Saturday, 13 October 2018

Floods

50 years ago our village was severely affected by the torrents of water that flooded houses and completely swept away the bridge.
There was a huge clear up afterwards and the Army put up a Bailey bridge to keep the road and village open.
Prince Philip made a visit by helicopter, landing in the Tipton St John Playing Fieldand visiting villagers to see and hear about the floods , oh .....and having a pint in The Golden Lion!
Two villagers describe what they remember from that July day and night.

"  ...Cant remember exact date, but I know it was July.  The rain was coming down in torrents and the first flood came down through the Village from the Goyle.  This flooded all the houses through the village and caused a fair amount of water damage. We had been clearing up the mess from that in my brothers house and I also went and helped Mrs Blunn with the dress shop, she lost a lot of her stock because of it.  When we had cleared up a lot of the mess, I went home to change and eat and then drove my Aunt’s car back down to the Village and parked it where I had been told to by the Station House, I was probably the last person to go over the old River Bridge.  We were advised that there was going to be another wave of flooding and were trying to move furniture etc. upstairs at my brothers to save what we could from the next lot, even a washing machine.  Chris and Jill lost a lot of their wedding presents in the flood.  The next lot of water came down across the fields towards the back of the house. Apparently it had got blocked because of the hay in the fields.  It came in a big wave and as it crashed into the back of the house the brick wall holding up the kitchenette caved in with a tremendous crash.  Jill and I were on the stairs and Chris was in the room it came into and just managed to jump through the window before a rather large piano was washed across the room and jammed itself into the window.  The water came into the house to a depth of about 4ft.  We had to push open a door, behind which was floating a large settee and then open the window to see Chris outside in the water.  He wanted us to get out in case of further collapse.  We went through the window into the water and swam across the road, I could just touch the road in the middle, so it must have been about 5ft.  John and Margaret Quaintance kindly took us in and made us dry and comfortable, their houses were up out of reach of the water.  The houses through the village were uninhabitable for quite a while afterwards.     Jill was introduced to the Duke of Edinburgh when he visited a few days later, he made a comment about “webbed feet” to her.  Incidentally the car had floated from one end of the Station Yard to the other but started first time.  We had to get back to Tipton Vale via Ottery.  The Army eventually came and built a bailey bridge to join the Village together again."
Marilyn Berry

"We had torrential rain all day, the village had been flooded in the afternoon from the brooks. I went down to the village in the evening and the river was rising up making a huge noise, then the Mill stream started to come out. We walked back up the village as the water rose ending up at Potters Corner at about 1am. You could hear the football hut break up and then the bridge, the telephone box was getting submerged, bins and other bits were floating around"
Len Baker

Photos from Sidmouth Museum, Tipton Times and some private collections.

Fluxton airplane crash

Do you remember this?  In July 1980 an aeroplane crash landed onto fields near the river at Fluxton, thankfully all 62 passengers on the plane were evacuated safely, although some sheep were killed during the impact.
The incident was obviously newsworthy and caused great excitement, with many coming to view the plane. I remember walking up the river with friends to see it. We called that area "Carters Airport" for quite a few months afterwards!
Photo courtesy of Tracy Kensdale.
#tiptonstjohn #tiptonstjohnhistory #tiptonplanecrash

Armistice Day

Armistice Day 100 years ago in a small Devon village.....
1918 saw the end of The Great War and Tipton St John took part in the celebrations of the Armistice signing as did many towns and villages all over the country.
This newspaper report was in the Exeter and Plymouth Gazette 1918.
          "Not to be outdone by its bigger neighbour at Ottery, this little village (Tipton) kept up the signing of the armistice by holding a torchlight procession around the village, headed by the Ottery Town Band and afterwards rolled several tar barrels through the village. "
It must have been a bitter sweet celebration for many villagers, with everyone being affected by the War in some way.
Six village men lost their lives during the First World War and people of the village collected money so that a memorial could be placed in the church. This took the form of a marble tablet with the names of the fallen men etched into it. In 1923 a church service was held to commerate the memorial and the church was so full even before the service began that latecomers had to stand outside to pay their respects. Sir John Kennaway on behalf of 195 subscribers unveiled the memorial and "the mournful notes of the last post rang out with remarkable clearness from the church across the valley".
Poppies have been sold each year since supporting Armistice Day and in 1930 Mrs Morshead (of Angela Court) and the WI collected £11 11s 1d  toward Earl Haigs Fund.  The same year the school children made a cross of Laurel leaves and put their poppies in it with a card attached "In loving memory of our brave soldiers from Tipton School"   It was placed on the War Memorial, which was also covered with poppies and flowers.

