Cullompton

Cullompton (/kəˈlʌm(p)tən/) is a town and civil parish in the district of Mid Devon and the county of Devon, England. It is 13 miles (21 km) north-east of Exeter and lies on the River Culm. In 2011 the parish as a whole had a population of 8,499[1] while the built-up area of the town had a population of 7,439[2]

Cullompton

Cullompton: the town from the south west
Cullompton
Location within Devon
Population8,499 (2011 census - parish)[1]
OS grid referenceST020071
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townCULLOMPTON
Postcode districtEX15
Dialling code01884
PoliceDevon and Cornwall
FireDevon and Somerset
AmbulanceSouth Western
UK Parliament

The earliest evidence of occupation is from the Roman period – there was a fort on the hill above the town and occupation in the current town centre. Columtune was mentioned in Alfred the Great's will which left it to his youngest son Aethelweard (c.880-922).

In the past the town's economy had a large component of wool and cloth manufacture, then later leather working and paper manufacture.

A large proportion of town's inhabitants are commuters but there is some local manufacturing, including flour and paper mills. It has a monthly farmers' market held on the second Saturday of every month which is the oldest event of its kind in the South West. It is home to two grade I listed buildings: the fifteenth-century St Andrew's parish church and the seventeenth-century house known as The Walronds. The centre of the town is the only conservation area in Mid Devon and there are seven grade II* listed buildings and ninety grade II listed buildings in the parish.

History

Toponymy and orthography

GWR luggage labels for Cullompton, showing both spellings used.

The derivation of the name Cullompton is disputed. One derivation is that the town's name means "Farmstead on the River Culm"[3] with Culm probably meaning knot or tie (referring to the river's twists and loops).[3] The other theory is that it is named after Saint Columba of Tir-de-Glas, who preached to West Saxons in 549 AD. The Revd Grubb also states that the parish church was probably formerly dedicated to St Columba (although for the last 500 years it has been dedicated to St Andrew) and that tradition records there was an ancient figure or image of Columba.[4] There are 40 recorded spellings of Cullompton between the first recorded use of the name and the present day,[5] and even as late as the mid-nineteenth century three spellings were in use: the post office spelled it Cullompton; in their 1809 first edition the Ordnance Survey map used Cullumpton and the railway station sign said Collumpton. The railway station sign was changed to Cullompton in 1874 and the Ordnance Survey used Cullompton in the edition of their map published in 1889.[6] It is affectionately known as Cully.[7]

Roman period

Excavations on site near Shortlands lane

On St Andrew's Hill, to the north-west of Cullompton town centre, two Roman forts were discovered in 1984 by aerial photography carried out for Devon County Council. The earlier, smaller fort (the boundary ditches of which showed up in cropmarks) was later replaced by a second, larger fort. The ramparts of this second fort are preserved on two sides as modern field boundaries with substantial earthen banks with hedges on top. The banks on the other two sides were removed shortly before the site was recognised as Roman. The site was made a scheduled monument in 1986. The aerial photography also revealed two subsidiary military enclosures or annexes to each fort. In 1992 a geophysical survey was made of the fort and areas to the east and west and this was followed by a trial excavation to the west of the site. These confirmed the existence of two forts, and the ditch of the second fort was excavated. Pottery from the site was dated from around 50–70 AD, which is consistent with a previous date of before 75 AD based on finds from fieldwalking.[8] A Roman settlement near Shortlands Lane was excavated in 2009. A large quantity of Roman pottery, burial remains and fragments of hypocaust tile from the second and third century was found.[9]

Saxon period and middle ages

Will of Alfred the Great, AD 873–888, mentions Columtune (11th-century copy, British Library Stowe MS 944, ff. 29v–33r)[10]

Saxon settlers moved into the Culm Valley in the seventh century and Cullompton was made the site of a minster.[11] In 872 Alfred the Great bequeathed Columtune and its lands to his son Æthelweard. At the time of the Norman Conquest, it was held by the Lady Gytha Thorkelsdóttir, the widow of Godwin, Earl of Wessex and mother of King Harold II. In 1067 William the Conqueror passed through the villa of Colitona on his way to besiege Exeter where Gytha was living.[12] In 1087 William the Conqueror gave the manor to Baldwin, his wife's favourite nephew. It was subsequently held by the Earl of Devon for many years until in 1278 Amicia Countess of Devon willed it to the Abbot and Convent of Buckland Monachorum. With the Dissolution of the Monasteries it was sold to Sir John St Ledger.[7] The five prebends of Cullompton (Colebrook, Hineland, Wiever, Esse, Upton) were presented by William the Conqueror to Battle Abbey in Sussex and were later held by St Nicholas Priory, Exeter.[13] In 1536 St Nicholas Priory was dissolved and the last Prior gained appointment as the Vicar of Cullompton. Patronage then passed to the More family of Moorehays.[12]

In 1278 the town was granted its first market to be held on a Thursday.[14] In 1356 the town gained its first water supply by a deed of gift of the Abbot of Buckland.[15] The water (known as the Town Lake or watercourse) came from a stream rising at Coombe Farm and flowed into a pond near Shortlands. From there it flowed in several open channels to all parts of the town. Water bailiffs were employed to protect the interests of the town and a tradition of "possessioning" took place. This was a ceremony that took place every seven years where a group of townsfolk would inspect the channel and ensure that it was not being abused. The first recorded possessioning was in 1716.[16] In the mid-nineteenth century the water courses were used for boiling vegetables, surface drainage and emptying cesspools. A Board of Health Inspector in 1854 concluded that "typhus and other epidemic diseases are so prevalent here more so than in any other parish in the Union". They were eventually only used to keep the streets clean and continued to flow until 1962 when the town council decided that they were not willing to pay for their upkeep.[16]

English Civil War to the eighteenth century

During the English Civil War the Royalist Earl of Bath tried to raise troops in Cullompton but met resistance from local people. Troops passed through Cullompton on several occasions during the civil war: Sir Ralph Hopton rode with a small troop thRough the town on his way to Cornwall; Cornish Royalist forces marched through Cullompton on their way to join Prince Maurice at Chard as did The Earl of Essex and Thomas Fairfax. There were also troops on the streets of Cullompton again in 1655 during Penruddock's Uprising.[17]

In 1678 a local innkeeper, John Barnes was hanged after being found guilty of highway robbery. He had waylaid, with the help of accomplices, a coach travelling from Exeter to London and made off with about £600 but he was recognised by the guards from Exeter, where he had been a taverner.[18][19]

Another local man called Tom Austin was hanged in August 1694. He inherited a farm with an annual income of £80 and then married the daughter of a neighbouring farmer with a dowry of £800. He lived an extravagant lifestyle and spent all of his money. His farm, having been neglected could not provide sufficient income for him and he borrowed a lot of money from neighbours and friends. He then turned to highway robbery and was moderately successful for a time. He shot Sir Zachary Wilmott during a robbery on the road between Wellington and Taunton. The proceeds from his crimes supported him for a time but in the long term he was unable to clear his debts. In 1694, following a row with his wife, he went to visit his uncle. His uncle was not at home and he killed his aunt and her five children and took around £60 from the house. On returning home he was asked about the bloodstains on his clothes by his wife. He then killed her and his two children. His uncle, who dropped in to visit him on his way home, knocked Tom Austin unconscious and he was arrested and later hanged at Exeter Jail.[20][21]

The Cullompton Company of Volunteers (a voluntary body of soldiers) was first raised in 1794 and continued until 1810. The volunteer companies were formed following Britain's entry into the French Revolutionary Wars and continued to exist during the Napoleonic Wars. Cullompton was the first inland town to offer to raise a volunteer company (on 16 May 1794) and on 24 June the volunteers were accepted. The first commander, Captain Jarmin, was a former Marine officer. The company was formed into a battalion with 11 other volunteer companies called the Hayridge (later Highbridge) regiment. It had 1,200 men and three companies were based in Cullompton with a barracks in New Cut. Jarmin died in 1794 and was succeeded by Henry Skinner Esq. In 1801 the company became a cavalry troop and was then disbanded only to be reformed in 1805 when hostilities with France resumed. Many Cullompton men fought in the Peninsular War and at the Battle of Waterloo.[22]

John Wesley preached in Cullompton on several occasions

The first Nonconformist congregation began in 1662 when the vicar of Cullompton, Revd William Crompton, was ejected from the established church. He continued to preach and a Protestant Dissenters meeting house was built in 1698 which became the Unitarian Chapel. In the eighteenth century there was a prevalence of Dissent with the local vicar recording in 1736 that of a population of 3358 there were 508 Presbyterians, 133 Anabaptists and 87 Quakers. By 1743 the first Baptist Chapel had been built. John Wesley's journal records preaching near the town in 1748[23] and on numerous occasions until 1789.

