Although Chevalier House appeared to be a single
building, it was two buildings, one dating from the reign of James I
and one from Charles I. They were built
from well seasoned British oak (Crocker 1886). At some point, a small
ceramic equestrian statue was placed on the roof of the right hand
house, number 79, which is said to
indicate loyalty to the Royalists - however, equestrian roof tiles were
made all over Devon and Cornwall at this time, and at least one other
survives at Marazion, Cornwall.
Victorian photographic evidence shows the building with no statue while
a 1910 photograph shows the statue.
It is also said that the exiled King Charles II (he had been crowned
King of Scotland, in January 1651) sought refuge there, in 1651, after
the Battle of Worcester. In fact, the
closest Charles came to Exeter when fleeing to France was Castle Cary
and Charmouth. Certainly at this time, alternate names for the building
was Cavalier or Chevalier House.
Robert Dymond dates the Fountain Tavern as occupying Chevalier
House to 1715, or even earlier, and alludes to the inns proximity to
the Carfoix or public water supply opposite for its name. The Carfoix
was taken down and relocated in South Street in 1770. A to let notice for the Fountain Inn
to Samuel Fley, bricklayer,
appeared in the Flying Post of January 1782.
In December 1787 a for sale notice appeared in the
Flying Post, referring to the former
Fountain Inn; it became the premises of Richard Sercombe, a wine and
spirit merchant whose family originated from Dunsford. It is
interesting to note that the Fountain
Inn on the quay was also owned by a Richard Sercombe. The Sercombes
were grocers and salt dealers and remained in Chevalier House for the
next five generations, when in
1868 John Sercombe died without an heir. Samual Sercombe, the nearest
relative successfully claimed the building at the Court of Common
Pleas at Westminster on 25 April 1868.
Upon Samuel's death, his wife Susannah Sercombe inherited the
property and, who in turn left it in her will to her on in law
Samuel Shilston. It was in November 1895
that a conveyance was drawn up between Shilston and Charles Ham, wine
and spirit merchant, who was the original sub-tenant with John Trehane
prior to 1868. It was sold for £1671 - 3
shillings, requiring Ham to take out a mortgage for £1,500.
A drawing by John Gendall dated 1850 shows the wine and spirit merchant
called John Trehane, on the left of the premises, and a shop called
Pitts on the right. Trehane was Mayor in 1867 and great
grandfather to Sir Richard Trehane who was chairman of the Milk
Marketing Board during the last century. In 1910, No 79 was a wallpaper
merchants. Just a year later in 1911, No 78 still contained Charles
Ham, and No 79 a book shop. In 1923, the last
wine and spirits merchant closed in the premises and Carr & Quick
opened selling 'The Wine of Devon',
pure apple juice. The building
was almost demolished in 1929, when Woolworth's, who occupied the
adjacent building, tried to purchase it to build a larger, more modern
store. The City Council stepped in, took
out a loan and purchased the building for the city. The Council's Guide
for 1930, shows an advert for Ye Olde Chevalier Inne.
Disaster struck when this whole area was destroyed, along with the
Chevalier Inn, in the May 1942 blitz. The post war replacement, next to
St George's Hall cannot be said to be a
worthy successor. However, it is still a pub - in 1958 it was known as
the Chevalier Tavern and Restaurant and during the 1970's it was
Winston's, No 10's and Churchill's and
became known, briefly for a weekly disco called the Rock Machine. It is
now the Hog's Head, a student haunt in term time.
A new equestrian statue is to be placed on the roof of the Hogs Head
after a public subscription organised by local historian Todd Gray, in
the spring of 2005.
Sources - Lost Exeter by Todd Gray, City Council Guidebooks
(1920's, 30's, 40's and 50's), insurance maps and my memory, Old Exeter
by Peter Thomas, family research by John
Martin © 2005 David Cornforth - not to be used without permission.

The building before it was the Chevalier Inn.
The ceramic Chevalier, equestrian roof adornment.
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