Volume Three

Summary, Reviews, Index

Words and Pictures from a vanished era

each of these hardback volumes is complete in itself 

Four more ordinary Exmoor people share their life stories with over 150 photographs taken from their own family collections.

John Hoyles was born and brought up in the Brendon valley.

His mother cooked at the Staghunters and John spent every evening in his early years in the kitchen at the back of the pub.  He tells of the early characters that collected in the bar and of the toasting, the pub games and the customs of that time.

At home he had to fetch all the water for the house in a bucket, and he tells of growing up during the war years, of pig-keeping and bell-ringing, of ‘tying the road’ at weddings, and of how even the Brendon schoolboys received rifle practice in preparation for a possible German invasion.

After the war his parents took over the Rockford Youth Hostel and he describes how this was run with up to sixty guests sleeping on bunk beds in communal rooms.

In the early fifties his parents moved again, this time taking over the Blue Ball pub up at Countisbury, and John describes this old coaching Inn where the only water supply came from a tank of rainwater from the roof, and of how they fitted hand pumped petrol pumps in order to attract custom.

John Pedder was from seafaring stock. His grandfather owned six ketches which were worked from Lynmouth harbour to both sides of the Bristol Channel and then beached at high tide and unloaded into carts or onto pack horses before the tide returned.

His family had been Postmasters at Lynmouth since the 1880s and it was his grandfather who took the telegraph message that led to the famous overland Lynmouth Lifeboat launch.

His father had been the local agent for the Paddle Steamers which called every day during the season at  Lynmouth where they had to wait out in deep water as there was no quay.  His father took all the bookings and arranged for the packets to be rowed out by local fishermen to these steamers to collect the passengers.

John himself followed in the family footsteps, going to sea for six years and then taking over at the post office. He tells about growing up in the war years, about small-boat herring fishing, evacuees arriving, swimming in the open-air sea pool in the harbour, and about the Lynmouth flood in which he was trapped on the highest roof and how he saved his father’s life.

Josie Floyd (nee Richards) was born at Broomstreet, a farm overlooking the Bristol channel.

One side of her family were Ridds, of Lorna Doone fame.  She describes the local Culbone church, the smallest complete parish church in the country, set deep in the coastal woods and so remote that it is only approachable on foot.  It is also where all the gravestones of previous generations of her family almost fill the little graveyard.

She describes galloping back through these woods as a young woman in the pitch dark from the Regal cinema, keeping her head low so as not to catch overhead branches and trusting the horse not to tumble headlong down the cliff.  She also talks of riding the same horse to the local dances and changing on arrival in the stables.

She tells of German U boats in the channel, of seeing southern Wales being continually bombed at night and of her cousin who was accused of being a German spy.  She talks about collecting sphagnum moss to be used as medical dressings for the troops and how, after the war, her sister Sheila had left Exmoor for ever, emigrating to Australia on a £10 ticket.

David Westcott can trace his immediate family to the Porlock area for more than 500 years and grew up at a time when ladies still rode side-saddle.

His grandfather was the secretary of the Exmoor Pony Society and David describes the round-up of the ponies on the fenceless common and how they were driven over two days to the Brendon and Bampton pony fairs.

He describes the fishermen at Porlock Weir and his fishmonger uncle who salted herring in barrels and how he took the young David all over Exmoor on his fish round.

He talks about how he and his friends as lads collected pocket money by pushing the early cars up Porlock Hill when they had run out of momentum, and about a cider brewing curate with only 52 sermons – one for each week of the year – and about the Porlock Weir choir and how he had to hand pump the organ in the church.

He tells of starting work on the family farm where he ploughed with a horse and a single furrow plough for the first ten years until they got a tractor.  He also describes how he and his father carried two milk churns each on a yoke down to Porlock Weir every morning to deliver milk  into the jugs of the forty odd houses on their round.

He also describes the three terrible winters that occurred in his lifetime – 1940, 1947 and 1963 – and of how horses always coped far better in those conditions than any wheels could.

