The Mamhead estate is recorded in the Domesday Book as belonging to Ralph de Pomeroy. It was subsequently owned by the Carew and Balle families, and then the Earls of Lisburne until it was bought by Robert Newman in 1823. In the 1770s, Capability Brown had undertaken landscaping of the grounds. Newman was the senior partner in Newman & Co., a trading company based in Exeter that had established a small shipping fleet to support its trade with Portugal and Newfoundland. The original mansion house of the Balle's had been demolished in the late 18th century and shortly after purchasing the estate, Newman commissioned Charles Fowler to design a new house. Fowler's Italianate plans did not find favour and Fowler had got not further than constructing the footings before he was replaced by Anthony Salvin. At 26, Mamhead was Salvin's first important commission and it made his reputation. His designs for the house were in the Tudor Revival style, then a relatively new architectural approach, and incorporated the initials of Newman and his new wife, together with the Newman familymotto in the decorative skyline above the main entrance. The Newman family retained ownership of the estate until the 1950s when Sir Ralph Newman, Robert Newman's great-grandson, sold it to an evangelical society. It subsequently housed a school, Dawlish College, in the 1980s, and was the regional headquarters of the Forestry Commission in the 1990s. In the early 21st century the house, again privately owned, operated as an events and wedding venue, hosting the marriage of Peter Andre in 2015. The business subsequently went into liquidation, and its owner was disqualified from acting as a company director in 2019. As of 2020 the house, with an estate of approximately 150 acres, is for sale, at a guide price of £10,000,000.
Architecture and description
describes Mamhead as establishing "Salvin as the chief architect of his time for large country houses in the Tudor style". The house is large, of nine bays, with battlemented and gabled roofs. It follows a "conservative" plan, mainly dictated by Fowler's foundations which has been undertaken for his intended, classically-planned, building. All the main rooms face east, opening on to a long, axial, gallery. This gallery housed a collection of statues depicting English monarchs and worthies of the Tudor era, an unusual feature for the decoration of an English country house. Pevsner suggests they were influenced by the decorative schemes for the Houses of Parliament being planned at the same time, of which Sir Robert would have been aware, having been elected M.P. for Exeter in 1818. Salvin's biographer, Jill Allibone suggests the Temple of British Worthies at Stowe as the statues' most obvious ancestor, and writes of their "scandalous removal" and sale in the 1980s. As he did throughout his career, Salvin sought inspiration for his designs in earlier examples. The triple oriel window on the garden front was copied from one on the entrance front of the genuinely-Tudor Hengrave Hall in Suffolk. Simon Jenkins notes that the staircase in the gallery is recorded as being based on the external stair designed by James Wyatt for Canterbury Quadrangle at Christ Church, Oxford. The interior of the house contains stained glass by Thomas Willement and was decorated with an exceptionally high standard of craftsmanship. The conservatory, which adjoins the house, is surmounted by a parapet decorated with "an ingeniously apt quotation" from Geoffrey Chaucer'sThe Romaunt of the Rose: "Flouris yelowe white and rede / Such plenty grewe there ner in mede". The mock castle to the north of the house, containing the stable block, the brewery and the laundry, is listed Grade II*. Pevsner suggests that the castle is modelled on Belsay Castle in Northumberland, a building Salvin knew, having grown up in the North East. The 1960s edition of Pevsner also suggested that it was constructed on the site of a genuine medieval castle, but this is contested and the 2004 revised Devon does not repeat the claim. The park has its own Grade II* listing.
Lodges and ancillary structures
The park is entered via one of three lodges. The first two are certainly by Salvin, and the third is attributed to him. Each has its own Grade II listing; Dawlish Lodge, Forest Gate, and Basket Lodge. Pevsner describes Dawlish and Forest Gate lodges as, "very pretty examples, Salvin trimmings added to plain 18th century boxes". Historic England considers Dawlish Lodge, "the most inventive and least altered of the Mamhead House lodges". Other features within the estate which are listed include: a sundial in the formal garden to the south of the house; a pool with a fountain in the same garden; the orangery; the terrace walling which runs to the south and east of the house; the steps, with decorative urns, leading from that terrace; and the obelisk, erected by Thomas Balle in 1742 as a guide for shipping, which stands in woodland on a ridge above the house. The writer Christopher Hussey suggests that the orangery was modelled on the water house at Chatsworth and may originally have had a similar cascade.