This November we will be remembering William Pottinger (Metcombe), Thomas Pratt (Coombe), Samuel Lowe Bennet (Tipton Lodge), William James
( Metcombe), Thomas Bastin (Tipton) and Harry Channon (Venn Ottery) amongst the many other brave men, women and animals who gave their lives.

"At the going down of the sun and in the morning. We will remember them."

#tiptonstjohn #tiptonstjohnchurch #devonyeomanry #armisticeday #thegreatwar #worldwarone

Sunday, 10 June 2018

Venn Ottery Churchyard

LIVING CHURCHYARDS
Here at Venn Ottery Church we are working towards making our 'God's Acre' ablaze with native wildflowers,  alive with bees, butterflies, birds and small mammals, a sanctuary for the living aswell as the dead. Churchyards can provide a huge contribution to the biodiversity of the countryside and at the same time engage and educate the wider local community
In our churchyard we already have a little haven for wildlife, with a variety of species in residence.  There are bees living in the tower, these have been in residence for 20 years, you can hear the walls humming on warm days and they can be seen busy flying back and forth visiting plants in and around the churchyard. At night our bat colony comes to life, we have them roosting in the porch, the tower and the main church. If you see droppings in these places these are evidence of our little friends. In 2017 we took part in the Devon Greater Horseshoe Bat Survey with some great results, we were stunned by not just the amount of bats but also the variety. During the winter of 2017/18 we had a Brown long eared bat taking refuge in a draw in the vestry.
Birds can be found feeding and nesting in the churchyard, the Yew tree provides food and shelter as do the hedges that surround the church. We have Tawny Owls roosting in the tower and calling at night too. The grasses and mosses are havens for ants, worms and other insects which in turn feed the birds. The moss is also an ideal home for Bumble bees to live in, along with other types of bees and wasps. Even the headstones are hosts to an array of lichens spreading out over time. On  Sunday June 3rd after the church service we will be planting a few wildflower plants to add to the variety of flora that is already florishing here. We hope that this will encourage more wildlife into the churchyard. If you would like to make a contribution towards the planting or help please come along and if you have more ideas to make our churchyard welcoming to those seeking sanctuary please give us your suggestions.
Judith Taylor
vennotery@hotmail.co.uk

Sunday, 1 April 2018

Tipton Church altar

Tipton St John Church Altar.
The chancel of Tipton St John Church is maybe not somewhere you have looked closely but a friend from America asked me to take a photograph of the reredos behind the altar. He was interested in two small discreet carved figures on either side of the altar table.  On the left is King Henry, founder of Eton college and on the right St Charles the martyr. I had never noticed these figures before. On looking closer I found that the reredos and altar was given by Dr Henry Ley  (precentor of Eton College) and his wife, Evelyn, in memory of her father Rev Heurtley and grandfather, MA Fellow of Corpus Christi College and the Ley family. The family has a very high church background and great lovers and writers of music.
Dr Henry and Evelyn Ley lived at Coombewater Cottage and were active members of the church and supporters of the school at Tipton, often taking part in the end of year prizegiving of books and bibles.  Mrs Ley wrote a hymn "The church on the hill" for the centenary of Tipton church in 1940.  When she died in 1946  the schoolchildren lined her graveside wth spring flowers. Dr Henry Ley, Professor of organ at Royal College of Music, London and Precentor at Eton, would play the organ at Tipton St John Church. He played recitals often in cathedrals all over the country and played at no less than 3 Coronations. Our organ must have seemed very small in comparison! The organ was originally upstairs at the back of the church, later it was moved to its present position to the right of the altar. The photograph shows just how dramatic the balcony looked back then with the organ under the Rose window.
When the church was first built in 1840 there was a "rich and chaste altar screen, divided into four compartments by triple columns with carved arches."  (see photo) The walls were painted with twining plants and writings from the bible, even the ceiling was decorated.  I would love to have seen the church with these amazing decorative paintings. The very beautiful antique altar table is in wood, being reduced from a screen in, none other than Cologne Cathedral, given by the Rev. George Coleridge of Ottery St Mary church.
The Leys had the new altar designed in 1938 by Herbert Read of Exeter. The figures represent (from left to right) St John (Tipton St John) St Peter (Exeter Cathedral) St Mary (Ottery St Mary) Christ is the central figure, robed as King of the earth  then St Therese (Dr Ley's sister)  St Benedict (Dr Ley's brother's name as a monk - Dom Benedict) and St Micheal (Chagford church  - Dr Ley's father was the vicar here).
Thank you Dr and Mrs Ley for a beautiful family and religious memorial in our church.
Had I not been asked to take that photograph I may never have noticed the beauty and history behind our altar!
"In piam memoriam"   Charles Able Heurtley, Priest and Mary Elizabeth his wife.  "Requiescant in face"

