Queen Anne's Walk Explained

Queen Anne's Walk (formerly The Mercantile Exchange) is a grade I listed building in the town of Barnstaple, North Devon, completed in 1713 as a meeting place for the town's merchants. It is believed to have been designed by the architect William Talman, on the basis of its similarity to his work at the Hall in Drayton, Northamptonshire.[1] It was promoted and financed by the thirteen members of the Corporation of Barnstaple whose armorials are sculpted on and above the parapet,[2] and the work was overseen by Robert Incledon (1676–1758), Mayor of Barnstaple in 1712–13.[2] It has been owned for many decades by North Devon District Council, which currently (2014) leases it to Barnstaple Town Council, and now trades as The Cafe on the Strand.

Location and function

The building is situated at the bottom of Cross Street on the bank of the River Taw, and looked onto Barnstaple Quay, ("New Quay" after the 1870s),[3] (now filled in) at which most of the sea-trade of the formerly important port of Barnstaple would arrive and depart. Here cargoes shipped from around the world, including notably tobacco from the North American colonies, would arrive and be sold to awaiting Barnstaple merchants, who were accustomed to seal deals by touching the 17th century so-called Tome Stone, a low stone circular bargaining table, with inscriptions around the rim of the names of three leading merchants, including Delbridge. In 1909 the Tome stone was moved to beneath the colonnade.[4]

Description

It consists of a low single-storey building fronted by a white Beer stone colonnade of ten bays, five to the left of the central bay supporting a statue of Queen Anne and four to the right. Above the columns and wrapping around the east side by one bay,[5] is a parapet decorated with relief sculpted garlanded heraldic escutcheons, one per bay, showing the arms of eleven leading aristocratic, gentry and mercantile families of North Devon, with the arms of the Borough of Barnstaple forming a twelfth.

Construction

Supervision

It was completed in 1713 under the supervision of Robert Incledon (1676-1758), who in 1746 built Pilton House[6] adjoining Barnstaple, a lawyer of New Inn, London, a Clerk of the Peace for Devon, Deputy Recorder of Barnstaple[7] and twice Mayor of Barnstaple, in 1712 and 1721.[8] In 1713 as mayor he supervised the building of the Mercantile Exchange as is recorded on the east parapet of the building by a contemporary brass plaque inscribed in Latin as follows:[9]

Faciendum curavit Robertus Incledon Generosus Oppidi Praefectus Anno Christi MDCCXIII ("Robert Incledon, Esquire, Prefect (i.e. Mayor) of this town, supervised the making. 1713")Above is a sculpted escutcheon with his armorials: Argent, a chevron engrailed between three tuns sable fire issuing from the bung hole proper. (The ancient building known as the "Three Tuns Inn" on the west side of Barnstaple High Street[10] is in 2015 now the Pizza Express restaurant[11] [12]). Above is a plumed helm placed on a fasces, part of an antique trophy of arms. He was the younger brother of Henry Incledon (1671-1736) of Buckland House, Braunton, whose arms are shown on the front (south) parapet, a son-in-law of the merchant John Davie (d.1710), whose arms are also shown on the front parapet. Robert's first wife was Mary Lethbridge (d.1709), daughter of Christopher Lethbridge (d.1713) of Westaway House, Pilton, (whose "big and sumptuous" mural monument survives in Pilton Church,[13]) whose arms are also shown on the front (south) parapet.

Financing

It was financed by the Corporation of Barnstaple, as the surviving contemporary inscribed brass tablet beneath the sculpted arms of that corporation records:[14]

"Haec porticus corporis politici de Barum sumptibus restaurata est. Opus tam decorum & utile munificentia promoverunt idemq(ue) suis insigniis ornarunt viri ipsi ornatissimi & honorabiles" ("This colonnade was re-erected by the expense of the body politic (i.e. corporation) of Barnstaple. By their munificence men themselves honourable and most illustrious promoted this work so decorous and useful and decorated the same with their insignia")