Nineteenth century to present

These two shops are on the site of the former tannery owned by the Selwood family.
The former health centre and magistrates court
The Hayridge Centre and car park on the site of the former health centre and magistrates court.

In 1805 or 1806 the last bull-baiting in the town took place. On 7 July 1839, a severe fire destroyed many houses in Cullompton. About two thirds of the town burnt with 145 houses and other buildings being destroyed.[24] A subscription for rebuilding was set and donations of £5 were made by Barne and Son, tanners of Tiverton, and Cullompton tanners Mortimore and Selwood.[25] In 1847 a riot occurred in the town due to the high price of wheat. Three houses were attacked, including one in Pound Square belonging to Mr Selwood, the owner of a local tannery and also a maltster. He was accused of speculatively buying 2000 bushels of corn and when his house was attacked, almost all the windows were broken and his furniture was also damaged.[25]

There have been police stations in the town since 1857, when the first Police Station was rented. It had three cells and a petty session courtroom.[26] A new police station was built in 1974,[24] which underwent a major refurbishment in 2011, to become a police force hub for Mid Devon, with 72 staff members.[27] The town acquired its first steam driven fire engine in 1914 which cost £100 and was paid for by voluntary subscription.[28]

In April 1903 a petition objecting to the renewal of alcohol licences for local inns, signed by 450 people, was presented to the Brewsters sessions (magistrates court meetings in England where pub licences were renewed or granted).[29] A deputation sent to the session explained that the number of licensed houses was too large in proportion to the population.[30] In 1917, the cattle market moved from the Higher Bullring to a field near the station. The first cinema was opened in the Victoria Hall in 1918 by Bill Terry[31] and in 1977 the town was twinned with Ploudalmézeau in Brittany, France.[32][33]

In 1920, a public company was formed to provide an electricity supply for Cullompton which merged with the Bradninch Electricity Company in 1927 to form the Culm Valley Electricity Supply Co. Ltd. A gasworks was set up in Cullompton in 1865 for the Cullompton Gas Light and Coke Co. This was taken over by the Devon Gas Association and nationalised in 1949. The gasworks was closed in 1956 and Cullompton was then supplied from Exeter.[34]

Another serious fire occurred on 17 October 1958, when Selwood's tannery in Exeter Street was gutted by fire; the site was subsequently used by a series of supermarkets.[28] It was run as a Gateway store and then as a Somerfield before closing in 2010.[35] Aldi re-opened on the site in April 2014 following a major refurbishment of the store.[36]

The town saw a major expansion in the 1970s as the construction of a bypass in 1969, and its conversion into part of the M5 in 1974, made it a popular commuter town,[37] and it continued to expand during the closing years of the 20th century and the first few years of the 21st century. The Mid Devon Local Development Framework Proposals include plans to erect 95 new dwellings a year, and to build 4,000 square metres (43,000 sq ft) of new employment floorspace a year between the start of the plan and 2026.[38] The first Cullompton town website was set up in 1998[39] and a new website was created in 2011.[40] CCTV was installed in the main street in 2000.[41]

In March 2010, it was announced that the town's magistrates' court was to be closed due its poor facilities and lack of rooms. It had been suggested that the site might be developed as a town hall or the site used as a car park.[42] but this plan was prevented when a group formed to oppose the proposal to purchase the site for a new town hall were elected to two thirds of the council seats in May 2011.[43] In June 2011, it was announced that two local businesspeople had purchased the site[44] and the building was demolished in March 2012 to make space for a car park.[45]

The town got its first permanent library in 1938 in a building on Exeter Hill.[39] In September 2011, a new library opened on a new site, which was four times the size of the old one and cost three million pounds.[46] This was followed shortly afterwards, in December 2011, by the opening of the Cullompton Community Centre, costing 1.5 million pounds. The Tiverton Dramatic Society used the new venue to stage the first pantomime to be performed in Cullompton for 20 years.[47]

Historic estates

Hillersdon House
Langford Court, a grade II* listed building

Within the parish of Cullompton are situated various historic estates including:

  • The church of Cullompton and its land was given to Battle Abbey by William the Conqueror. The manor contained five sub-manors called Upton, Weaver, Ash, Colebrook and Henland (now in the parish of Kentisbeare). This manor later passed to St Nicholas Priory in Exeter.[48]
  • Cullompton. At the time of the Doomsday Book this manor was part of the royal manor of Silverton and so not recorded separately. Before the conquest it was held by King Edward. In 1291 this manor was given to Buckland Abbey by Isabella Countess of Devon.[49]
  • Padbrook and Newland were also smaller parts of Silverton in Doomsday.[49]
  • Colebrook was also a Doomsday manor. William Cheever was the tenant-in-chief and it was held by Manfred. Alward held it before 1066. It was given to Ford Abbey by Henry de Tracey.[50]
  • Hillersdon, was held by Sherwold before 1066. Reginald held it from Odo FitzGamelin at the time of Doomsday and was later held of the Honour of Torrington.[51]
  • Two manors named Ponsford were recorded in the Doomsday Book and were both held by William from Baldwin the Sheriff. Before 1066, one of the manors was held by Sidwin and one by Edwin.[52]
  • Langford was also held from Baldwin by Rainer at the time of Doomsday. The manor was previously held by Brictmer.[53] Along with Ponsford it later formed part of the Honour of Okehampton and was held by the Courtneys.[54]
  • There are two estates named Aller in the Doomsday Book. One of these lay within the Parish of Cullompton and was held by Ralph Pagnell. Within the manor were Whitheathfield and an unidentified place named Frieland. Bolealler may have also been part of this manor. Along with Kerswell, Aller was granted to Montacute Priory by Matilda Peverel and a cell was established at Kerswell Priory.[55]
  • Moor Hayes, for many centuries the seat of the prominent Moor (alias Moore) family, which was responsible for the Moore Chantry / Moor Hayes Chapel at the east end of the north aisle of Cullompton Church.

Economic history

Cullompton has a long history of manufacturing, first with wool and cloth manufacture, and then later with leather working and light industry.

Cloth trade

In the 15th century the weaving of fine kersies and later serges was introduced to the area by weavers from the continent. This was largely a cottage industry and merchants would have premises where the fleeces would be combed and sorted. John Lane was one of the best known local cloth merchants (see Lane's Aisle in the section on St Andrew's church below).[56] In the seventeenth century, Higher and Lower King's Mills were fulling mills for the local industry.[25] In 1816 Mr Upcott employed 60 weavers and 'many spinners'. The Wellington based firm Fox Brothers had a branch factory built in 1890 and made high quality woolen and worsted cloth until 1977. During World War I, their entire output was of khaki cloth, employing over 200 people. In 1910 Mrs Gidley, wife of Dr Gustavus Gidley, set up a hand-weaving enterprise in the stables of Heyford House with the aim of giving employment to ex-servicemen and disabled people.[57] To manage it she appointed two women, one a granddaughter of Bishop Phillpotts.[58] Later the business evolved into machine knitted garments.[56]

Mills powered by the town leat

Lower Mill as it is today

A leat runs to the east of the town's main street but it is uncertain when it was first constructed. By the early seventeenth century, the southern end of the leat and one mill are shown on a map. There were three main mills: Higher Mill, Lower Mill and Middle Mill. Higher Mill appears to have always been a corn mill and it continued to produce animal feed until 1974. It has since been converted to housing but a water turbine remains.[59] Middle Mill was used as a woollen mill in the nineteenth century and was also associated with Bilbie's bell foundry (see below).[59] Around 1900, the mill was steam powered and had a boiler delivered. It is labelled as an axle works on the 1904 Second Edition Ordnance Survey map.[60] The only remains of Middle Mill are some walls and a chimney base.[59] Lower Mill ceased working in 1968. The building is now in residential use but the sluices (made by Stenner and Gunn of the Lowman Ironworks, Tiverton) can still be seen, as can the water wheel and gearing.[61]

Tanning

Tanning in Cullompton goes back to at least the sixteenth century and in the nineteenth century there were three tanneries: Crow Green, Lower King's Mill and Court Tannery. The tannery at Higher King's Mill was active between about 1830 and 1875 and employed 12 labourers in 1851 and 9 a decade later. Court Tannery was established by 1871 and had closed by 1906. It was located at the north end of the town behind Court House, which was the residence of the owners of the tannery. In 1871 it employed 21 men and was probably steam-powered. A local tanner, James Whitby, along with George Bodley and John Davis patented an improved bark mill (used to grind bark for producing tanbark used in the tanning process).

