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RICHARD WEEKES, GENTLEMAN AT ARMS AND PRISONER IN THE FLEET


IN the parish of South Tawton, about three miles from the village and church, and midway on the west road to North Tawton, stands the ancient and interesting mansion of North Wyke.[1] A house so named was there as early as I243,[2] but experts are at variance as to the age of the several parts of the existing structure. It formed an inner court, two sides of which were stables and offices, and a front court enclosed within high walls, and with gate-house, porter's lodgings, and domestic chapel. Though the house itself lies in a somewhat sheltered situation, the drive down from the lodge commands a lovely prospect; and from the top of North Wyke Quarry a panorama of three-quarters of a circle extends over miles of undulating country, from the blue sky-line of Exmoor to the three conspicuous heights of the north-east angle of Dartmoor—Yes Tor, Belstone, and Cosdon—the last crowned with a cairn from which beacon fires have flared out many a warning message to arm against a foe, both before and since the coming of the Armada. From Belstone Cleave bursts forth the

  1. For fuller accounts of the house and family see Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vols. XXXII and XXXV.
  2. For in that year "Roger de Nort' Wyke" appears in the jury list of S.T. Hundred (Assize Roll, Devon, 175, m. 35).