Unforgotten Exmoor Volume Three:
ISBN Number 978-1-7397944-1-5

REVIEWS

Historic Voices of Exmoor

 

It has been a delight to read this new volume of David Ramsay’s Unforgotten Exmoor, the third in the series, and to know that someone is continuing to collect these important memories from Exmoor’s older residents. And that they are willing to share them. The book, like the earlier volumes, focuses mainly on a central coastal swathe between Lynton and Porlock, with the Brendon Valley to the south. This area, in reality only a small portion of Exmoor, is the prism through which we see the rest of the national park, and beyond. This is what makes it so interesting. Indeed, taken together, the three volumes of Unforgotten Exmoor are a testament to the fact that small is beautiful. Lives interweave, one person’s reminiscence is told again by another, but differently, and bit by bit, like a pointillist painting, a picture develops of what life was like in the earlier part of the twentieth century. These stories, the stories of Everyman, show how the personal is political and how life on Exmoor, remote as it was at the time, still reflected, and was influenced by, events on the wider world stage.

As with all good stories, we are left wanting to know more. About the tramps who knocked on Josie’s door in the Depression, ex-servicemen from the first world war, looking for work; about the conscientious objectors, working in the woods; or David Westcott’s cider-making curate, who only had 52 sermons, which he preached on the same week each year. And how John Hoyles, a stone mason, came to be a Grenadier standing guard outside Buckingham Palace.

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Family name Index – Volume Three

Arkwright, Mrs

Ash, Alan

Attree

Babbage- Charles (computer inventor)

Baden-Powell, Lord

Bale, Abraham

Beazley, Sidney

Beck, Mrs

Beesley, Ray

Bevan

Brennan, Mrs (Rising Sun)

Byron

Canning, Tom

Chichester, Captain

Crocombe, John (coxwain)

Dallyn, John

Darch, Bill

Evered, Philip (Master of D & S)

Fisher, Widow

Floyd – Bill, Helen, Joe, John, John (carver), Lennox, Molly, Nigel, Robin, William

Fouracre, Ern

French, Albert

Gallagher, George

Graham, Lewis

Gregory – Dick, Gordon

Groves, Fred

Halliday, Miss

 

 

Haw Haw, Lord

Head, Dr

Jarvis, George (water bailiff)

Jones, Tom

Judges picture postcards

Kellaways (shop)

Kent, Fred (blacksmith)

Leeves, Graham, Hazel

Litson, Gabriel

Lock, Ivy

Loosemore, Mrs

Lorna Doone

Lovelace, Fan

Lovelace, Lady, Ashley Combe

Manley, Victor

Marley, Mr (deer damage assessor)

Mather, Ted

Medway, Herbert (butcher)

Molland

Moore, Sally

Mountain, Sir Edward

Nancekivell

Newnes, Sir George

Nightingale, Dr

Nye, Major General Sir Archibald

Parmentor, Charley (War Ag)

Pedder – Angela, Edward James, Harriet, Hope, Jack, Julie, Pauline, Stephanie

 

Pile – Joe, Bill

Prideaux, Bill (blacksmith)

Pugsley, Roy

Rawle, Harry

Red, John

Richards – David, Ernest, John (The Globe), Margaret, Molly, Sheila, Stanley (postmaster), Tom

Ridd – Ambrose, Granfer, Ian, John, Mary

Ridler, Miss (private tutor)

Rook – Mr (Ship hotel), Tom (auctioneer)

Rudd

Sanders, Mr

Scott, Mr, (Lynton POW)

Shute, Mr (Lynton POW)

Smart, parson (Porlock curate)

Snow White

Squires, Charley (Brendon blacksmith)

Sutton, Harry

Taylor, Major

Thorne, Harold

Tucker, David

Vellacott Charley

Vowlews, Alfred

Westcott – April, Carole, Cecil (fishmonger), EA and sons, Ernest, Jayne, John, Margaret, Robert, Sally

Places and General Index, Volume Three

AA box

aeroplane crash

Agricultural Disaster Fund

Alderman’s barrow

Allerford cottages

ambulance, horse drawn

Anchor hotel

apprenticeships

Ashley Combe

Bampton fair

Barbrook petrol station

Bath hotel

bath house

battle of the butchers

Besshill

bible swept out to sea

bicycles

Birchanger (farm)

blackouts

blacksmith

Blathwayt estate

Blue Ball pub

Blue Band buses

Brendon – bridge

Brendon Manor

Bridge Ball

Bristol Channel

Broomstreet (farm)

burning the common

Burvill street, Lynton

Campbell’s paddle steamers

carbide lamp

Carpenters

Castle Rock

charcoal burners

choir

church bells

cigarettes

Civil Defence

cliff railway

coaching inn

coal yard

coast guard

Combe Park (farm)

conscientious objectors

Coombe (farm)

