Kerswell Priory


Kerswell Priory was a small Cluniac priory in the parish of Broadhembury in Devon, England.

History

According to the Ecclesiastical historian George Oliver, the priory was founded between 1119 and 1129 as a cell of the Cluniac Montacute Priory in Somerset. However, according to the Devon historian Pole, it was a cell belonging to the Augustinian Canonsleigh Abbey in the parish of Burlescombe, Devon.
According to John Parker, the land was given to the church by Matilda Peverel, the daughter of Pagan Peverel of Sampford Peverell in Devon, a knight who fought in the First Crusade.
The priory was valued at £2 1s 8d in the Taxatio Ecclesiastica of 1291–1292 when it held land in Kerswell, Monk Culm and Sampford Peverell. During the 14th and 15th centuries as an alien priory it was seized by the crown during a period of wars in Aquitaine but was restored to the monks in 1312. In 1374 it was recorded that prior did not actually live at Kerswell Priory.

Dissolution

By the 16th century only two monks remained at the Priory, according to Leland. In 1534 it was valued at 28l 16s 4d, when the prior was Thomas Chard. It was dissolved in 1538 or 1539 during the Dissolution of the Monasteries and was granted by King Henry VIII to John Etherydge, according to Dugdale. According to Pole, it was later purchased, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, by William Rosewell, the queen's Solicitor-General, and descended to his grandson Sir Henry Rosewell, who owned it at the time of Pole's writing.

Hill of Priory

In the early 17th century, when the estate was known as "Priory", it was acquired as his seat by Edward Hill, the ninth son of Thomas Hill of Hills Court in the parish of Nash in Shropshire, as is recorded on the mural monument in Broadhembury Church of his second son and heir Richard Hill, inscribed as follows:
Above within the gap of the broken pediment is a castle, an element of the arms of Hill of Hill's Court, Shropshire: Ermine, on a fesse sable a castle triple towered argent. These arms are visible as an inescutcheon of pretence on the monument in Dulverton Church, Somerset, to Humphrey V Sydenham, "The Learned", of Combe, Dulverton, MP for Exeter 1741–1754, mentioned on the Broadhembury monument, who married Grace Hill, one of the two co-heiresses of that family.

Sydenham

Humphrey Sydenham (1694–1757)

, "The Learned", of Combe and Nutcombe, Devon, eldest son and heir of Humphrey Sydenham, was MP for Exeter 1741–1754. His mural monument survives in All Saints' Church, Dulverton. He was a lawyer trained at the Inner Temple. He married Grace Hill, 2nd daughter and co-heiress of Richard Hill of Kerswell Priory , by whom he had children 1 son and 3 daughters. He was ruined by the South Sea Bubble of 1720, in which he lost £20,000. His financial situation was restored by a large inheritance from his great-great-uncle Sir John St Barbe, 1st Baronet, MP, of Broadlands in Hampshire. In the chancel of Ashington Church, Somerset, is a monument of grey and white marble, inscribed:
In 1736 Humphrey Sydenham sold Broadlands to Henry Temple, 1st Viscount Palmerston. His own mural monument in Dulverton church is inscribed as follows:
Underneath are displayed on an escutcheon quarterly of four: 1st: Argent, three rams passant guardant sable ; 2nd: Argent, a bend of fusils sable ; 3rd: Chequy argent and sable ; 4th: Gules, a bend between six cross crosslets or. Overall is an inescutcheon of pretence: Ermine, on a fesse sable a castle with three towers argent. These are the arms of the Hill family seated at Hawkstone Hall in the parish of Hodnet, Shropshire, since its purchase in 1556 by Sir Rowland Hill, MP.

St. Barbe Sydenham (died 1799)

In the time of the Devon historian Polwhele, Priory was the seat of St Barbe Sydenham, He was the only son of Humphrey Sydenham and was the possessor of Combe in 1791. He married his cousin Ellery Williams, eldest daughter of Sydenham Williams of Herringston House in the parish of Winterborne Herringston in Dorset, whose mural monument survives in Broadhembury Church, inscribed as follows:
Below are shown in a circular escutcheon the following arms: Argent, three Cornish choughs proper a bordure engrailed gules charged with crosses patée or and bezants alternately impaling Sydenham, with the rams shown incorrectly as goats. The arms are thus shown incorrectly, as Sydenham should impale Williams. Sydenham Williams was Governor of Portland Castle and was Sheriff of Dorset in 1740–1741 and was the son of John Williams by his wife Jane Sydenham, a daughter of Humphrey Sydenham of Combe, Dulverton
St Barbe Sydenham died without male progeny, when Combe appears to have passed to his Sydenham cousin and heir male, apparently a descendant of his first cousin Floyer Sydenham, and left an only daughter Catherine Sydenham, who in 1781 married Lewis-Dimoke Grosvenor Tregonwell of Anderson in Dorset, by whom she had a son St Barbe Tregonwell of Anderson. Combe passed to a cousin.

The site today

Today a grade II* listed house occupies the probable site of the north, west and east ranges of the Priory. This house has a late 16th-century core with 17th- and 18th-century alterations and is rendered, probably over cob and stone, with a slate roof. The building includes a re-sited 12th-century stone doorway and is important both for its 17th- and 18th-century features and because of the archaeological interest of the site.
South of the house are the remains of the refectory, which had been rebuilt in the 19th and 20th centuries from a late 15th- or early 16th-century building. Although now a roofless ruin, it is a grade II listed building, mainly due its archaeological interest as part of the Priory complex. Originally it had a medieval wind-braced roof which was removed in 1984 and placed in storage.