The Crow Green tannery was situated at the south-west end of the town and was already in existence in 1816. It had a water-powered bark mill and 47 tan pits at that date. It was owned by the Selwood family for much of the 19th and 20th centuries, who probably purchased it from James Whitby around 1830, and it was often referred to as Selwood's tannery. It suffered from fires in 1831, 1867 and 1958. In 1881 it employed 48 people and over 100 in 1958 (8% of the local workforce at the time). One of the major products of the factory in the nineteenth century was high-quality sole leather, but during the Second World War, only poor-quality hides, such as buffalo, were allocated to the firm. The business was badly damaged by the invention of rubber stick-on shoe soles which reduced the demand for sole leather from shoe repairers. It finally finished operation in 1967 when the leather side of the business was sold to a Yorkshire firm.

The building to the north-west of Exeter Hill, which formerly housed the water-powered bark mill, is now an antiques warehouse and the remains of the leat and tail race can still be seen. This side of the site was also the location of the lime yard. The other half of the site, to the south-east of Exeter Hill, which was the location of the tan yard, is now the site of an Aldi supermarket.[25][62][63]

In addition to tanning, the leather industry included a leather dressing works (founded in 1921 and which closed in 1982)[64] and a glove maker, Drevon and Brown.[65]

Higher Kingsmill in 2010

Paper making

The first paper mill in Cullompton dates from 1729, with mills being set up near by at Hele and Higher Kensham in 1767, at Lower Kensahm c1788 and Langford c 1788. These would have been small water-powered vat mills, where paper was made by hand, generally by women and children.[66] Records show that the mill in Cullompton was owned by a Mr Simon Mills in 1757 and was taken over by a Mr Theodore Dart in 1799. There followed a number of different owners of whom one of the most significant was Albert Reed who purchased the mill in 1883. His brother, William Reed, established a partnership with a Mr C King Smith. The Reed & Smith group (which acquired New Taplow Mill in 1950) became one of the biggest papermakers in the UK. A Fourdrinier machine was installed in 1892 and continued to make paper at Higher Kings until about 1972. A new machine was built in 1956 to make blue sugar bags and other products, and has been modified over the years to make different grades of paper and card. St Regis acquired Higher Kings in the early 1980s and since then the mill has diversified into making a wide range of recycled coloured papers and boards.[67][68][69] It is now owned by Asia File Corporation.[70]

Cabinet making

Luxtons cabinet makers was founded in 1800 and grew until it employed 50 people, with workshops at Cockpit Hill and Duke Street. After World War I a retail shop was opened by the firm in Fore Street and it kept going doing retailing and repairs until the mid-1960s.

A former employee of Luxtons, William Broom, started his own cabinet making business in 1920 and employed 7 or 8 workmen until the 1930s when the Great Depression meant that by the start of the Second World War, William Broom was the only worker in the firm. After the war, the firm concentrated on repair work and antiques restoration. The firm closed in 1990 with the retirement of Sid Russ who had taken the firm over after William Broom retired.[71]

Haulage

Mark Whitton founded Whitton's in the early 1900s carrying timber with a horse and cart. After World War I the company carried coal to the gas works and local paper mills. In 1923 they bought their first Sentinel steam lorry and carried paper to Bristol, returning with animal feed. During the Second World War they were run by the Ministry of Transport and after the war were nationalised to become part of British Road Services. The brothers who had owned the company moved back into haulage, setting up a new firm which went into receivership in the 1970s and was then bought by Wild Transport of Exeter in 1973.[72]

Bell foundry and clock making

The bell in the stable block at Killerton was made by Thomas Castleman Bilbie in 1782.[73]

A Cullompton man called Chubb travelled widely to repair bells during the reign of James I. In 1745 a vestry meeting determined that in order to reduce the cost of having the church bells repaired, the bells should be cast in some part of the almshouses, and a bell founder be found to work there. In 1746 Thomas Bilbie, from Chew Stoke in Somerset, created a new bell foundry (The West of England Church Bellfoundry) in the town, paying an annual rent of £1/13/4 (£1.67) for premises in the Almshouse building. He recast the six bells of Cullompton church as eight new ones. In 1754 Thomas's eldest son also called Thomas moved to Cullompton to take over the bell foundry. Over a period of 26 years he cast 239 bells, the majority for churches in Devon. When he died, aged 53 in 1780, his son Thomas Castleman Bilbie took over the business and cast 197 bells from 1780 to 1813. The business was then sold to Pannell and Co. who moved it to Exeter in 1850.[74][75] St Michael's and All Angel's in Alphington has a peal of 8 bells cast by Bilbie in Cullompton, at a cost of £108 12 shillings and 8 pence (£1.63) in 1749.[76] The bell in the Chapel at Killerton House was made by W. Pannell and Son in 1845.[77]

The Bilbie family were also involved in clock making. In 1749 Thomas Biblie (senior) was asked to make a set of chimes for Cullompton church. Thomas II worked on clock mechanisms to play tunes on church bells at East Coker and also at Beaminster. Thomas Castleman is recorded as having made a clock for Cullompton Church in 1811 at a cost of £55.[75]

Other industries

There was also a jam factory, 'Devon Dale Jam' in the 1930s[65] and a foundry.[78]

Governance

The town and civil parish of Cullompton has three wards: North (6 councillors), South (7 councillors) and Outer (2 councillors).[79] The town council first met on 1 December 1894 when it took over from the Parochial Committee,[80] and since 1995 the town has had a mayor elected by the councillors.[81] It is part of Mid Devon District Council and there are three Cullompton wards in the district council North (2 councillors), South (2 councillors) and Outer (1 councillor). The total population of the wards at the 2011 Census was 9,835.[82] It is also part of Devon County Council and is represented through the Cullompton Rural ward.[83]

From Saxon times it was part of the hundred of Hayridge.[84] From 1894 to 1935 it was part of Tiverton Rural District and prior to that it was part of Tiverton Sanitary District and Tiverton Poor Law Union. It may have been a borough in the 17th century but this status was not sustained.[85]

It is part of the Tiverton and Honiton constituency and its MP in 2012 was Neil Parish.[86] It was formerly part of the Northern Parliamentary Division of Devon (1831–67), the North Division (1867–85), the North Eastern Division (1885–1918) and the Honiton Division.[85]

Geography

Ordnance Survey street view of Cullompton

Cullompton is 4 miles (6.4 km) south-east of Tiverton,[87] 13 miles (21 km) north-north-east of Exeter and 149 miles (240 km) west-south-west of London.[88] It is at about 70 m above sea level.[88] The parish covers nearly 8,000 acres (32 km2) and stretches for 7 miles (11 km) along the Culm valley.[7]

Demography

Population of Cullompton Parish 1801–2010

At the 2011 Census the parish of Cullompton had a population of 8,499.[1] The wards of Cullompton North and Cullompton South contain the urban area and had a combined population of 7,643.[89][90]

