Tetton, Kingston St Mary Explained

Tetton is an historic estate in the parish of Kingston St Mary in the English county of Somerset. The present grade II* listed Tetton House dates from 1790 and was enlarged and mainly rebuilt in 1924–6 by Hon. Mervyn Herbert (1882–1929) to the design of the architect Harry Stuart Goodhart-Rendel.

History

Dyke

The Dyke family of Somerset uses the same arms as the ancient Dyke family which originated at Dykesfield, Cumberland, before the Norman Conquest of which branches later settled at Henfield in Sussex and at Cranbrook in Kent. Reginald de Dike of Cranbrook was Sheriff of Kent in 1355. Thomas Dyke (d.1632) of Cranbrook married Joan Walsh, heiress of the manor of Horeham in the parish of Waldron in Sussex, which thus passed to the Dykes. The Dyke Baronetcy, of Horeham in the County of Sussex, was created in 1677 for Thomas Dyke, Commissioner of Public Accounts and a Member of Parliament for Sussex and East Grinstead.[1]

"Here lye buried the bodyes of Thomas Dyke and Anna his wife. She died 15th day of May 1630 aetatis suae 32. He died 26th day of May anno d(omi)ni 1672 aetatis suae 81".

On a speech scroll emanating from the mouth of a skull above two crossed-bones:

Farewell fond world, I found thee vaine at best,

In Abram's bosome I find sweetest rest.

Also engraved here on a shield are the Dyke arms : Or, three cinquefoils sable; above, on an esquire's helmet, the Dyke crest: A cubit arm erect, vested and cuffed, the hand grasping a mace, the head of which is barbed with seven spikes.

Below is inscribed in Latin:

Siste viator morae pretium erit scire qui vir hic situs est. ("Stand still, O traveller, the prize of your delay shall be to know what man is placed here")

Below is inscribed verse:

"Here lyes just pious prudence which is more,

Here lyes the father of the orphan poore;

King, country, church, the poore, all these have lost,

Good subject, servant, son, those fathermost".

Below is inscribed in Latin:

Abi viator et vale donec resurgamus. ("depart, traveller, and fare thee well, until we rise again")

Acland

The Acland family originated in the 12th century at the estate of Acland, from which they took their name, in the parish of Landkey, North Devon. In the opinion of the Devon historian Hoskins (1981),[10] based on the family's early and repeated use of the Flemish firstname of Baldwin, the Acland family probably migrated to England from Flanders soon after the Norman Conquest[11] of 1066. Sir John Acland, 1st Baronet (c. 1591 – 1647) moved his residence from Acland to Columb John, near Exeter, the former seat of his great-uncle Sir John Acland (died 1620), and soon after the family moved again to the adjoining estate of Killerton where they built a grand country house, today the property of the National Trust.

Herbert

In the late 19th century the gate piers and walls from Tetton were moved to Cothelstone Manor. In World War II the house was used as a maternity unit. It has since been divided into apartments.

The south front has a colonnade, of fluted Doric columns, onto a courtyard around which the house is built. The east front has a pedimented porch.

Bibliography

51.0679°N -3.1318°W

Notes and References

  1. Betham, Rev. William, Baronetage of England, Vol.III, London, 1803, pp.1–5, Dyke of Horeham, Sussexhttps://books.google.com/books?id=8LRBAAAAcAAJ&dq=dyke+armorial+gules+three+3+cinquefoils+sable&pg=PA5
  2. Literature: see description and transcript in Notes & Queries for Somerset and Dorset, Vol.7 https://www.amazon.co.uk/Notes-queries-Somerset-Dorset-7/dp/1235913341
  3. Hancock, Frederick, The Parish of Selworthy in the County of Somerset, Taunton, 1897, p.167 https://archive.org/stream/parishselworthy01hancgoog#page/n193
  4. https://pepysdiary-production.s3.amazonaws.com/media/encyclopedia/familytree/FamilyTree_clickable.pdf
  5. Hancock, pp.167–8
  6. Hancock, Frederick, The Parish of Selworthy in the County of Somerset, 1897 https://archive.org/details/parishselworthy01hancgoog
  7. Acland, Anne, A Devon Family: The Story of the Aclands, London and Chichester, 1981, pp.17–18
  8. Acland, Anne, 1981, p.16
  9. Hancock; Acland, Anne, 1981, p.16
  10. [William George Hoskins|Hoskins, W.G.]
  11. Acland, Anne. A Devon Family: The Story of the Aclands. London and Chichester: Phillimore, 1981, p.2; & foreword by W H Hoskins, p.xv
  12. Lauder, Rosemary, Devon Families, Tiverton, 2002, p.12, Acland of Columb John
  13. [Daniel Lysons (antiquarian)|Lysons]
  14. Collyns, Charles Palk. Chase of the Wild Red Deer, 1862, p.9
  15. Web site: Tetton, Somerset. National Archives. 22 September 2016.
  16. Web site: HERBERT, Hon. Edward Charles Hugh (1802–1852), of Tetton, Som.. The History of Parliament. The History of Parliament Trust. 22 September 2016.
  17. Acland, Anne. A Devon Family: The Story of the Aclands. London and Chichester: Phillimore, 1981, pp. 70–1,91
  18. History of Parliament biog. of father
  19. Hampshire Archives and Local Studies75M91 – Carnavon of Highclere Papers, 75M91/Y5-Y38 http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/596551a1-312b-4341-a0f3-8e30b238ae51
  20. Web site: Carnavon of Highclere Papers.
  21. Hardinge, Arthur 'Henry Howard Molyneux Herbert, Fourth Earl of Carnarvon' (OUP 1920) pp 31–39
  22. Web site: Mervyn Herbert grave monument details at Blessed Virgin Mary Church burial ground, Kingston St Mary, Somerset,England.
  23. Web site: Person Page.
  24. Kidd, Charles, Debrett's Peerage & Baronetage 2015 Edition, London, 2015, p.P216, Earl of Carnarvon
  25. Dale-Thomas, Peter, The Landed Estates of Somerset Since 1873, Somerset Archaeological & Natural History, 1994, p.154 http://www.sanhs.org/Documents/138/09%20DaleThomas.pdf