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Yarner House, Bovey Tracey

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Beverley

Beverley Report 21 Sep 2010 15:26

Thanks Choccy

That was what I found. I was wondering if anyone knew of the house from local knowledge. Apparently they do weddings now.

Beverley

Choccy

Choccy Report 21 Sep 2010 15:23


Yarner House, Bovey Tracey
Description: Yarner House

Grade: II
Date Listed: 3 July 1986


Large house. C17 or earlier, remodelled and considerably enlarged in C19. Occupies a prominent site nearly 800 feet above sea-level. Solid, rendered walls. Slated roofs, mostly concealed behind high crenellated parapets. Rendered chimneystacks with C19 tops, mainly crenellated but some in south-west corner with tapered tops. L-shaped, the old house (which has very thick walls) being contained in a square block at the south-east end. 3 storeys. The old house has a 3-window entrance-
front to south-east and a 4-window front of equal quality to north-east.

Ground and second-storey windows have decorated stucco friezes and cornices on consoles. Ground-storey windows have mullioned-and-transomed wood casements with 2 panes per light, while the second and third-storey windows have ordinary small-paned wood casements. In the north-east front the left-hand window in each of the second and third storeys differs in having small panes with a margin of quarter-panes. In
centre of south-east front is a single-storeyed entrance-porch with flat, parapeted roof; chamfered, round-headed granite doorway, probably of C17. The north-east front has a projecting chimneystack with offsets, placed between the 2 left-hand windows. The C19 addition, which more than doubles the size of the house, adjoins the old house on the north-west and is similar to it only in having the same crenellated parapet and chimney-tops. The windows are much larger and have fewer glazing bars; there is an entrance-porch at the south-east end.

Interior: the 2 north-east rooms on each of the ground and second storeys have chamfered beams with scroll-stops (where the beam-ends are exposed). This implies that the C17 house was 3-storeyed and (in Devon)suggests that the building was of more than farmhouse status; it is impossible to be certain because the roof has been rebuilt in C19. Other early features are likely to be concealed under plaster.

The C19 interior details are not of great interest. The added wing contains a large plain wooden staircase and 2 papier mache ceilings in neo-Elizabethan style.

Little is known of the history of the house. The Burnet Morris index quotes the will of Moses Stoneham of Yarner (d.1678) 'in which he says that he had built a new house'; Stoneham, the 2nd son of a Norfolk rector, was born circa 1638 and came to Devon between 1650-7. The earliest title deed of 1706 shows the Yarner estate being sold for the large sum of £1196; by 1829 it contained 500 acres. At the end of C19 it passed to (Sir) Harry Eve, M.P. for Ashburton and later a senior judge in the Chancery Division. However, the 1918 sale catalogue, while referring to new
outbuildings of 1896 and 1908, makes no mention of alteration to the house.

Sources: Burnet Morris index is Exeter Westcountry Studies Library. Devon Record
Office: 1477M/T1-56, E1-2; 547 B/P1783.





Beverley

Beverley Report 21 Sep 2010 14:39

Does anybody know anything about this house? I have found something that says this was built by my Gtx7 Grandfather. I have emailed the company (hotel?) that owns it now but am curious if anyone lives near there that could give me some first-hand information.

Any informtion greatly appreciated.