Queen Anne's statue

In 1708 Robert Rolle (c. 1677–1710) of Stevenstone, near Great Torrington in Devon, donated to the Corporation of Barnstaple, Devon, a large stone statue of Queen Anne, the victorious monarch of the recent Battle of Blenheim in 1704. He was a Tory MP for Callington (twice in 1701) (a pocket borough of the Rolle family) and for Devon (1702–1710). Underneath the statue, possibly intended to be free-standing and not on top of this building, is its original base, now seated somewhat incongruously above the Royal Arms. On the base is an escutcheon showing a cartouche with the arms of Rolle (Or, on a fesse dancetté between three billets azure each charged with a lion rampant of the first three bezants), now much worn, above which is the Rolle crest: A cubit arm erect vested or charged with a fess indented cotised azure in the hand a roll of parchment. On either side of the Rolle arms is a seated naked, disheveled and shackled French prisoner of war, behind whom is a centrally placed antique trophy of arms consisting of captured French weapons (two canon, muskets, a club, a halberd and a helmet etc.) and two lowered French standards on either side. The imagery is reminiscent of the sculptures of two French captives atop the central pediment of Blenheim Palace, built for the Duke of Marlborough, the victorious English commander at that battle. The original source for both is imagery from the classical world, as visible for example on Roman coins. On each side of the base of the statue of Queen Anne is an escutcheon showing the arms of Rolle impaling Duke, the arms of his wife. Immediately below the feet of the Queen is a tablet on which is inscribed the following Latin text:[15]

"Anna, Intemeratae fidei testimonium Roberti Rolle de Stephenstone in agro Devoniensi Armigeri MDCCVIII" ("Anne, a testament of the undefiled faith of Robert Rolle, Esquire, of Stevenstone in the land of Devonshire, 1708")The inscription was transcribed by the Devon topographer Rev. John Swete (d. 1821) in his "Journals".[16] On the sides of the base of the statue are identical heraldic escutcheons showing the arms of Robert Rolle impaling the arms of Duke, Per fesse argent and azure, three chaplets counterchanged, for his wife Elizabeth Duke (d. 1716), daughter of Richard Duke (1652–1733),[17] MP, of Otterton, Devon.

Chronology

The building was first mentioned in 1609 when a walking place for merchants was erected on the quay.[18] It was then known as the Mercantile Exchange or Merchants' Walk.[19] In about 1708, the present colonnade known as "Queen Anne's Walk" was constructed. In 1859-60 baths were built at which time according to Blaylock (1986), the whole structure was dismantled and the facade rebuilt integrally with the whole.[20] There were six "private baths for ladies and gentlemen" and a "wash house for the poor".[21] In 1866 the "small quay" nearby was filled in following complaints about the "stink from the mud", and on the site was later built the surviving Strand bus station, in the style of Queen Anne's Walk.[22]

In 1868 it was converted to a Masonic Hall.[23] In 1872 the North Devon railway was extended northwards to Ilfracombe and southwards to Torrington, and the new "town station" at Barnstaple destroyed the old harbour area in front of Queen Anne's Walk, following which replacement quays were built at Castle Quay.[24] Repairs were carried out in 1985 when a survey and detailed drawings of the building were made by Blaylock.[25] Further repairs were undertaken in 1912 and 1923. It was re-roofed in 1981.[26] In 1986 a survey was made by Exeter Museums Archaeological Field Unit.[27]

Armorials

The armorial bearings on the structure are illustrated and described in Blaylock's 1985 survey. As the contemporary brass tablet affixed to the east parapet suggests, they represent the members of the Corporation of Barnstaple, viri ipsi ornatissimi & honorabiles, "men themselves honourable and most illustrious", who financed the building work. Nine of them are members of a tightly-knit group closely related by blood or marriage, namely: Acland, Hooper, Basset, Davie, Clevland, Chichester, both Incledons and Lethbridge (see pedigree chart illustration). In 1913 the arms shown on the entablature were repeated on twelve small escutcheons and crests in coloured enamels on small decorative brass plates stamped "PARTRIDGE 1913" made by May Hart Partridge (born c.1881 in Harborne, Staffordshire – died 1917), an art enameller who studied at the Birmingham School of Art.[28] She was "the most notorious pupil of Arthur Gaskin".[29] Her works are mainly in the Arts and Crafts style. She later worked at London County Council schools and at home.[30] [31] [29]

May Hart Partridge was the wife of Frederick James Partridge (c.1877–1946), born in Barnstaple, a jeweller, silversmith and teacher of jewellery making.[31] These are now displayed in individual glazed wooden frames affixed to the walls of the staircase of the Barnstaple Guildhall, six on each side.[32] The families so represented are, in order of escutcheons on parapet from west to east (left to right when looking at main front):

