This time we’re doing a circular walk looking at the
neighbourhood walls, around the grounds of four former villas from past
centuries. The walk proper starts at the
junction of Wonford Road and St Leonard’s Road, just a short way from the
village shops. St Leonard’s Road was
once an approach to Mount Radford House and the cedar tree is a reminder of the
trees that lined the mansion’s drive.
Walking towards Topsham Road from the junction, there are
Victorian houses on both sides, with the Woodhayes Care Home formed from three
of them. The abandoned bus shelter is a
relic from the 20th century.
After the fourth house on the left there is a footpath leading to West
and East Grove Roads. The path marks the
boundary of The Grove whose estate was developed for the terraced houses
round about 1900. The Grove had a lodge
(where house 39 stands) and an entrance drive (houses 41 and 43 are built over
it). The wall on the left is typical of
the many Heavitree stone (Breccia) walls with added stones from other quarries
--- until you find something quite different.
The builders incorporated some large hard stones that have been polished
in river or sea. Why and where
from?
Back on the main road, the Victorian houses continue on the
right-hand side of the road. As in the
road nearer the village, some of the walls have granite toppings and the
remains of railings. One property has
the stumps of very thick railings --- the salvage crew in WW2 chose not to cut
through them.
The bricks here include
many with a white glaze, adding visually to both sides of the road.
There’s plenty of Breccia to be seen here,
including on the boundary wall of the houses in St Leonard’s Place.
There’s volcanic trap there; did someone
salvage that from Exeter’s city walls?
And
don’t miss the street sign, with its “pointing finger”.
St Leonard’s Lawn straight ahead was part of
the front lawn of Mount Radford House (Barnardo Road is on the site of the
house).
The road always curved around
the lawn, though one old map shows a public footpath across it.
Psychologists tell us that it is hard to notice when
something is not to be seen; so what is missing? From here on, Dartmoor granite is little
used. The approach to Claremont
(the second of the villas on this walk) has a gatehouse and walls of stone from
beyond the city; grandeur on the cheap, costing less than granite, but
definitely more upper-crust than brick or Breccia.
The school is built on the site of Parkers Well House,
whose grounds stretched from here to Matford Lane. Some of its estate walls are intact, others
have been replaced over the years. The
walls were built before the widespread availability of granite in the
city. After the school gates there is a
cob wall on a foundation of Breccia; stand here on a sunny afternoon in the
early summer and you are likely to see masonry bees entering nests in the cob
--- and at any time you can find the small holes they use. An old saying is that a cob wall has “its hat
dry and its feet wet”; the hat is made of tiles, the feet are on porous stone –
however the wall lacks protection from the weather and is slowly eroding. (But school budgets do not include a heading
for “repair of cob walls”!)
Round the corner is a gateway for Parkers Well House,
now a little overgrown; the family sought to impress passers-by with this brick
entrance; pause to look at the fancy brickwork on the curved wings of the
gateway.
Because of the slope of Topsham
Road, the next section of boundary wall is much higher, and the brick walls are
on a base of stone.
Hidden at the top
are iron railings; they possibly survived the war, but may be an addition to
protect schoolchildren.
The foundation
wall here has a few pieces of water-washed stone; they are generally much
smaller than the blocks seen earlier and have been used to fill in cracks where
the quarried pieces were uneven.
(In
other parts of St Leonard’s, clay roof tiles have the same purpose.)
Turn up Matford Lane (averting your gaze from the modern
development opposite); opposite you are the impressive granite gateposts of
Coaver. Just reflect on the effort to
shape them, transport them and erect them with few mechanical aids! The walls around Parker’s Well are stone, and
the well itself has a pleasant stone arch.
On the left are the sandstone walls of Parkers Well House, now playing
fields for the school.
Several years
ago, part of the wall collapsed, blocking the road.
The repaired wall can be recognised with its
modern mortar.
Further up, a
microclimate on the wall means it is partly covered by a large patch of moss.
It's worth a diversion to the right, into the grounds of
County Hall, and a short way along, on the left is a high stone wall; this was
the boundary wall of the grounds of Coaver, and there are small signs in the
structure that this was once the wall of a glasshouse, facing south to take
advantage of the sun. (Edward Parfitt,
who was Coaver’s gardener in the 1850s, was a nationally known botanist,
familiar with the flora of tropical Africa, which may have led to the
construction of a building for delicate plants.)
Back on Matford Lane, Wayland Avenue has a dog-leg route
around the terrace of army officers’ houses.
The small side wall is stone topped with brick; just round the corner is
a cob wall, with a rough stone base, exposed to the elements to keep it damp,
and a tiled top. The limestone wall on
Matford Lane belongs to the former rectory of the parish church, and then just
round the corner is a small reminder of the fourth villa, the lodge of Fontmell.
We are back in Wonford Road, and refreshments await us in
the village, a quarter of a mile away.