in excess of one million pounds since 1910, totalling £55 million.[10] In 1897 Frederick Wills of Batsford Park in Gloucestershire and of Northmoor House was created a baronet "of Northmoor in the County of Somerset". He was a director of W. D. & H. O. Wills, which later merged into the Imperial Tobacco Company, and was a Liberal Unionist Member of Parliament for Bristol North. He was the younger brother of Sir Edward Wills, 1st Baronet, and the cousin of William Wills, 1st Baron Winterstoke. In 1929 his son Sir Gilbert Wills, 2nd Baronet was raised to the peerage as Baron Dulverton "of Batsford in the County of Gloucester". In 1874 a new stable block with clock tower was built at the rear of the house, but were demolished in the 1950s. Also built by the Wills family were staff accommodation and the Gardeners Cottage and buildings at Kennel Farm.[11] The Wills family of Northmoor were associated with the Dulverton Foxhounds, since split into two hunts, the Dulverton Foxhounds (East) (since renamed the Exmoor Farmers Foxhounds) and the Dulverton Foxhounds (West). The sinister supporter of the coat of arms adopted by Baron Dulverton is a "huntsman of the Dulverton Hunt".[12]
Marriott-Dodington
Roger Marriott-Dodington (1866-1925) of Orchard Portman House and Horsington House, Somerset,[13] High Sheriff of Somerset in 1922. Roger Marriott-Dodington was the owner of the historic estate of Combe near Dulverton, being the eldest son and heir of Thomas I Marriott-Dodington (d.1890) who had purchased the estate in 1872. The Marriott-Dodington family succeeded the Wills family at Northmoor House, and in 1926 were themselves succeeded by the Clayton family.[14] Thomas II Marriott-Dodington (1895-1916), the eldest son of Roger Marriott-Dodington (d.1925), was killed in action in World War I and his younger brother James Marriott-Dodington in 1937 was resident at "Northmoor Estate", Kyambu, Kenya.[15]
Clayton
In 1926 Northmore was purchased by Colonel Edward Clayton whose son, David Clayton (d.2004), resided there until 1994 when he sold the main house and 100 acres to Tom Yandle and moved to nearby Kennel Farm, where he established a business making all-terrain Supercat vehicles.[16]
Yandle
In 1994 Northmoor House and 100 acres of surrounding land was purchased by Tom Yandle[17] (born 1935) of Riphay, Brushford, near Dulverton. Tom Yandle is a farmer and chairman of the Devon and Somerset Staghounds and was High Sheriff of Somerset in 1999 and a committee member of both the National Trust and Exmoor National Park, and played a leading role in challenging both the National Trust's decision to ban stag hunting on the Holnicote Estate and the Labour government's ultimately successful proposal to ban hunting with hounds.[18] The Yandle family was previously resident at nearby Duvale an historic estate in the parish of Bampton, Devon.
Nicholson
Yandle sold Northmoor House and its 100 acres to Ralph and Suzanne Nicholson who refurbished the house, which in 2016 is operated as a holiday let.[19]
References
- ^ http://www.groupaccommodation.com/properties/northmoor-house-dulverton-somerset
- ^ Binding, H. & Bonham-Carter, V., Old Dulverton and Around: Dulverton - Bury - Brushford - Exebridge, 1986, pp.20-23
- ^ http://smtp.oneoffplaces.co.uk/Europe/England/Devon/Northmoor-House.aspx
- ^ http://www.exmoor-nationalpark.gov.uk/about-us/meetings-agendas-reports/enpa-planning-committee/07-apr-2009/ar-epc-07-04-09-item_4.2.pdf
- ^ Punchard
- ^ Punchard, E.G., Heraldic Scrolls from Grange, Devon Notes & Queries, Vol.3, 1904-5, p.44
- ^ http://www.everythingexmoor.org.uk/encyclopedia_detail.php?ENCid=736
- ^ http://www.exmoor-nationalpark.gov.uk/about-us/meetings-agendas-reports/enpa-planning-committee/07-apr-2009/ar-epc-07-04-09-item_4.2.pdf
- ^ http://smtp.oneoffplaces.co.uk/Europe/England/Devon/Northmoor-House.aspx
- ^ Guinness Book of Records, London, 1966, p.230
- ^ http://smtp.oneoffplaces.co.uk/Europe/England/Devon/Northmoor-House.aspx
- ^ Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.381
- ^ Marriage settlement 1895, Somerset Record Office, DD\LR/9
- ^ A history of Northmoor House (nr Dulverton) and the Residents 1859-2006, published in: The Devon Family Historian, Vol.120, Dec 2006; Bonham-Carter, p.22, omits mention of Marriott-Dodington of Northmoor
- ^ Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 15th Edition, ed. Pirie-Gordon, H., London, 1937, p.626
- ^ http://smtp.oneoffplaces.co.uk/Europe/England/Devon/Northmoor-House.aspx
- ^ http://smtp.oneoffplaces.co.uk/Europe/England/Devon/Northmoor-House.aspx
- ^ [1]
- ^ http://smtp.oneoffplaces.co.uk/Europe/England/Devon/Northmoor-House.aspx