Further reading

Sources

References

  1. Pevsner, p.153
  2. As stated in Latin inscription on contemporary brass tablet at east end, see below
  3. Wood, J., 1843, Plan of the Town of Barnstaple from Actual Survey (Cartographic): A town plan of 1843 shows Queen Anne's Walk fronting directly onto Barnstaple Quay (before New Quay was built in the 1870s)(Quoted by Heritage Gateway)
  4. English Heritage, 2012, National Heritage List for England (National Heritage List for England)(Quoted by Heritage Gateway)
  5. left return with blind wall, right return open
  6. Reed, Margaret A., Pilton: Its Past and Its People, Barnstaple, 1985, p.143; Listed building text http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-485770-pilton-house-barnstaple-devon
  7. Vivian, 1895, p.498
  8. Lamplugh, Lois, Barnstaple: Town on the Taw, South Molton, 2002, p.15
  9. Transcribed in Gribble, pp.560-1
  10. Pevsner, p.155
  11. Text from thepiltonstory.org http://vimp.thepiltonstory.org/picture/The-Sign-of-The-Three-Tuns-in-Barnstaple/f519eabd67a8decf9e11905beb151b64 "The Three Tuns was once a very popular pub on Barnstaple High Street and was marketed as "the oldest tavern in the oldest street in the oldest borough in Britain" – not completely true but a good strap line. The three tuns, small ornamental wooden beer barrels which hung outside the pub until it closed in about 2007, were made by William James Norman, the grandfather of John Norman of Pilton. William lived in Bradiford as a child and then moved to Yeo Vale as a young man before joining the Royal Engineers and going off to fight in World War I. Unfortunately he was killed at the Battle of the Somme in July 1916. The tuns were recovered by John during the refurbishment of the pub as a Pizza Express Restaurant and are now on display in Barnstaple Museum."
  12. See further: Oliver, Bruce W., The Three Tuns, Barnstaple, Transactions of the Devon Association, vol. 80 (1948) pp.147-158 (Very detailed account of the history of the inn, 1415-1948)
  13. [Nikolaus Pevsner|Pevsner, Nikolaus]
  14. Transcribed in Gribble, Joseph Besly, Memorials of Barnstaple: Being an Attempt to Supply the Want of A History of that Ancient Borough, Barnstaple, 1830, pp.560-1 https://books.google.com/books?id=5AsNAAAAYAAJ&dq=mary+paige+barnstaple&pg=PP17 (Gribble established the “Barnstaple Iron Foundry” in 1822 (p.546))
  15. Transcribed in Gribble, pp. 560-1.
  16. Travels in Georgian Devon: the Journals of John Swete, Vol. 1, p. 33.
  17. Vivian, Lt.Col. J. L., (Ed.) The Visitations of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, p. 312, pedigree of Duke of Otterton.
  18. Exeter Archaeology, 2001, Archaeological Assessment and Building Recording at Commercial Road, Barnstaple (Report - Assessment)(Quoted by Heritage Gateway)
  19. Ordnance Survey Archaeology Division, Unknown, SS53SE9 (Ordnance Survey Archaeology Division Card)(Quoted by Heritage Gateway)
  20. Blaylock, S. R., 1986, Queen Anne's Walk, Barnstaple (Report & Survey)
  21. http://genuki.cs.ncl.ac.uk/DEV/DevonMisc/NDJchronology.html North Devon Journal
  22. Christie, Peter, A North Devon Chronology: The Heritage Album: 175 years in North Devon (1824-1999), excerpts from the North Devon Journal http://genuki.cs.ncl.ac.uk/DEV/DevonMisc/NDJchronology.html
  23. Ferguson, P., 1993, The Restoration of Queen Anne's Walk, Barnstaple "(Article in Serial)"(Quoted by Heritage Gateway)
  24. North Devon Journal
  25. Timms, S., 20/06/1984, Queen Anne's Walk (Personal Comment): "The District Council proposes to repair the stonework on the façade in 1984/5 with the aid of a grant from the Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission".(Quoted by Heritage Gateway)
  26. Timms, S., 1981, Queen Anne's Walk (Personal Comment)(Quoted by Heritage Gateway)
  27. Southwest Archaeology, 2013, Greater Barnstaple Area Project Database (Un-published)(Quoted by Heritage Gateway)
  28. Web site: Collection | Themes | Enamel plaque | William Morris Gallery.
