Mount Radford, Exeter
Mount Radford is an historic estate in the parish of St Leonards, adjacent to the east side of the City of Exeter in Devon.
Descent
Radford
- Lawrence Radford was the builder of Mount Radford House, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. In the words of the Devon historian Sir William Pole : Uppon a little ascending hill did Lawrence Radford Esqr. bwild hym a fayre howse & called it Mount Radford.
- Arthur Radford, son, who sold it to Edward Hancock, MP, lord of the manor of Combe Martin, North Devon.
Hancock
Edward Hancock (c.1560–1603)
Edward Hancock was the son and heir of William Hancock of Combe Martin. He was MP for Plympton Erle, Barnstaple and Aldborough. He matriculated at Trinity College, Cambridge in 1578 and entered the Inner Temple c.1580 and was called to the bar in 1590. He was Clerk of Assize on the western circuit in 1590. He married Dorothy Bampfield, daughter of Sir Amyas Bampfylde, MP, of Poltimore near Exeter and North Molton in North Devon. Edward Hancock committed suicide on 6 September 1603. He left a one-year-old son and heir William II Hancock. Dorothy survived her husband and received Mount Radford as her dower house, where she lived with her second husband. She remarried to the highly influential Sir John Doddridge, a Justice of the King's Bench, and contemporary of her father, who had purchased as his seat the North Devon estate of Bremridge, near Dorothy's father's seat of North Molton. She was a Maid of Honour to Queen Elizabeth I and has a sumptuous monument to her memory in the Lady chapel of Exeter Cathedral, next to that of Dodderidge.William II Hancock (d.1625)
The father of William II Hancock committed suicide when William was an infant aged one year. His mother Dorothy Bampfield then remarried, as his 2nd wife, the highly influential Sir John Doddridge, a Justice of the King's Bench, and contemporary of her father, who had purchased as his seat the estate of Bremridge, near Dorothy's father's seat of North Molton. They had no children. His mother then LadyDodderidge died in 1617 when William was aged 15 and he appears to have remained in the care of his step-father Dodderidge, who remarried to Anne Culme, the granddaughter of Hugh II Culme of Molland-Champson, a manor adjoining North Molton. Anne thus effectively became William's step-mother. She had previously been married to Gabriel Newman, a member of the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths in the City of London, to whom she had borne a daughter Judith Newman, who was 6 years william's junior. The Newman family later were seated at Baconsthorpe in Norfolk, in the parish church of which are some grave-slabs sculpted with the family's arms. At or before her 17th birthday she and the 23-year-old William were married and had two children:
- Anne Hancock, who married Rev. George Cary, of Clovelly, Dean of Exeter and rector of Shobrooke near Crediton. Their son was Sir George Cary, MP for Okehampton, whose monument exists in Clovelly Church.
- John Hancock, son and heir, in the year of whose birth William died, leaving Judith a 17-year-old widow.
Thomas I Ivatt, who had purchased in 1624 for the sum of £3,000 a lease of the profitable office of "Searcher of the Port of London" the reversion of which he bequeathed in his will to his son Thomas II Ivatt together with the sum of £400 to cover the cost of acquiring a new royal patent. Philipa, The widow of Thomas I Ivatt, of unknown family, was a lunatic, and her wardship was sold by the king in 1629 to the poet Aurelian Townsend
They had the following progeny:
- Thomas III Ivatt of Shobrooke.
- Judith Ivatt
"Memoriae Amoris Sacrum. Here lyeth the body of Judith first the wyfe of William Hancock Lord of this mannor by whome she had issue John & Ann, after the wyfe of Thomas Ivatt Es some tymes His Mat's printcipail sercher in the Port of London at whose cost this monument was erected. Shee had issue by him Thomas & Judith Ivatt. Shee departed this life 28 May 1634 Ao Aetatis 26. Solus Christus mihi salus".
"Grace meekenes love religion modistye
Seem'd in this mirrour of her sex to dye
For hir soule's lover in hir lyfe did give
To hir as many vertues as could live
And thus full beutifyed by heavenly arte
Earth claim'd hir body Heaven hir better parte"
Judith was buried in the middle of the aisle of this chapel, in the floor of which exists a large sandstone ledger slab inscribed thus:
"Fuimus Here lyeth the body of Judith Ivatt wife of Thomas Ivatt Es. for whome he lay'd this stone & erected the monument in the north isle of this chancel. Erimus".