In 2011 there were 6,153 people aged 16 to 74 living in the parish. 4,591 were economically active of whom 177 were unemployed and 1,562 were economically inactive of whom 867 were retired.[91] Figures in 2011 on ethnic composition for Cullompton were: White English/Welsh/Scottish/Northern Irish/British 94.2%, White other 3.6% and White Irish 0.3%.[92] The parish's religious composition was 61.8% Christian, 28.7% no religion and 8.5% religion not stated.[93]

In 1660 the population of the town (only including the urban parts of the parish) has been estimated at 1,800, which made it the 10th largest town in Devon and Cornwall. The town's population grew to 2,750 by 1750 (meaning it was the 8th largest town) but it then fell rapidly so that it was only 2,275 by 1805 - only the 23rd largest town in Devon and Cornwall. This fall in population, in a period when many other towns grew rapidly, was probably due to the decline in the importance of the cloth trade in this period.[94] The population of the parish changed little from the start of the 19th century until the 1970s, remaining at around 3,000 (see chart). However it increased rapidly in the last part of the 20th century and the start of the 21st. Cullompton's population growth looks set to continue as Mid Devon's core strategy foresees 95 new dwellings being built per year in the period to 2026.[95]

Economy

Mole Valley Farmers, Cullompton
Kingsmill industrial estate

In 2001 the proportion of people living and working in Cullompton was 43% with 19% of the town's working population employed in Exeter.[95]

Retail

In 2001 the retail sector in Cullompton met fairly local needs only.[95] The town currently has two supermarkets, Tesco, which opened in September 2008 [96] and Aldi which opened in April 2014.[36] Mole Valley Farmers has a store in the town which sells a wide range of goods including farm requirements, garden supplies and hardware.[97]

The Cullompton street market came to an end in the late 1950s but it was revived for a trial period of seven weeks starting on Saturday 28 June 2008.[98] Although in the initial few weeks trading was good, overall takings for the traders were disappointing.[99] The town also has an indoor market in the town hall every Wednesday[98][100]

A farmers' market held in Cullompton is the oldest event of its kind in the South West.[101] It was Tracey Frankpitt's idea, and after much work, the first market was held on 13 June 1998. She was later consulted by the producers of the long running radio soap opera The Archers and the Cullompton farmers' market was mentioned in one of the episodes.[41] It is held monthly on the second Saturday of the month.[102]

There is an active traders group (Cullompton Traders Association) which holds a range of events.[103] The Bullring Market has been relaunched since Dec 2012 and continues into 2013 every Wednesday and Saturday.

Kingsmill industrial estate

Mid Devon District Council owns 11 industrial units at the Kingsmill industrial estate[104] which are let by a variety of businesses. Business based on the estate include Gregory Distribution,[105][106] who have 27,000 square feet (2,500 m2) of temperature controlled storage which they use for a contract to deliver chilled and frozen goods to Spar stores in the southwest.[107] There is also a flour mill, milk depot, marketing and advertising agency and an industrial clothing shop as well as Higher Kings Mill.[108][109]

Culture and community

The Hayridge Centre in Cullompton which contains the library and also the adult learning services.

The town has an annual Christmas parade to celebrate the switching on of the town's Christmas lights[110] and a festival week in the summer which includes the annual town fayre (formerly known as the Cullompton Town Picnic and Classic Car Show).[111]

Community facilities improved during 2011, with the completion of two projects. The first was a 'community hub' called 'The Hayridge', which opened in September. The facility, which is open six days a week, has a public lending library and cafe with free Wi-Fi access, IT suites and conference facilities. The office space is used by Cullompton Adult Community Learning which was previously based at the local secondary school.[46][112][113] Cullompton Adult Community Learning is run by Devon County Council and offers a range of courses for adult learners ranging from Indian Head Massage to French for Beginners. Courses are run in the Hayridge's learning suites on the first floor.[114] The second major project completed in 2011 was the Cullompton Community centre, which opened in December. This is a 9,250-square-foot (859 m2) building created for community use with sponsorship from St Andrew's church and with grants from Devon County Council and Uffculme Environmental Fund, donations from church members, and money from the South West of England Regional Development Agency. The main meeting area has seating capacity for 180 people, and there are five further meeting rooms as well as offices, kitchens and toilets.[115]

A major recreational area for the town is the Cullompton Community Association's fields which cover 32 acres (13 ha) in the centre of the town. The fields are used for a variety of events, which include a circus, whippet racing and a firework display. The Association is a registered charity which was formed in 1970 to provide a recreation area for the town. It purchased the fields, which are next to the riverside walk along the leat, for £11,500. The site was chosen as the water meadows needed to be maintained to help prevent flooding and it was also close to the cricket and bowling clubs.[116][117] Youth activities have been provided by a youth centre called the John Tallack Centre since it opened in 1988.[118][119]

In February 2008 the Culm Valley Integrated Centre for Health opened in Cullompton.[120] The services provided at the site include: the College Surgery Partnership which is a large general practice with ten doctors;[121] complementary therapies provided by Culm Valley Natural Health;[122] self care groups[120] a health food café, a physic garden and a pharmacy run by Alliance Boots.[123] Health care is also provided by the Brain Injury Rehabilitation Trust, which has run a residential centre called 'The Woodmill' since May 1998. It is the most southerly residential assessment and rehabilitation centre run by the Trust in the United Kingdom, and provides rehabilitation for up to 23 adults with acquired brain injury.[124][125]

Cullompton United Charities provides a number of charitable services to residents of Cullompton. The majority of the funds come from bequests made to the parish from the seventeenth century onwards. Thirteen separate charities were combined in 1921 and then in 1953 further amalgamation went on with the Trott's almshouses, John Lanes Charity and the Charity of George Spicer combining to form the current United Charities.[126] There are nine local almshouses which are available to local residents over the age of 55.[127] They also offer Alpha Piperline emergency call services for the elderly, can refund up to £100 to school leavers under 25 who have spent money equipping themselves with tools, books, vocational training or further education and offer financial help needy individuals resident in the parish to help them purchase specific items.[128] They also own a building called Community House in the town centre, where local organisations can hire meeting rooms.[129]

Landmarks

The street plan of the town still reflects the medieval layout of the town. Most shops lie along Fore Street with courts behind them linked by alleyways. The length of the high street reflects the prosperity of the town from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century when it was a centre of the cloth trade.[130] The street plan is still fundamentally the same as shown on a map of 1663, with a wider area at the North end where markets were held, roads to Tiverton and Ponsford and a small lane leading down to a mill (now known as Lower Mill). This map has only two buildings with roofs coloured blue (conventionally meaning they were of slate) – St Andrew's church and the Walronds.[131] There are two grade I listed buildings in Cullompton: the fifteenth century parish church (St Andrew's) and the Walronds at 6 Fore Street. There are also seven grade II* listed buildings and ninety grade II listed buildings.[132] The centre of the town is a conservation area – the only one in the Mid Devon area.[133] Hillersdon House, a Victorian manor house is near to the town centre and within the parish.[134]

The Walronds

The Walronds before renovation
The Walronds after renovation

The Walronds was probably built in 1605 which is the date over the hall fireplace. John Peter, a lawyer, acquired the property by marriage into the Paris family and his initials are over the fireplace. The plan is a traditional one with the ground floor hall divided from the entrance passage by a screen. The main range has three storeys and there are two wings which are both two storeys high. In the upper south-east room is a barrel shaped ceiling and a second fireplace with the date 1605. The association with the prominent local gentry family of Walrond of Bradfield House only dates from the eighteenth century.[130]

It is now owned by Cullompton Walronds Preservation Trust which was registered as a charity and as a private company limited by guarantee in the spring of 1997. It inherited half the building in 2005 from Miss June Severn and bought the other half. In 2008 the building became the only building in Mid Devon to be put on English Heritage's Buildings at Risk Register and received £250,000 from Devon County Council and £100,000 from Mid Devon District Council for restoration work. Emergency repairs costing £15,000 were carried out during 2008.[135] In July 2010 the Heritage Lottery Fund announced that it would provide a grant of £1.75 million to help complete the restoration.[136] Work began with the erection of scaffolding in August 2011.[137] Restoration including restoring the rendering on the house. This had been removed in 1898 causing water to penetrate the fabric of the building. The house re-opened to the public following the restoration on 29 March 2014 with a display of kersey cloth and costumes made by the Walronds Costume making group.[138]

