Collacombe
Collacombe is an historic manor in the parish of Lamerton, Devon, England. The manor house survives as a grade I listed building, known as Collacombe Barton or Collacombe Manor .
Descent
d'Aumale
The Domesday Book of 1086 lists COLECOME as part of the triple-manor of Ottery-Collacombe-Willestrew, the second listed of the 17 Devonshire holdings of Robert d'Aumale one of the Devon Domesday Book tenants-in-chief of King William the Conqueror. He held it in demesne. The triple group had been held before the Norman Conquest of 1066 by three Saxon thanes, including Oslac and Burgred, as four manors. It was administered within Lifton hundred after 1066.Courtenay
The Devonshire lands of Robert d'Aumale later formed part of the very large feudal barony of Plympton, whose later barons were the Courtenay family, Earls of Devon. The Book of Fees lists Collecumb and Willestre as held from the honour of Plympton, the third part of the triple-manor, Ottery, having dropped out of the grouping since being given to Tavistock Abbey by one of the predecessors of Ralph d'Aumale.de Esse
In 1242 it was held by Raph de Esse.Trenchard
In 1295 it was held by Sir Michael Trenchard, and in 1301 by Walter Trenchard. William I Trenchard held it in 1314 and William II Trenchard held it in 1345. The last in the male line of Trenchard left a daughter and heiress, Isabella Trenchard, who married Thomas Tremayne of Carwithenack in the parish of Constantine, Cornwall, and the manor of Collacombe passed to her descendants from this marriage. She survived her husband and remarried to Sir John Damerell, who by apparent coincidence was of the same family as the Domesday Book holder Robert d'Aumale. As Sir John Damerell died without progeny he bequeathed to his wife and her progeny by her first husband Thomas Tremayne, the manors of North Huish, Sydenham Dammarel and Whitchurch.Tremayne
The Tremayne family originated at the manor of Tremayne in the parish of St Martin in Meneage, Cornwall, about 8 miles south-west of Penryn, from which they took their surname.Thomas Tremayne
Thomas Tremayne of Carwithenack in the parish of Constantine, Cornwall, who married the heiress of Collacombe, was the second son of Richard de Tremayne by his wife Mary Erney, a daughter of Sir Thomas Erney of Cornwall. Thomas's elder brother, who inherited the paternal estate of Tremayne, was John de Tremayne, a Member of Parliament for Cornwall in 1366 and 1369, who died without male progeny leaving two daughters and co-heiresses. Thomas's younger son was Rev. Thomas Tremayne, Rector of Aveton Giffard and a Canon of Exeter Cathedral in Devon.Nicholas Tremayne (born 1368)
Nicholas Tremayne, eldest son of Thomas Tremayne and Isabella Trenchard, married as his first wife Joan Dodscombe, daughter and heiress of Sir John Dodscombe.Thomas Tremayne (d.1482)
Thomas Tremayne, eldest son of Nicholas Tremayne, married Elizabeth Carew, a daughter of "Thomas Carew", apparently Thomas Carew of Mohuns Ottery in Devon. In 1448 Edmund Lacey, Bishop of Exeter, granted the couple a licence to celebrate divine service "within their mansion of Collacombe", effectively to maintain a private chapel. The arms of Carew are visible on the 1588 Tremayne monument in Lamerton Church.John Tremayne (1452-1504)
John Tremayne, eldest son of Thomas Tremayne, was Sheriff of Cornwall in 1486 and 1487. He married Jane Warre, a daughter of Sir Francis Warre. By his deed of 1493 he settled his lands in Devon in tail male on his heirs male forever.Thomas Tremayne (1496-1562/3)
Thomas Tremayne of Collacombe, one of Prince's Worthies of Devon. He was the eldest son of John Tremayne, married Phillipa Grenville, eldest daughter of Sir Roger Grenville of Stowe, Kilkhampton in Cornwall and lord of the manor of Bideford in Devon, Sheriff of Cornwall in 1510–11, 1517–18, 1522, ancestor of John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath. Her brothers included Digory Grenville of Penheale, Cornwall and John Grenville, three times MP for Exeter, in 1545, 1554 and 1558. By Phillipa Grenville he had 16 children, including 8 sons, the eldest surviving three of which succeeded successively to Collacombe. Edmund Tremayne, the second son, was Chief Secretary for Ireland. A large standing monument erected in 1588 by his 3rd surviving son Degory Tremayne of Collacombe, survives in Lamerton Church which includes "lively" statues of five of his brothers, with lengthy biographical inscriptions in verse and a profuse display of the family's heraldry including the arms of Grenville and Trenchard.Roger Tremayne (d.1571/2)