John Hancock (1625–1661)
John Hancock, eldest son and heir, who was an infant aged 1 year at his father's death. He became a ward of the king. He married Mary Sainthill, daughter of Peter Sainthill of Bradninch, by whom he had 3 children:- Edward Hancock, son and heir
- John Hancock,
- Judith Hancock, who married, as his 2nd wife, Henry Stevens of Vielstone in the parish of Buckland Brewer, eldest son and heir of William Stevens of Great Torrington, apparently a younger son of the Stevens family of Chavenage House, near Tetbury in Gloucestershire. Her mural monument, on which the arms of Stevens impale Hancock, exists in Great Torrington Church. The Stevens family later resided at Cross in the parish of Little Torrington and at Winscott in the parish of Peters Marland. They were briefly in the 19th. century the heirs apparent of John Rolle, 1st Baron Rolle of Stevenstone, the largest landowner in Devon. The inscription on the monument is as follows:
Duck
- Nicholas Duck of the parish of Heavitree, adjacent to St Leonards, Exeter, purchased Mount Radford in 1614. He was a lawyer who served as Recorder of Exeter and twice as a member of parliament for Exeter, in 1624 and 1625. He was one of the Worthies of Devon of the biographer John Prince. His father was Richard Duck of Heavitree who founded "Duck's Almshouses" at Heavitree, still surviving at the intersection of Fore Street and Butts Road, having been rebuilt in 1853.
- Richard Duck, eldest son and heir. During the Civil War Mount Radford House and the parish church of St Leonard's were fortified by the Royalists in defence of the City of Exeter. He married Bridget Drewe, daughter of Sir Thomas Drewe of The Grange, Broadhembury, Devon, Sheriff of Devon in 1612, who sold Killerton to Sir Arthur Acland..
- Nicholas II Duck, eldest son and heir, who married his cousin Martha Duck, eldest daughter and co-heiress of his great-uncle the "vastly rich" Sir Arthur Duck, a Doctor of Civil Law, a Royalist in the Civil War, MP for Minehead in Somerset and an author of several works. she survived her husband and remarried to Sir Thomas Carew, 1st Baronet of Haccombe, Devon. One of his daughters, Margaret Duck, married Edward II Mansel of Henllys, near Llanddewi, on the Gower Peninsula in Glamorgan, Wales. The senior line was seated at Margam Abbey which family had played a major role in the early settlement of Gower. Edward II Mansel was the son and heir of Edward I Mansel. The Mansel family suffered financial problems and in 1699 Mrs. Mansel, widow of Edward II, petitioned Parliament for a special settlement of her affairs. In a letter to Mr. Thomas Drew, "probably a lawyer",, she stated that Mr. Mansels father "left a great incumbrance on the estate".
- Richard II Duck, eldest son and heir, who in Exeter Cathedral married Elizabeth Acland, eldest daughter and co-heiress of John II Acland, Mayor of Exeter. John II Acland's father was John I Acland, also Mayor of Exeter, and a grandson of Anthony Acland of Hawkridge, Chittlehampton, Devon, a junior branch of the ancient family of Acland of Acland, Landkey in North Devon, the senior branch of which became the Acland Baronets of Killerton, major landowners in the Westcountry. Elizabeth's sister and co-heiress Margery Acland was the wife of Richard's brother Arthur Duck, LLD. The marriage was without progeny.
Colesworthy
Baring
Mount Radford was next acquired by the Baring family, substantial local merchants and bankers who founded the international banking house of Baring Brothers.- John Baring, MP, merchant and banker, in 1755 purchased for £2,100 the estate of Mount Radford, adjacent to his father's residence of Larkbeare. He also purchased the adjoining manors of Heavitree and Wonford. He rebuilt the 16th century house in the modern Georgian style and added a carriage drive from Magdalen Street, lined with cedar trees. The course of the carriage drive is today represented by St Leonards Road. In 1810 he had an additional residence at West Teignmouth House in the parish of West Teignmouth. In 1816, the last year of his life, he encountered financial difficulties and sold Mount Radford and his other Exeter properties to his cousin Sir Thomas Baring, 2nd Baronet, who in 1826 sold them to a commercial builder. A memorial to members of the Baring family of Mount Radford and Larkbeare exists in the late Victorian St Leonard's Church on Holloway Street, which replaced the small classical church built in about 1831, which itself replaced the mediaeval parish church.
Mount Radford School