The upper floors of the house, the inner garden and car park will be leased to the Vivat Trust for holiday lettings. The trust will retain the three rooms adjoining the path from Fore Street for public use. These comprise a meeting room, a kitchen and a lavatory. Additionally, the Trust plans to convert the garden which stretches back to Shortlands Lane into a park for the people of the town.[139]

St Andrew's Church

St Andrew's Church from the South West. Lane's Aisle can be seen at the side of the church

St Andrew's church dates from the fifteenth century[140] and is set back from the main street but despite this its tower is a landmark which is highly visible from the surrounding area. The tower is 100 feet (30 m) tall with pinnacles on top which add a further 20 feet (6 m) to its height.[13] On the west face are the badly damaged remains of a Crucifixion scene with figures of Edward VI and St George to either side.[140] The tower also has a large clock face by Norman of Ilfracombe dating from about 1874.[13] Despite being the first part of the church to be seen when approaching from the main street, it is however the most recent part of the church, being built 1545–1549. The tower is built in the local red sandstone with carved parts in Beer and Ham Hill stone.[130]

The nave and chancel are carried on five pairs of piers and the interior has a boarded wagon roof coloured in blue, crimson and gold which stretches the whole length of the church. At the time of the construction of the Bristol and Exeter Railway, William Froude – the engineer given responsibility for this section of the line by Isambard Kingdom Brunel – inserted iron stringers to prevent the walls from spreading as a result of vibrations from the trains.[13] A screen runs across the whole width of the church.

At the end of the nave is a Jacobean gallery with four oak pillars about 9 feet (3 m) tall.[13] It dates from 1637 and there are sixteen figures carved on it. These figures are typical of the Stuart period and represent the twelve apostles and the Four Evangelists (meaning that Matthew and Mark appear twice). At the centre are Saint Andrew (with an X cross), Saint Peter (with a key) and Saint John (with the chalice).[141]

The central window of the North Aisle is a World War II memorial and a World War I memorial is on the other side.[13] The Moores Chantry Chapel (or Moor Hayes Chapel) occupying the easternmost bay of the North Aisle, was built by the Moor (alias Moore) family, long resident at Moor Hayes within the parish, and contains some original box pews. At the rear (western end) of the church are two large pieces of oak which make up a Golgotha which once rested on top of the Rood Screen. They are carved with rocks, skulls and bones. They were probably removed from the church in 1549 and cut into 2 pieces. For many years they remained in the graveyard.[13]

On the south side of the church is the first major addition to the church: Lane's Aisle. This was built 1526–1529 by a local cloth merchant, John Lane (d.1529). It is fan vaulted in a style inspired by the Dorset aisle at Ottery St Mary and some of the carvings are similar to John Greenway's Chapel at Tiverton. John Lane and wife are buried at the east end of the aisle.[140]

Cullompton Manor House

Cullompton Manor House. The building just in the left of the shot is the adjacent house, Veryards

Cullompton Manor House is a grade II* listed building with sections built in 1603 (dated panel and initials TT for Thomas Trock on the top corner of the front of the house) and 1718 (on a lead cistern head of a drainpipe, are the letters (L) S/WT (R) and the date 1718). It was originally a private residence and now forms part of the Manor House Hotel. It has a jettied half timbered front with four gables and stone end walls with upper windows on carved brackets. It was probably built in the sixteenth century but was refurbished in 1603 for Thomas Trock, a clothier. The original structure consisted only of the front part, in which there were three rooms and a passage on the ground floor, three rooms opening into each other on the floor above, and above again. The front room on the left was the former hall with large oak panels of the Queen Anne period, and a moulded and beamed ceiling. Part of an earlier newel stair which descended to the hall or kitchen survives above a back staircase. The house was remodelled in 1718 for William Sellock. At the front of the building is a hooded shell porch of the early 18th century supported on pilasters and the back of house is also early 18th century of red and blue brick, with windows with thick glazing bars beneath a hipped slate roof with coved eaves. It was given the name of The Manor House in 1850 by J. S. Upcott who owned the property at that time. During World War II it was requisitioned by the army and used to billet officers. The adjacent house, Veryards, was originally a separate residence but was bought by the owners of the Manor House Hotel and incorporated into the hotel in the 1980s.[130][142][143][144][145]

The building is currently on the Heritage at Risk Register following a serious deterioration in its condition which led to concerns for public safety, and the issuing of a repairs notice under section 48 of Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 by Mid Devon District Council.[146]

Cullompton Leat

Running parallel to the main high street is a leat with a public footpath running along it. The leat runs from Head Weir, north of Cullompton, and takes its water from the Spratford Stream. It flows past three former watermills (Upper, Middle and Lower Mill) and then empties into the Culm near First Bridge. It is uncertain when the leat was first made but the south end of the leat and Lower Mill are shown on an early seventeenth-century map. The leat is no longer in use for powering mills and the Environment Agency is not interested in managing the leat nor keeping it flowing so the Cullompton Leat Conservancy Board was formed to restore and maintain the Leat in 2005.[59]

Transport

Roads

Cullompton High Street – this is the former route of the A38 and is now one of the areas with air quality problems
A Virgin CrossCountry train crosses a bridge over the river Culm near Cullompton and heads north for Taunton. To the left is the M5 motorway

Junction 28 of the M5 lies within the parish of Cullompton and a short distance from the town centre. Other major road links are the A373 to Honiton and the former A38 to Exeter which runs through the town, and is now the B3181.[147] In 2001 61.6% of people living in Cullompton travelled to work by car or van and 83% of households had at least one car.[148] In October 1969 a bypass was completed[149] but after only five years this was upgraded to form part of the M5.[150] Since this time traffic coming from the south of Cullompton to the M5 junction has had to pass through the centre of the town. There are now problems with air quality in the town and Mid Devon District Council have made the whole of the built up area in Cullompton an Air quality management area.[151] Traffic on the exit slip road leaving the M5 northbound often backed up onto the motorway,[150] so the Highways Agency and Devon County Council made junction improvements by widening roads, introducing traffic lights and reopening the left hand lane of the northbound slip road, at a cost of £1.3m. This cost was covered by businesses moving to Cullompton.[150][152][153]

There are two routes for relief roads being considered by Mid Devon District Council – a western route and an eastern route. If a lower growth option is chosen it is proposed that only the western route would be constructed. An alternative Outer Eastern Relief Road crossing the M5 at Old Hill was rejected as the existing bridges would need rebuilding, making the cost prohibitive.[154] There is some opposition to both routes – a group called Cullompton Against Western Relief Road has been formed to oppose one route[155] and there is also opposition to the eastern route which passes through the Cullompton Community Fields.[156]

Railways

The Bristol & Exeter Railway opened Cullompton railway station when the railway opened on 1 May 1844.[149] Around 1931 the lines were widened to provide two passing loops and a new goods shed and waiting room were constructed.[157] It closed to passengers on 5 October 1964,[149] the site now being used for the M5 motorway Cullompton services. The nearest railway station is now Tiverton Parkway opened by British Rail in May 1986.[158] Despite reopening plans, Cullompton is only 4.5 miles from Tiverton Parkway as the crow flies.[159]

Railway station reopening

Devon County Council's Travel Transport Plan includes the reopening of Cullompton railway station,[160] and in July 2016 Mid Devon District Council announced that it would spend £40k on engineering design work to test the viability of their concept for a new station. This matched a previous commitment by Taunton Deane Borough Council of £40,000 and £10,000 contributions from the Town Councils of Cullompton and Wellington.[161]

Buses

The 1, 1A and 1C buses run by Stagecoach South West provide regular bus services to Tiverton and Exeter. There is also a town circular bus run by Dartline. An express bus from Plymouth to Bristol, branded the SW Falcon and run by Stagecoach, stops at Cullompton.[162]