Combe Foot

Cottage Inn

Countisbury hill – mill, school

Court Place (farm)

Cross Street, Lynton

Crossgate

Crown hotel

Crystal Palace

Culbone, church, Inn (fn), woods

curfew

dances

day trippers

Deer damage

Devon and Somerset

dig for victory

Dr Barnardo’s Home

East Lyn (farm)

Eastcott (farm)

‘Eleanor Mary’, ketch

electric light works

Embelle wood beach

emigration to New Zealand

evacuations

Exmoor museum

Exmoor pony society

ferret

fishermen

fishmonger

fleas and lice

‘Forrest Hall’

Gallipoli

gas masks

German – bombers, agents, spy, u-boats

Gibralter cottages

gipsies

 

Glebe (farm)

Glenthorne estate

grass variety trials

‘Growing Wild on Exmoor’ (book)

guests, permanent

harbour

herring – fishing, salting

High Cliff hotel

Hillsford Bridge

Hoaroak valley

Hollerday House

Holman’s Park

Home guard

horse ploughing

hot toddy

hunt puppies

Institute, the

“Inverdargle”

invasion

junket

ketches

Lands End Trials

Larkbarrow (farm)

leather tanning

Leeford

library, traveling

Lilycombe

lime – kilns, mortar, burner

Littlewood (farm)

‘Louisa’, (Lynmouth lifeboat)

Lydney

Lynbridge

Lyndale hotel

Lynmouth – beach, cottage hospital, council, flood, lifeboat, memorial hall, open air sea pool, pillars, post office, reading room, Relief Fund, slaughterhouse, temporary post office, town on wheels

Lynrock Fountain shelter

Lynton coast guard

Manleys, grocer, Porlock Weir

Manor House, Countisbury

Marleck

‘Mary’ (ketch)

memorial hall, Lynmouth

Metticombe (farm)

milk round

Millslade

motto-ware

museum

mushrooms, wild

Myrtleberry

Napoleonic prisoners of war

Nelson Tea rooms

North Devon Journal

oak bark

Oaklands

Oare church, House

Orchard house, Lynton

overland launch

oyster cleansing beds

packet boats

packhorses

paraffin pump

Parsonage (farm)

Pavillion, Lynmouth

Peace cottage

‘Penguin’ (ketch)

petrol pumps

photographer

Picked Stones (farm)

picking up stones

pit props

pitch-and-toss (game)

Plymouth Bretheren Gospel Hall

poaching

pony and trap

pony round-up

Porlock – hill, pushing cars up, tarring

 

Porlock Weir

post horses

post – mistress, master, office

potatoes

Prospect cottage

pumping – petrol, church organ

rabbits – mass extermination of , train, trapping

reading room

Rhenish tower

Ridd milking machine

ringing of bells

Rising Sun (pub)

Rockford – youth hostel,  pub

Rookery, hotel

salmon

Scouts

Seaside Follies

Severn Estuary

Shilstone cottage

shipping conveys

shoe cleaning

side-saddle

Silcombe (farm)

Sillery sands (fn)

Sinai hotel

slaughterhouse

sphagnum moss

Sportsman Inn, Sandyway

St John’s Ambulance

St Nicholas’ church, Porlock Weir

St Vincents

Staghunter pub

stone gateposts

stove, paraffin

suffragettes

Sunderland flying boat

swimming, segregated

tannery

tea from fishermens’ wives

telegrams

‘The Barry’, paddle steamer (fn)

The Globe

Thornmead

‘Three Sisters’, ketch

threshing machine

Timber corps

Tippacott (farm)

toasting

tramps

Tucker’s toffees

Valley of Rocks

wages

walking a puppy

War Ag

war office

water supply – wheel, hot

Watersmeet

‘Waverly’ (paddle steamer)

Welsh coal miners

Wendy Cott

West Buckland school

West Lyn (farm)

West Somerset Yomenary

whortleberries

Wills tobacco

Wilmersham (farm)

windmill

Winsford

winter of discontent

winter, 1947, 1963

Wootton Courtenay mill

workhouse

Worthy Manor

Wringcliff bay

Yearnor (farm)

Yenworthy (farm)

Youth Hostel, Rockford