  29. For career of Mary Hart Partridge see: Toni Lesser Wolf, Women Jewelers of the British Arts and Crafts Movement, Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts, Vol. 14 (Autumn, 1989), pp. 28-45
  30. Occupation given in Census Returns of England and Wales, 1911 'Artist & Art Jeweller' working on own account, his wife May is an 'Art enameller' working at 'LCC and other Schools', also working at home
  31. https://sculpture.gla.ac.uk/view/person.php?id=msib4_1251819321 Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain and Ireland 1851-1951
  32. http://www.barnstapletowncouncil.co.uk/guildhall-and-tours-barnstaple.asp Image of enamel escutcheons on the Guildhall staircase
  33. http://www.churchmonumentssociety.org/Devon_1.html Image
  34. Pevsner, p.157
  35. Residence of Gilbert I Paige in Crock Street as revealed by his will
  36. Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.497, Lethbridge Baronets
  37. Christopher Lethbridge (d.1713) of Westaway House, Pilton, whose "big and sumptuous" mural monument survives in Pilton Church (Pevsner, Nikolaus & Cherry, Bridget, The Buildings of England: Devon, London, 2004, p.629)
  38. Reed, Margaret A., Pilton, its Past and its People, Barnstaple, 1985, p.141
  39. Vivian, p.255, pedigree of Crossing
  40. Per his History of Parliament biography http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1604-1629/member/crossing-francis-1598-1638
  41. (National Archives: C 66/3525). Patent revoked 24 May 1732 (National Archives: C 66/3586). Per Collinge, J.M., Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 7: Navy Board Officials 1660–1832, published 1978 http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=16855
  42. Lauder, Rosemary, Devon Families, Tiverton, 2002, p.41
  43. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=50569 Lysons, 1822
  44. Acland, Anne. A Devon Family: The Story of the Aclands. London and Chichester: Phillimore, 1981, p.2 & foreword by W. G. Hoskins
  45. [J. Horace Round]
  46. As shown for example on the engraving of his portrait after Kneller, see
  47. As seen on his heraldic achievement in the Church of St James the Great, Kilkhampton, Cornwall
  48. Cassell's Latin Dictionary
  49. Vivian, 1895, p.497
  50. Vivian, 1895, p.48
  51. [History of Parliament]
  52. Reed, Margaret A., Pilton, its Past and its People, Barnstaple, 1985, p.31
  53. Per list compiled by the antiquarian Benjamin Incledon, published in Lamplugh, pp.156-7
  54. [History of Parliament]
  55. Risdon, p.414
  56. Vivian, p.488, pedigree of Howper of Musbury
  57. See History of Parliament biography of his father John Basset (1653-1686)http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1660-1690/member/basset-john-ii-1652-86 and History of Parliament biography of ACLAND, Arthur (1616-91), of Bittadon, Devonhttp://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1660-1690/member/acland-arthur-1616-91
  58. John III Davie's father John II Davie (d.1761) married as his 2nd wife Mary Courtenay (d.1754) a daughter of Sir William Courtenay, 2nd Baronet of Powderham, whilst Sir William's other daughter Eleanor Courtenay was the mother of Eleanor Basset (d.1800) (Vivian, 1895, pp.48 (Basset), p.249 (Courtenay)
  59. Web site: CHICHESTER, Sir Arthur, 3rd Bt. (C.1662-1718), of Youlston, nr. Barnstaple, Devon. | History of Parliament Online.
  60. "the manor of Raleigh, which carried the main interest at Barnstaple", i.e. a rotten borough (Cruickshanks, Eveline, biography of "Champneys, Arthur (c.1658-1724), of Raleigh House, nr. Barnstaple, Devon and Love Lane, London", published in History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1690-1715, ed. D. Hayton, E. Cruickshanks, S. Handley, 2002 https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1690-1715/member/champneys-arthur-1658-1724)
  61. Lamplugh, p.42
  62. Vivian, p.174
  63. Per Heraldic Visitation of 1620 for the Borough of Barnstaple http://www.civicheraldry.co.uk/cornwall_wessex.html

51.0792°N -4.0615°W