Education

Cullompton has two primary schools: St Andrews Primary School which is a medium-sized primary school with approximately 230 pupils in Key Stages 1 & 2, and nine classes[163] and Willowbank Primary School.[164] The secondary school is Cullompton Community College. It opened in 1964 on the present site[165] and became fully comprehensive in 1979. It is now a co-educational comprehensive school for students aged between 11 and 16 with approximately 650 students on roll and in December 2003 it secured sponsorship of £50,000 from The Co-operative Group to enable it to become a Business and Enterprise college.[166][167] It 2017 it was described as being in the top 10% of schools in the country by Offsted. There was also good support for pupils who have special educational needs and/ or disabilities and the most able pupils were reaching high standards.[168]

Religious sites

The Catholic Church of Saint Boniface

As well as the Parish church, St Andrew (see #Landmarks), there are several other religious sites. The Roman Catholic church, Saint Boniface, was built in 1929 by Manuel de las Casas who was descended from the uncle of Bartolomé de las Casas.[169] The church served a separate parish until 2014 when the parish merged with that of Tiverton to become the Parish of St Boniface and St James Mid Devon.[170] The Methodist church in New Cut is the third chapel on the site. The first was started in 1764 and the current building was built following a fire in 1872 which did serious damage to the chapel built in 1806.[169] The Unitarian chapel on Pound Square dates from 1913 following the collapse of the previous building in 1911. It is the oldest nonconformist congregation in Cullompton.[34] Hebron Evangelical Church was built in 1962.[34] The Baptist Church is the site of a meeting house erected in 1743 on High Street.[171]

Sports and leisure

Padbrook Park golf course

Local teams and clubs

Cullompton Rugby Club was formed in 1892 and played on thirteen different grounds in and around the town before their current ground – Stafford Park – was purchased in 1980.[172] In 2008-9 the senior 1st XV team won the Western Counties West League finishing the season unbeaten.[173] On Saturday 9 May 2009 they won the EDF Energy Senior Vase by beating Tyldesley 8-7 at Twickenham.[174] Exeter Chiefs prop Ben Moon formerly played for Cullompton and is now an England International.[175][176] Ladies rugby started at Cullompton in 1997 and by 2009 the team had two qualified coaches.[177] They currently play in the National Challenge South West South 2 league.[178] Former Cullompton flanker Izzy Noel Smith, currently playing for Bristol has been capped for England.[179] Abbie Brown is another former player who captained England at the 2018 Commonwealth Games where they won a bronze medal in the Rugby Sevens competition.[180]

The local football team is Cullompton Rangers who were formed in 1945 and play in Premier Division of the South West Peninsula League. Their ground is called Speeds Meadow.[181] There was also a women's football team – Cullompton Rangers L.F.C. who were formed when Exeter City L.F.C. amalgamated with Cullompton Rangers AFC but in 2011 the women's team folded when the manager was forced to leave and a replacement could not be found.[182]

Cullompton cricket club was established in 1892 and they play at Landspeed Meadow, by the Cullompton Community Association Fields.[183] There are also a variety of other clubs including several bowls clubs and badminton, running, squash, and Taekwondo martial arts clubs.[184][185]

Sports and leisure facilities

Culm Valley Sports Centre

The town has a sports centre, Culm Valley Sports Centre, which is currently run by Mid Devon District Council. It was opened in 1985 and facilities include a fitness studio, an all-weather pitch, a sports hall, squash courts and a sauna.[186] The town is also home to Padbrook Park – a golf course and sporting and recreational centre which first opened in March 1992.[187] The facilities include a Parkland Golf Course, a Golf School, a 40-bedroom hotel, conference suites, health & fitness centre, indoor bowls, fishing lake, beauty salon, restaurants and a sports bar[188]

Notable people

gollark: The Emergency Backup Esobot was initiated after prolonged esobot downtime.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Hi jerdle™!
gollark: Not if I... delete and recreate... my account?
gollark: HAX!

