Friday, 18 October 2019

A to Z of Westcountry Houses

Laurence Hunt will address the Exmouth Historical and Archaeological Society at 7.30pm on Monday 4th November, in Glenorchy Church Hall, Exeter Road, Exmouth EX8 2SS

Visitors are welcome – entrance £3.00.
Contact:
Mike Tracey
01395 260442
Programme for 2020

Jan. 6 Wartime Dalditch Camp, and finds on Woodbury Common

Speaker: Simon Fogg

Feb. 3 AGM, followed by The humble milk bottle and doorstep
deliveries
Speaker: Peter Haywood

Visitors are welcome at all evening meetings, at a cost of £3 per meeting, but

Please Note

Because of limited space, non-members will be admitted

only after 7.15pm.

Thursday, 17 October 2019

Onwards

A meeting of interested parties discussed:

  • The need to start recording oral histories. The Dawlish talking newspaper, Hear and Now,  based in the community centre in The Strand Church, Dawlish, offered use of their recording studio. We need a volunteer to expedite this ASAP or the precious memories will be lost
  • Perhaps Starcross Primary School hall would be the ideal place to meet
  • There was no follow up to the successful Unearth project
  • Monica has a project to recreate the Galloper carousel which used to visit Starcross
  • Another project is to reproduce the eel trap which was on the end of Starcross pier during World War 2.
  • Malcolm Fairweather is kindly making a child's rocker in the form of The Swan of the Exe, and designing a one twelfth scale model of The Swan of the Exe
  • It has not yet been possible to get cheques signed to Starcross Primary School and Starcross preschool for £50 each, this being last year's prize money for Kattanga the War Horse on the 2018 Teignmouth Recycled Art in the Landscape sculpture trail. The school and preschool have merged so one cheque for £100 is now required. It could perhaps be stipulated that the preschool could choose how to spend £50.
  • Monica has 3 people who have agreed to speak at a meeting.
  • The next meeting should be the AGM so that a new committee can be elected. The main part of that meeting will be a speaker. The committee election need not take up much time. Quorum for this is 6


Wednesday, 16 October 2019

More about the smugglers' tunnel

Many thanks to John Williams for this newspaper cutting.

The Mamhead Estate has a documented history dating back to the Domesday Book.
There are even stories that an ancient village of Mamhead once existed in the present grounds at Mamhead Park but concrete evidence has not been established.
Rumours also exist of an underground passage running from Mamhead House to the old estate kitchen gardens at Brinshill. These may indeed have some substance since smugglers are said to have been active in the area a lot landing contraband at Hele's Dock near Dawlish Warren and taking it via Port Road to various hiding places round the Mamhead estate.

Tuesday, 8 October 2019

Disastrous fire at the Red House, 1933

DISASTROUS FIRE AT THE RED HOUSE STARCROSS, SUNDAY, JANUARY 22ND 1933

On the Saturday night, Mr Richards made his customary bedtime inspection of the house. He checked the locks on the doors and the window-latches. He raked the ashes from the sitting room fire, then ascertained that his mother, and his daughter Evelyn, were in their beds asleep; before he retired to bed with his wife.

At around 5 on Sunday morning, Miss Evelyn Richards was awoken by the smell of smoke. She aroused her father, who followed the smoke down into the basement. He discovered that 4 joists were alight. Smoke began to fill Red House. Mr Richards ensured that his daughter and his wife made their immediate escape; even though they were clad only in their night attire. Mr Richards wet a towel and put it over his head. Surrounded by dense smoke, he was just able to breathe through the towel. He groped along in dense smoke to his mother’s bedroom. Mr Richards wet another towel, draped it over his elderly mother’s head, and carried her downstairs and out into the street. The women were comforted in a neighbouring property which belonged to Mr Richards’ father; Mr Rowe.

Mr Richards immediately aroused Dr JH Iles, who lived next door on the North side in Swan House. Dr Iles telephoned the exchange who called the Exeter Fire Brigade. The Peacock family in the next door South side; Regent House; were away. Mr Campion was the caretaker of Regent House. He lived in a nearby cottage and was one of the first Starcross villagers on the scene, with Horace Daw and his father. The intense heat prevented the many villagers from effectively fighting the fire, so they concentrated on salvaging the furniture from Swan House. Very little of the furniture from Regent House was able to be saved.

When the Dawlish Brigade arrived,” It was just like a raging furnace.” “We could not go near it.” Flames shot up 30 foot. The whole village was lit up. Under Captain Holman, the Dawlish Brigade concentrated on Regent House and Swan House. Water came from a street hydrant, and a 30,000 gallon storage tank at the Western Counties Institution. Staff from the institution who came to help included: Mr EG Magrow (engineer and clerk of works) and Mr R Millman (attendant). Firefighting equipment from the institution was used. Dawlish Brigade ran their engine under the railway through Bishop’s Arch. Although it was low tide, they obtained sufficient water to pump up a powerful jet.

The Exeter Brigade also attended. The strong south-easterly wind hampered the efforts of both brigades to contain the fire. Red House became an inferno. The flames eat through to Swan House but the two brigades managed to prevent the fire from reaching its staircase. It took over 5 hours to subdue the fire. All that remained of the seven-bedroom Red House were its exterior walls. Both adjoining houses suffered considerable fire damage.

Those who assisted the two brigades were: Constable Ball (Starcross), Sgt West, Constables A & S Stephens (Dawlish), AA & RAC Scouts FH Pike, H Daw, S Hart, W Pike, B&W Badcock, J Skinner, J Selley and B Guest.

Sunday, 6 October 2019

Starcross Smugglers?

Here's a picture of the entrance to a tunnel which goes for around 2 miles and exits in Starcross...and also goes up to the Mamhead obelisk. Read about it on the Devon Sculpture Park's website.
The Devon Sculpture Park

The entrance is disguised, not very well, as an ice house.

Ice houses were usually placed near to the kitchens, but this ice house is a long way away from any house. It sits incongruously in the middle of a field. Surely, the customs men would have twigged it?
Experienced cavers say that this tunnel is not safe to explore. After all it might be a couple of hundred years old.

Does anybody have any stories to tell about this tunnel: where it comes out and what it was used for?

Tuesday, 1 October 2019

Men in Sheds at St Paul's Church

Many thanks to the team at St Paul's Church Starcross. On Saturday 28th September, £200 was raised on the Men in Sheds stall,  and everyone enjoyed the tea and cakes. Sorry the event  didn't go on til 4pm as advertised, but next time it will be from 10am until around 1. Thankyou to everyone who came and bought tools and bird-boxes etc,  and also brought in broken or simply unwanted tools etc.
The wonderful flamingos will be sanded down and repainted. The windmill will be welded. Tines on garden forks will be straightened. Strimmers will be made safe and working again.
One of the items on sale was identified as a valuable shipbuilders' adze. Retired shipbuilder Malcolm Fairweather demonstrated how it's used. You must stand with your feet well apart when swinging it to carve out the beams of a ship - otherwise you could cut off your toes!
Retired shipbuilder Malcolm Fairweather demonstrated the adze

We hope to get a Men in Sheds project up and running in the village - if we could find some premises and some more volunteers. Please get in touch if you can help. Men in Sheds could provide start-up equipment. Workbenches could be built. 

People were very interested in the   Starcross History archives. If you have any old photos or documents, they can be added. We could do with someone to go through it all and get it into order.