Thanks to Marilyn Berry and Chris Baxter for the old church photograph, Rev. Mark Ward and Clinton Crawshaw for the inspiration.
The Newspaper Archives. Exeter and Plymouth Gazette.

Thursday, 1 February 2018

The water pump.

The village water pump
During a cup of tea, my sister happened to remark that whilst walking the dog they had come across the base of a water pump, near the mill stream track, next to Willow Tree Cottage (was Dolphin Cottage). Jane and Mark have a similar pump and recognised the base. I have walked past this metal base hundreds of times but never realised what it was....until now. The actual pump and handle are unfortunately long gone but it got me thinking....
       .....when was the pump in use, who would have used it and when was running mains water introduced to the village?
Most of the the old houses and cottages were built alongside the brooks that ran down from East and West Hill so that they could use the constant supply of water. Over the years though pollution from grazing animals, farming and  sewage made the water taken from the streams and brooks dangerous to drink. Some properties were lucky enough to have their own well,  Elmgrove House,  Hayne and Mallocks had a well in the garden, and I imagine many other houses and farmhouses had one too.  Most of the cottages though were not so lucky, so they had to go to the pump for their water.
It was reported that the only public water pump was at Mr Potters, the blacksmith, ( The Old Smithy) which was only available up until 6pm, then it would be padlocked whilst the smithy was closed. Mr Potter would also service and repair the pump. The Urban District Council paid him £2, increased to £4 for this service in 1913. The pump supplied at least 9 cottage tenants. This arrangement continued until 1924 when a new well with a good supply of fresh water was found and the new community water pump at Dolphin Cottage was installed in 1925.
There was much gossip and suspicion in the village about the quality of  the water in the new well, so the council  " ever desirous of doing the right thing", sent a man out to collect a sample to be analysed.
The Council were told "the sample was of excellent purity, good for drinking and of satisfactory quality for domestic use" and so the chairman remarked  "That's that"!

The pump would go on to be used for many years.

The household sewage would be buried in the garden or more often thrown in the brook or river. The mill would release water once a week, to increase the water flow, so everyone used to empty their waste, which would then get flushed quickly away into the river. 

At many Ottery Council meetings the lack of help for the village was often brought up by local rate paying residents and a report was written in 1913.

    "Conditions were a menace to the health of the village and an epidemic of contagious disease was imminent"

      "It appears that provision has been made for the removable of the closet deposits to be collected only twice a week by means of a cart"!  

Tipton wasn't connected with water and sewage mains until the l950s, as the new houses were built, with some more 'out of the way' properties still relying on a well and pump until the 1970s

We just take it for granted, to turn on on a tap or flush the toilet, but within living memory it was a case of walking with your bucket to the pump and 'fetch your pail of water'  before you could even start the washing up!

Well, well, well....next time you are out walking, see if you can find what's left of the village pump.

Acknowledgements to Len Baker, Marilyn Berry, Chris Baxter, Ann Knight, Jane Hembury, Mark Taylor, British Newspaper Archives.