In 1823, the wife
of the landlord of the Fountain Inn (Prospect Inn) was found in the Exe
at Salmon Pool. She was taken to The Exeter Humane Society, near the
Lime Kilns, but attempts to revive her failed - it is probable that
this was one of the buildings that became the Port Royal.
It is not certain when the Port Royal first traded but the earliest
date I have found appears in the 1844 copy of Pigot's Directory of
Exeter, where Robert Ugler is listed as the landlord of the Port
Royal Tavern. Ugler's rein as innkeeper was short lived, for in
1850 George Webber was running the Port Royal at St Leonard's Quay.
Five years on and the 1855 Exeter Journal & Almanack, listed
one John Western as the landlord of the Port Royal on the Quay.
The 1857 Billings Directory of Devon lists Charles Edwards as the landlord of the Port Royal Public House, Lime Kiln. He was 26 years old. By 1861 he was married to Susan and had a daughter, Alice. The 1871 Pocket Journal also list Edwards as running a 'passage-boat' on the quay. The landlord in the 1893 and 1897 and the 1919 Kelly's was still Charles Edwards. The last listing I have found is the Post Office directory of 1923 which still shows Charles Edwards. Charles Edwards died at the end of 1923 at the age of 93 years old, making his tenure of the Port Royal, at least 66 years.
Before they moved to new premises, the Exeter
Amateur Rowing Club was first established in 1864 at the Port
Royal. In 1927 the Port Royal Amateur Rowing Club was formed, which
was merged with the Exeter Amateur Rowing Club in 1946 to form the
Exeter Rowing Club. The boat house was rebuilt in 1952 by the St
Anne's Well Brewery at a cost of £1,600 and opened by Mr G
Pring on 6th June. The old boat-house is now the pub's
restaurant.
In 1870, the employees of the Trews Weir Mill dined at the Port
Royal. In the same year a soup kitchen was opened for those who
were not in regular employment. Also, as was common in the
19th-century, the Port Royal was used for an inquest in 1878.
A deed of 1924 noted of the Port Royal that came "with the Brewhouse and cellar and
Outbuildings, yard and Boathouse, Bagatelle room and premises
thereto adjoining".
In 1930, the pub was taken over by Norman Pring. The link with
rowing was maintained when a new boat house was opened in 1952.
Pring sold out to Starkey, Knight and Ford in 1962. Exeter Rowing
Club finally vacated their clubhouse at the pub in 1981 and in 1982
their old room was converted into a function room. Further
improvement have been made and the owners claim that it is the
longest pub in Exeter.
Strangely, the Port Royal was once hit by a
whirlwind. On 7 September 1850, a four-oared gig moored next to the
building was picked up by a sudden swirling wind and lifted some 15
ft above the river. The boat was then dropped back into the water,
as amazed customers looked on.
The incident was reported in the Illustrated London News on 14
September with this statement from George Webber, the landlord:
"On Saturday afternoon last,
between the hours of three and four, whilst working in his shed,
his attention was arrested by a loud rushing sound, which proceeded
from a path immediately outside the building. On hastening thither
he saw large stones, dust, etc., taken up as in a whirlwind, from a
space on the ground as large as a coach-wheel. The revolving column
gradually drew towards a small punt afloat in the adjacent river
and moored to a post by the bank; the boat was then lifted as high
in the air as the painter would allow, and was held there by the
force of the wind, spinning round like a top. The column then moved
on towards a four-oared gig, moored in a similar manner; when
simultaneously the punt fell and the gig was elevated precisely
from the water, whilst the stern was raised about fifteen feet. The
column then seemed to have expanded its strength and fell, so to
speak, in water, with the noise of a ton weight, dashing and
stirring up the bed of the river with foam. The gig is thirty feet
long and had in her at the time such was taken up from twelve to
fifteen gallons of water: she has been rendered quite useless. What
renders the occurrence the more remarkable is that at the time
scarcely a breath of wind was stirring, and the sky was nearly
cloudless."
Source - St Leonards by Gilbert Venn, an Exeter City Guide
Book from the 1920's and Exeter in Old Photographs by Peter Thomas,
Two Thousand Years in Exeter by W G Hoskins, Trewman's Exeter
Flying Post. The Exe Island and City Breweries by Geoffrey Pring,
Illustrated London News.

The Port Royal circa 1920.
The Port Royal in 1967 - photo Jim Billsborough.
The 1850 whirlwind as depicted in the Illustrated London
News.
│ Top of Page │