References

  1. Office for National Statistics (2011). "UK National Census (Cullompton Parish)". Archived from the original on 21 November 2015. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  2. Office for National Statistics (2011). "Town population 2011". Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  3. Hesketh, Robert (2008). Devon Placenames. Launceston: Bossiney Books. ISBN 978-1-899383-98-6.
  4. Grubb, Geoffrey W (1986), "St. Columba and Cullompton", in Pugsley, David (ed.), Old Cullompton, Maslands, p. 16
  5. "Spellings of Cullompton". The official Cullompton site. Archived from the original on 3 April 2008. Retrieved 7 June 2008.
  6. Grant, W.C.; Overy, H; Forster, J. M. (1985). The Town on the Culm. Tiverton: Maslands.. This book contains details of the nineteenth-century controversy over the correct name through a series of letters published in the local papers and other documents.
  7. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 9
  8. Simpson, S.J.; Griffith F.M. (1993). "Trial excavation at the Roman Fort on St Andrew's Hill, Cullompton". Devon Archaeological Society Proceedings (51): 149–159.
  9. "Dig at heart of town sheds light on its Roman history". Culm Valley Gazette. 15 December 2009. pp. 1, 27.
  10. "S1507". Electronic Sawyer. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
  11. Sellman, R.R. (1985), Aspects of Devon History, Devon Books, p. 16, ISBN 0-86114-756-1
  12. Grubb, Geoffrey W (1986), "William the Conqueror – Caen – Cullompton", in Pugsley, David (ed.), Old Cullompton, Maslands, pp. 22–23
  13. Chalk, Edwin S. (1910). "The Church of St. Andrew, Cullompton". Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association. Plymouth: W. Brendon and Sons. XLII: 182–205.
  14. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 59
  15. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 85
  16. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 87
  17. Stanes, Robin (1986). A History of Devon. The Darwen County History Series (1st ed.). Shopwyke Hall, Chichester, Sussex: Phillimore and Co. pp. 85–91. ISBN 0-85033-528-0.
  18. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 148
  19. Baring-Gould, Sabine (1908). Devonshire characters and strange events. J. Lane. pp. 320–324. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
  20. Harrison, Paul (1992). Devon Murders. Countryside Books. pp. 58–65. ISBN 1-85306-210-3.
  21. "Tom Austin". The Newgate Calendar. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  22. Grubb, Geoffrey W (1986), "The Cullompton Volunteers", in Pugsley, David (ed.), Old Cullompton, Maslands, pp. 12–13
  23. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 55–8
  24. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 115
  25. Bodman, Martin (2008). Devon Leather. An outline history of a lost industry: nineteenth century tanners and tanneries. Tiverton, Devon, UK: Leat Press. pp. 13, 61, 58–62, 136. ISBN 978-0-9548758-1-7.
  26. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 113
  27. "Police Response Hub Ready To Go". Culm Valley Gazette. 15 November 2011. pp. 1, 3.
  28. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 117
  29. "Tracing ancestors who worked in pubs, Pub History Society Leaflet No. 1". Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  30. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 75
  31. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 71
  32. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 129
  33. "Twinning Association – Cullompton & District". The official Cullompton site. Archived from the original on 3 April 2008. Retrieved 29 May 2008.
  34. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 58
  35. "Sadness as store closes its doors". Culm Valley Gazette. 31 August 2010. pp. 1, 3.
  36. "Aldi is ready to open its first store in Mid Devon". Culm Valley Gazette. 22 April 2014. p. 12.
  37. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 81
  38. Mid Devon District Council (2007), Culm Development Plan Document Issues and Options Report
  39. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 145
  40. "Cullompton Town Council website". Retrieved 8 June 2012.
  41. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 146
  42. "Magistrates' Court to close says ministry". Culm Valley Gazette. 23 March 2010. p. 5.
  43. "Voters put new party in control". Culm Valley Gazette. 11 May 2011. Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
  44. "Let's make room for more spaces". Culm Valley Gazette. 7 June 2011. pp. 1, 3.
  45. "Crunch time for Cully Court". Culm Valley Gazette. 27 March 2012. p. 1.
  46. "Opening Chapter for New Library". Culm Valley Gazette. 13 September 2011. pp. 1, 5.
  47. "Cinderella comes to town to christen church centre". Exeter Express and Echo. 13 December 2011. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013.
  48. Thorn, Frank; Thorn, Caroline, eds. (1985). "General notes, section 9-1". Doomsday Book, Devon (part 2). Chichester: Phillimore.
  49. Thorn, Frank; Thorn, Caroline, eds. (1985). "General notes, section 1-7". Doomsday Book, Devon (part 2). Chichester: Phillimore.
  50. Thorn, Frank; Thorn, Caroline, eds. (1985). "General notes, section 19-23". Doomsday Book, Devon (part 2). Chichester: Phillimore.
  51. Thorn, Frank; Thorn, Caroline, eds. (1985). "General notes, section 42-18". Doomsday Book, Devon (part 2). Chichester: Phillimore.
  52. Thorn, Frank; Thorn, Caroline, eds. (1985). "The Doomsday Survey of Devon, sections 16-97, 16-98". Doomsday Book, Devon (part 1). Chichester: Phillimore.
  53. Thorn, Frank; Thorn, Caroline, eds. (1985). "The Doomsday Survey of Devon, section 16-96". Doomsday Book, Devon (part 1). Chichester: Phillimore.
  54. Thorn, Frank; Thorn, Caroline, eds. (1985). "General notes, section 16". Doomsday Book, Devon (part 2). Chichester: Phillimore.
  55. Thorn, Frank; Thorn, Caroline, eds. (1985). "General notes, section 32-3". Doomsday Book, Devon (part 2). Chichester: Phillimore.
  56. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 89
  57. Green, John Little (2013), Village Industries: A National Obligation, London: Forgotten Books, pp. 58–59, retrieved 19 March 2016
  58. The National Archives of the UK, Census Returns of England and Wales 1911, Class RG14, Piece13223, Schedule Number 254
  59. "Cullompton Leat Conservancy Board". The official Cullompton site. Archived from the original on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  60. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 8, 10, 11
  61. Bone, Mike; Stanier, Peter (1998). A guide to the industrial archaeology of Devon. Association for Industrial Archaeology. p. 15. ISBN 0-9528930-1-0.
  62. "Daniel recounts times past in old tannery". Culm Valley Gazette, MDG2 supplement. 2 December 2014.
  63. "Buffalo hides came with anthrax warnings". Culm Valley Gazette, MDG2 supplement. 9 December 2014.
  64. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 94
  65. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 92
  66. Havinden, Mark (1999), "The woollen, lime, tanning and leather-working industries and paper-making industries c. 1500 – c. 1800", in Kain, Roger; Ravenhill, William (eds.), Historical Atlas of South-West England, Exeter: University of Exeter Press, p. 343, ISBN 0-85989-434-7
  67. "Mills: Higher Kings". St. Regis Website. Archived from the original on 20 May 2010. Retrieved 15 June 2009.
  68. "Our History". St. Regis Website. Archived from the original on 15 January 2010. Retrieved 15 June 2009.
  69. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 91
  70. "Scheme will cut truck numbers". Culm Valley Gazette. 6 December 2011. pp. 1, 3.
  71. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, pp. 93–94
  72. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 84
  73. "Bell 922686". National Trust Collections and Places. Retrieved 29 October 2016.
  74. Grubb, Geoffrey W (1986), "The Cullompton Church Bell-Foundry", in Pugsley, David (ed.), Old Cullompton, Maslands, pp. 20–21
  75. Moore, J., Rice, R. & Hucker, E. (1995). Bilbie and the Chew Valley clockmakers: the story of the renowned family of Somerset bellfounder-clockmakers. The authors. ISBN 0-9526702-0-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  76. "St Michael's and All Angel's – Alphington". Exeter Memories. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  77. "Bell 922685". National Trust Collections and Places. Retrieved 29 October 2016.
  78. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 11
  79. "Parish Council Full results". Mid Devon District Council. 5 May 2011. Archived from the original (pdf) on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
  80. The Second Book of Cullompton, 2007, p. 51
  81. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 12
  82. "District Council Elections full results". Mid Devon District Council. 5 May 2011. Archived from the original (pdf) on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
  83. "Devon County Council Elections 2009". Devon County Council. June 2009. Archived from the original on 29 April 2011. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
  84. "The hundreds of Devon". GENUKI. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
  85. Youngs, Frederic A. (1979). Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England. 1. London: Royal Historical Society. p. 82. ISBN 0-901050-67-9.
  86. "Neil Parish MP". Retrieved 18 June 2011.
  87. "Cullompton-Tiverton". Wolfram Alpha. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  88. "Cullompton". Wolfram Alpha. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  89. Office for National Statistics (2011). "UK National Census (Cullompton North)". Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  90. Office for National Statistics (2011). "UK National Census (Cullompton South)". Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  91. Office for National Statistics (2011). "Economic Activity, (QS601EW) 2011, Cullompton (Parish)". 2011 Census. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  92. Office for National Statistics (2011). "Ethnic Group, 2011 (QS201EW), Cullompton (Parish)". 2011 Census. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  93. Office for National Statistics (2011). "Religion, 2011 (QS208EW), Cullompton (Parish)". 2011 Census. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  94. Barry, Jonathan (1999), "Towns and processes of urbanisation in the early modern period", in Kain, Roger; Ravenhill, William (eds.), Historical Atlas of South-West England, Exeter: University of Exeter Press, pp. 417–419, ISBN 0-85989-434-7
  95. Mid Devon District Council (2007). "Mid Devon Local Development Framework Core Strategy 2026" (PDF). Retrieved 9 May 2018.
  96. "New Tesco is off to a flying start". Culm Valley Gazette. 9 September 2008. pp. 1–2.
  97. "Mole Valley Farmers". Retrieved 24 April 2009.
  98. Shepherd, David (17 June 2008). "Market to be revived after gap of 50 years". Culm Valley Gazette. p. 1.
  99. "Closure of trade group is proof 'town is dying'". Culm Valley Gazette. 2 September 2008. p. 5.
  100. "Indoor Market". The official Cullompton site. Archived from the original on 3 April 2008. Retrieved 19 June 2008..
  101. "Ten years of local food". Culm Valley Gazette. 17 June 2008. p. 1.
