More information : (SX 86546485) Compton Castle (NR) (NT) (NAT). (1)
Compton Castle is one of the few fortified houses to have survived without the alterations and additions which usually modify the character of such buildings.
The earliest part of the castle, and the nucleus around which the rest developed, is the hall, dating to the time of Joan, daughter of William de Compton, who married Geoffrey Gilbert before 1329. The hall had fallen into ruin by 1750, but was rebuilt in 1954-5.
The buttery and pantry at the east end of the hall, and the solar and cellar at the west end, conformed to the Medieval plan and date from the first building.
The chapel has a doorway of this period, and a licence was granted in 1350 to William Gilbert, by the Bishop of Exeter, for a portable altar.
In the second building period, 1450-70, the solar and cellar were rebuilt, the cellar becoming a withdrawing room. A third building period occurred about 1520, when the area was suffering from French raids, and the towers and curtain wall date from this time.
The house remained in the Gilbert family until 1800, was bought back by them in 1930, and was given to the National Trust in 1951. HHR Grade 1. (2-3)
Compton Castle, Grade I. Medieval fortified house, seat of the Gilberts and property of the National Trust. Circa 1320 manor house with work of circa 1450, extended and fortified in circa 1500 to early C16. Restored circa 1930-55. Hall rebuilt 1954-5. Built of local limestone rubble with red sandstone and white Beer-stone dressings and granite corbels, lintels and copings. Slate roofs. Only parts of the screens passage survive of the early C14 four-bay hall which was reconstructed in C20. At the west end the solar and withdrawing room with a polygonal bay window to the west, a large tower on the south west and a chapel projecting at right angles to the hall to the north west are all circa mid C15. The chapel has Perpendicular four-light windows and a pointed turned vaulted roof with a priest's room above. At the east service end of the hall the buttery and pantry and offices including angle towers to the north east and south east and the kitchen wing to the south east with another tower on the south east corner are all circa 1500. Also of circa 1500 is the north front wall in line with the end of the projecting chapel and service wings which forms a small court in front of the hall. This front elevation is almost symmetrical and has a contemporary corner tower to the right hand (north west) to balance the left hand (north east) tower, both gabled (although in different directions) and with corbelled oriels. The main portcullis entrance is slightly left of centre with its corbelled machicolations and battlements to the high courtyard wall, the Perpendicular north window of the chapel on the right hand and the service room to the left. To the far left another portcullis to the postern gateway. Outer walls to the east, west and south with another tower on the south east corner circa early C16. All the towers are square with gabled roofs. Compton was abandoned by the Gilbert family in circa 1750 (in favour of Sandridge, Stoke Gabriel q.v.) and became a farm. It was bought back by the Gilberts in C20. As well as reconstructing the hall Compton was thoroughly restored. Originally, the land was held by the Comptons. Joan daughter and heiress of William de Compton married Geoffrey Gilbert who built the house in circa 1320. It was the home of Sir Humphrey Gilbert the explorer and navigator who annexed Newfoundland in 1583. Sir Humphrey Gilbert was half brother of Sir Walter Raleigh.
References: Country Life, volume 170, page 1546, 5 November 1981. Transactions of the Devonshire Association, volume 88, pages 75-85. National Trust Guide Book, 1952.
Barn immediately north of Compton Castle, Grade II*. Barn. Circa C18. Stone rubble with dressed quoins. Thatched roof with gabled and hipped ends and widely overhanging eaves on east side facing forecourt to Compton Castle q.v. Central cart doors flanked by flat buttresses, two similar buttresses to right flanking blocked cart entrances. Similar west side but cart entrances not blocked. Some ventilation slits. C20 window and doors in south end. Roofs trusses are C20. Grade II* because of its proximity to Compton Castle. (4)
SX 86576492. A fortified manor house of the 14th century, extensively rebuilt in the later 15th/early 16th century. The site includes the remains of a medieval fishpond, later formal gardens and a threshing barn. Scheduled. The house is also Listed Grade I and the barn Grade II*. (5)
Listed as a strong house by Cathcart King. (6) |