Halwell


Halwell is a village, former parish and former manor in Devon, South West England. It is presently administered by the civil parish of Halwell and Moreleigh, itself administered by South Hams district council. In 1961 the civil parish had a population of 219.

Geography

It is located south of Totnes, north of Kingsbridge and west of Dartmouth, on the junction of the A381 and A3122 roads serving the three towns.

Toponymy

The name means "The holy well" and it derives from Old English halig: "holy" plus wylle: "well". It is first attested as halganþille in a 16th-century copy of an early 10th-century document. Other early forms include Halgewill and Halghwille, Hallewell, and Holwell.

History

During the Saxon era Halwell was one of the four burhs, or fortified settlements, established in Devon by King Alfred the Great, King of Wessex from 871 to 899, to defend against invasion by Vikings. At that time the other three were Exeter, Pilton and Lydford. According to the Burghal Hidage, Halwell's town wall was 1,237 feet long and the garrison consisted of 300 men who could be drawn from the surrounding district in the event of an invasion. However by the close of the 11th century its status as a burh had been transferred to Totnes, 5 miles to the north and situated on the River Dart, probably because it was better placed for trade at a time when the Viking threat had diminished, after which the significance of Halwell greatly decreased.

Descent of the manor

According to William Pole, from the reign of King Edward I the manor was the seat of the de Halgawell family, which resided there for several generations. Sir John Halgawell was Steward of the Duchy of Cornwall under King Henry VIII, and Admiral of the Fleet and a Knight of the Body. His son was Richard Halgawell, the last in the male line, who married Joan Norbury, daughter and heiress of John Norbury of Stoke in Surrey. His daughter and heiress was Joan Halgawell, who married Edmund Braye, 1st Baron Braye of Eaton Bray in Bedfordshire. Her eventual heiress and inheritor of the manor of Halwell was her second of six daughters, namely Elizabeth Bray, who married Sir Ralph Verney, of Pendley in Tring, Hertfordshire, and of Middle Claydon, Buckinghamshire, whose monumental brasses with heraldic shields survive in the Church of St. John the Baptist, Aldbury, Hertfordshire. On Elizabeth Bray's robe are engraved the arms of Verney impaling Bray ; 2: Sable, a chevron between three bull's heads cabossed argent ; 3: Gules, a fess chequy argent and sable between six crosslets formée fitchée argent ; 4: Or, two bends gules.