Roger Tremayne, eldest son and heir, who married Anne Coffin, a daughter of Richard Coffin of Portledge in the parish of Alwington in Devon. He was predeceased by his only son John Tremayne, and his 4 daughters were unable to inherit due to the tail male settlement.Edmund Tremayne (d.1582)
, next younger brother, of Collaton, a clerk to the Privy Council of Queen Elizabeth I, who rebuilt the manor house at Collacombe, which survives today. Evidence of his work includes the surviving large heraldic plaster overmantel to the fireplace in the great hall, with date "1574". He married Ulalia St Leger, a daughter of Sir John St Leger of Annery, Monkleigh in Devon. She survived him and in 1583 remarried to Tristram Arscott of Launcells, the son and heir of Richard Arscott, the 4th son of John Arscott of Arscott in the parish of Holsworthy, Devon. Her father sold the manor of Annery to Tristram Arscott.By Ulalia he had one surviving son, Francis Tremayne, who died an infant, having survived his father only a few weeks.
Francis Tremayne (1582-1582)
Francis Tremayne, only surviving son, who died an infant, having survived his father only a few weeks. His heir under the entail was his uncle Degory Tremayne.Degory Tremayne (d.1601)
Degory Tremayne of Collacombe, uncle, 3rd surviving son of Thomas Tremayne. He succeeded to Collacombe in November 1582. In 1588, when only one of his other brothers was still living, he erected the large monument in Lamerton Church to his 5 brothers, as the inscription relates "Through duty mov’d he of his care and cost, Caus’d to be fram'd this monument emboss'd". He married Elizabeth Vasey, a daughter of Thomas Vasey of Tamerton and widow of Richard Browning. Secondly he married Katherine Courtenay, a daughter of Sir Peter Courtenay of Ugbrooke, in the parish of Chudleigh, Devon, Sheriff of Devon in 1549, whose monument survives in Chudleigh Church. He was the 2nd son of Sir William Courtenay "The Great", of Powderham, MP for Devon 1529, Sheriff of Devon 1522, 1525-6, 1533-4 and Esquire of the Body to King Henry VIII. The arms of Tremayne impaling Courtenay appear at the top of the monument in Lamerton Church. The first part of the inscription on the monument erected by Degory is as follows:This here erected massy type contains,
The history of latter-age Tremains;
Who numb'ring fair descents of ancestry,
Are drawn from lines of long antiquity.
Thomas their sire match'd one of Grenvil's blood,
Philip her name by birth a gentile good;
From out her womb unto the world's full view,
Eight sons and just so many daughters grew.
Roger first born stepp'd into father's stead;
Edmund by course succeeded father dead.
Next Edmund fell the land to Degory,
Who only wrought his wasted name supply.
Through duty mov’d he of his care and cost,
Caus’d to be fram'd this monument emboss'd,
As witness of his love to parents gone,
Not that his praise should be engraved thereon.
Richard and John, the fourth and fifth so hight,
Both safe one timely birth brought forth to light;
The sixth and seventh like after twins in all,
Were Nicholas and Andrew, stout and tall.
Robert the least, and eke by kind the last,
Dy'd e're the term of infancy was past.
Of eight male two near of one age and stature
- Yet live; the rest pay’d tribute unto nature.”
The parents of th’ above recited race, -
Devoy'd of sense lie here inclos'd together,
Who Colacombe held their abiding place,
Till death's sad harbinger convey'd them hither.
Long faithful pairs they liv'd in wedlock-state,
And both enjoy'd many a blissful year,
E’re marriage knot dissolved was by fate,
Which wife bereaved of her husband dear.
The widow left, made choice to wed no more,
But spent in prayer the remnant of her days;
And shortly went the path he went before,
The path to heav'n whereof Christ keeps the keys.
Their life and death did truly testify,
Both in God's fear did live, and favour die.”