  102. "Cullompton Farmers Market". Archived from the original on 30 January 2011. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
  103. "Welcome to Cullompton Traders Association website". Cullompton Traders Association Website. Archived from the original on 23 May 2012. Retrieved 10 March 2012.
  104. "Council Commercial Property to Let". Mid Devon District Council. Archived from the original on 5 August 2012. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  105. "Warehousing". Gregory Distribution website. Archived from the original on 28 November 2010. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
  106. "Palletised Services". Gregory Distribution website. Archived from the original on 28 November 2010. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
  107. "Gregory's land a five-year deal to deliver for Spar". Culm Valley Gazette. 3 August 2010. p. 22.
  108. Bodman, Martin. "Cullompton: Kingsmill Industrial Estate". geograph. Retrieved 4 July 2009.
  109. "Marketing South West". Retrieved 19 December 2011.
  110. "Christmas procession helps light up the town". Archived from the original on 30 September 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  111. "Annual event now a fun fayre". This is Devon. Archived from the original on 30 September 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  112. "The Hayridge, Cullomptonwork=Devon County Council Website". Archived from the original on 1 November 2013. Retrieved 18 July 2013.
  113. "Cullompton Library". Devon County Council Website. Archived from the original on 30 September 2011. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  114. "Cullompton ACL". Archived from the original on 17 September 2012. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  115. "Community Centre". St Andrews, Cullompton Website. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 14 January 2012.
  116. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 134
  117. "Cullompton Community Association". Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  118. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 36
  119. "John Tallack Youth Centre". Archived from the original on 19 December 2013. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
  120. "Royals return for second look at health centre". Culm Valley Gazette. 12 July 2011. p. 12.
  121. "College Surgery Partnership Online". Archived from the original on 26 September 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  122. "Culm Valley Natural Health". Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  123. "Culm Valley Integrated Centre for Health, Cullompton". Primary Health Properties. Archived from the original on 9 September 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  124. "The Woodmill, Cullompton, Devon". BIRT website. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
  125. "The Woodmill Cullompton, Devon, Annual Report 2010" (PDF). BIRT. p. 27. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  126. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 135
  127. "Almshouses". Cullompton United Charities website. Archived from the original on 5 September 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  128. "Gifts in Need". Cullompton United Charities website. Archived from the original on 5 September 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  129. "Community House". Cullompton United Charities website. Archived from the original on 5 September 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  130. Cherry, Bridget; Nikolaus Pevsner (2004). The buildings of England: Devon. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 303–307. ISBN 0-300-09596-1.
  131. Ravenhill, Mary (1996), "Sir William Courten and Mark Pierce's Map of Cullompton of 1633", in Gray, Dan (ed.), Devon Documents, Devon and Cornwall Notes and Queries, pp. xix–xxiii, ISBN 0-9528362-0-3
  132. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 39
  133. "Cash scheme may aid shops revamp". Culm Valley Gazette. 21 July 2009. p. 1.
  134. Tyzack, Anna. "Hillersdon House in Devon: a decadent affair". The Telegraph. Retrieved 12 June 2008.
  135. "Walronds set for Lottery and council windfalls". Culm Valley Gazette. 9 September 2008. p. 5.
  136. "Joy as Walronds gets £1.75m grant". Culm Valley Gazette. 27 July 2010. pp. 1, 3.
  137. "First step in £3m plan to restore home under way". Culm Valley Gazette. 2 August 2011. p. 5.
  138. "House restored to its 1800s glory". Culm Valley Gazette. 25 March 2014. p. 3.
  139. "Welcome to the Walronds". The Walronds. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
  140. Pugsley, David (1993). St Andrew's Church Cullompton. Derby: English Life Publications. ISBN 0-85101-302-3.
  141. Grubb, Geoffrey W (1986), "The Jacobean Gallery", in Pugsley, David (ed.), Old Cullompton, Maslands, pp. 10–11
  142. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 78
  143. The Second Book of Cullompton, 2007, p. 127
  144. "The Manor House". The official Cullompton site. Archived from the original on 3 April 2008. Retrieved 18 June 2008.
  145. Historic England. "The Manor House Hotel (1105901)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  146. "The Manor House Hotel". Historic England, Heritage at Risk Register. Archived from the original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved 23 January 2017.
  147. "Mid Devon Local Plan First Alteration" (PDF). 1 September 2002. p. 158. Retrieved 14 February 2009.
  148. Cullompton, Devon Town Baseline Profile (PDF). 1 May 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 September 2008. Retrieved 18 February 2009.
  149. The Second Book of Cullompton, 2007, p. 62
  150. "Town may have to foot bill for junction work". Culm Valley Gazette. 10 February 2009. p. 19.
  151. Cullompton Air Quality Management Area Air Quality Action Plan, Mid Devon District Council, November 2009, p. 2, archived from the original on 27 September 2011, retrieved 16 July 2011
  152. "M5 work to continue next spring". Mid Devon Gazette. 25 October 2013. Archived from the original on 20 November 2014. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  153. "Cullompton's 'bog standard' traffic lights criticised by drivers and town councillor". Exeter Express and Echo. 26 May 2016. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  154. Mid Devon Local Development Framework Cullompton, Preferred Options Document (PDF). 1 November 2008.
  155. Shepherd, David (3 February 2009). "Relief road protesters in call to improve dialogue". Culm Valley Gazette. p. 5.
  156. "Fields not site for relief road". Culm Valley Gazette. 27 January 2009. p. 19.
  157. "A daily Bovril is better than a week in bed", British Railways Illustrated, 22 (10): 442–443, July 2013
  158. "Travel Information". The official Cullompton site. Archived from the original on 28 June 2010. Retrieved 9 July 2011.
  159. https://distancecalculator.globefeed.com/UK_Distance_Result.asp?fromplace=Cullompton%2C%20United%20Kingdom&toplace=Tiverton%20Parkway%20Station%2C%20United%20Kingdom&dt1=ChIJy6MXATCMbUgRUeJA9RLRSMk&dt2=ChIJqza6fFmUbUgRfl4uN7xZOWk
  160. Allocations and Infrastructure Development Plan Document, Mid Devon District Council, 10 August 2007, p. 132, archived from the original on 27 September 2011, retrieved 9 July 2011
  161. "The future of Cullompton Railway Station". Mid Devon News. Mid Devon District Council. 15 July 2016. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  162. "SW Falcon". Retrieved 2 August 2017.
  163. "Our school". St Andrew's Primary School Website. Retrieved 10 February 2009.
  164. "Willowbank Primary School Website". Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  165. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 17
  166. "Welcome from the Principal". Cullompton Community College Website. Archived from the original on 26 May 2009. Retrieved 10 February 2009.
  167. "About Cullompton Community College". Cullompton Community College Website. Archived from the original on 26 May 2009. Retrieved 10 February 2009.
  168. Merritt, Anita (24 March 2017). "Mid Devon college is named among top schools in the country". devonlive.com. Archived from the original on 24 March 2017. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  169. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 57
  170. "A New Church For The Parish". Saint Boniface Saint James - Tiverton and Saint Boniface - Cullompton Catholic Parish. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
  171. The Book of Cullompton, 2001, p. 55
  172. "Club History". Cullompton Rugby.com. Retrieved 20 March 2012.
  173. "Cully crown their super season with Vase glory". Culm Valley Gazette. 12 May 2009. p. 34.
  174. "Fans jubilent at Rugby Triumph". Culm Valley Gazette. 12 May 2009. p. 3.
  175. "Prop Moon makes debut for under-20s". Culm Valley Gazette. 10 February 2009. p. 39.
  176. Kitson, Robert (31 October 2018). "Ben Moon's landing in England squad seemed 'joke' to Chiefs' late developer". ~The Guardian.
  177. "Ladies". CullomptonRugby.com. Archived from the original on 7 March 2009. Retrieved 11 February 2009.
  178. "Ladies XV – League Table". Retrieved 19 December 2013.
  179. "Izzy wins a cap". Culm Valley Gazette. 15 November 2011. p. 36.
  180. "Bronze medal for Abbie". Culm Valley Gazette. 17 April 2018. p. 55.
  181. "History/ Who's Who". Cullompton Rangers FC website. Archived from the original on 19 December 2013. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
  182. "Cully pull plug on ladies side". Culm Valley Gazette. 12 July 2011. p. 40.
  183. "Cullompton Cricket Club". Archived from the original on 30 March 2012. Retrieved 12 February 2009.
  184. "Leisure Activities". The official Cullompton site. Archived from the original on 26 February 2010. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
  185. "Cullompton Taekwondo". Retrieved 18 June 2011.
  186. "Culm Valley Sports Centre". Mid Devon Leisure Website. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  187. The Second Book of Cullompton, 2007, p. 136
  188. "Padbrook Park". Retrieved 12 February 2009.
  189. Hind, Arthur M. (1952). Engraving in England in the Sixteenth & Seventeenth Centuries – a Descriptive Catalogue with Introductions. Part 1 The Tudor Period. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 59.
  190. "Charles Fowler". Encyclopædia Britannica. 1911. Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  191. Worth, R.N. (1895). A History of Devonshire with sketches of its leading wothies. London: Elliot Stock. p. 41.
  192. Lee, Sidney, ed. (1893). "Manton, Thomas" . Dictionary of National Biography. 36. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 101.
  193. Pugsley, David (1987). Old Cullompton (Part 2). Tiverton: Maslands. pp. 36, 40.
  194. Hoskins, WG (2011). Devon. Andover, Hampshire: Phillimore and Co. pp. xii. ISBN 978-1-86077-270-2.
  195. "Joss Stone plot suspects appear in court". guardian.co.uk. London: Guardian News and Media. Press Association. 16 June 2011. Retrieved 17 June 2011.

Sources

  • The people of the parish (2001). The Book of Cullompton. Tiverton, Devon: Halsgrove. ISBN 1-84114-117-8.
  • Morris, Judy (2007). The Second Book of Cullompton. Wellington, Somerset: Halsgrove. ISBN 978-1-84114-625-6.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.