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CLOSED UNTIL 1st OCTOBER 2010
History of Hesperus
 

History of Hesperus Cottage

In the 1840 records, Crowcombe Cottage, as Hesperus Cottage was then known, was the second house name to occur in the documented history of our hamlet. The first was Tracemills, mentioned in the Doomsday Book when William the Conqueror had a tax survey compiled in 1086. We can be pretty sure though that the cottage dates back to around 1600. There are 2 main reasons for this: the first is that, when a new roof was put up in 1966, the architect found that the jointing and pegging in the roof timbers dated back to around 1600 and the second reason is that the name Crowcombe Cottage could be linked to Thomas Carew of Crowcombe who
was the grandfather of a local heiress, Jane Bluett, who got married in 1595. It is thought that her money could have paid for new buildings in their manor and that she could have named one after her grandfather.

 
Hesperus Cottage view 1

   
Forest view
 

Hesperus Cottage is on the site of the old cutting workshops for the local slate quarry. The ruins of the workshops are still there today. We know that the quarry was in existence in 1892 where it appears on an ordnance survey map until it's closure in 1940. It seems the closure was prompted by a lack of quality slate and the fact that the men were needed on the front line of World War II.

The history is compiled from a book on Tracebridge written by Mr Eric Rodwell who was the owner of Hesperus Cottage from 1962 to 2000.

 
Hesperus Cottage Brook

 
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