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Stepcote Hill

Page updated 8 August 2008

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This street is one of the oldest surviving parts of Exeter, located in the West Quarter. Its name comes from the Old English word for steep, rather than from step.

The hill had been used as the main route into Exeter from the river since Roman times, and it was used by strings of pack horses and weary travellers, before New Bridge Street was constructed.

A new King in the street

When William of Orange was invited to take the throne with his wife Mary from James II in 1688, he landed at Brixham and marched to Exeter, enroute for London. He rode up Stepcote Hill with a large force of "200 Blacks from the Plantations of the Netherlands in America...200 Finlanders...all in bright armour".

In the early 18th Century the street and area was inhabited by merchants. A record shows that a certain Thomas Clutterbuck had imported lemons and fresh lime juice at 5 shillings per gallon, expensive and rare commodities in Exeter at that time, for sale from his premises in Stepcote Street. At roughly the same time, Stepcote Hill was said to be not only congested, but to contain some expensive property; one house, garden and packing chamber, owned by the fuller Nicholas Dark, was insured in 1740 for £1,000, the same value for which the New Inn in the High Street had been insured, only eleven years earlier.

A few years later, Andrew Brice wrote of Stepcote Hill "A descent called Stepcote-Hill, to which the Butcherow leads.... the Guts, Blood, Litter, Ordure and a variety of Nastiness are, in hard showers of rain, rapidly carried.... into the River". In 1802, Mrs Flashman was fined "1s for throwing filth before her door in Stepcote-hill" which will not have helped the situation.

Victorian times

James Cossins reminisced in 1877 of Stepcote Hill from around 1820 "The direct line from the Old Bridge was up Stepcote hill. I have seen three horses pulling a waggon up that steep ascent.

The street still supported some commercial enterprise, and in November 1820, John Hancock and Son, thanked their many customers for supporting their business as manufacturers of Tortoise-shell, Ivory and Horn combs. By 1834, Hancock's house was for sale as the last of the old merchant class moved out. There were a number of sales of property, as the nature of the area changed. In 1835, Turner's Buildings, "ten compact and well built Dwelling-Houses, calculated for the occupation of mechanics, and now fully and respectively Tenanted, producing together an Annual Rental of £76 4s.... Each house will be entitled to an exclusive Garden frontage, to the use of a Pump of Excellent Well Water in common, and to other conveniences" were offered for sale.

Later in the 19th Century, the area was home to a large, poverty stricken artisan and labouring class. The area was afflicted with bouts of cholera and the inhabitants suffered from poor health and short lives. There were 15 deaths from the cholera in 1832, and even though Preston Street had 43 and Smythen Street 24 victims, the number in Stepcote Hill was high, relative to its length. The next year, and the Exeter Commissioners of Improvement were concerned that so few on the hill had connected their house to the public sewers. Parsonage Court was declared unfit for human habitation in May 1878 by the jury in an inquest, after they visited the court during their duties. The Council installed a public fountain at the bottom of the street which also had a trough for horses and dogs, but it did little for the living conditions of the hill.

Many worked in the nearby cattle market and slaughterhouse, in Bonhay Road, a tannery, a soap and candle manufacturer and various flour mills and the stench was very unpleasant. Frank Shooter, the Hero of the Exe, and a man who depended on his health and fitness was listed living in Stepcote Hill for a number of years. The only public house on the hill during this time was the City Arms, which had a reputation "as it had given rise to some notoriety in the Court."

Mrs Whitehead was interviewed in the 1977 and said "I was born at Stepcote Hill in 1897, so you can tell I'm 80. I remember some things of Stepcote Hill. I used to run up and down the steps, down through the centre. There was an old lady who used to sell winkles; she'd sit on a chair and pick 'em out. I can picture that, young as I was." The photo on the right could almost be of the old lady when she was a child.

The area had the the worst living conditions in the south-west of England, and yet, even at the turn of the 20th-Century, artists and writers would allude to the antiquarian interest and visual attractiveness of the little street, neatly avoiding the poverty and filth. Still, before the great clearance, the inhabitants had a fish and chip shop open on the corner of King Street. In 1928 a policy of clearing the slums and moving the population out to Burnthouse Lane, known locally as 'Siberia' was started. The fish and chip shop was a victim of the clearance when it was replaced by the King's Dwellings in 1933, built by the Exeter Workmen's Dwellings Company Ltd, which still exists as Cornerstone in Southernhay.

This list is from a street directory published in 1897 - it gives a picture of the trades that people followed to make a living at that time.

Stepcote hill, King street to West street.
1 Snell Henry, general dealr
2 Browning Mrs. Sarah, dairy
3 Bennett Richard, baker
7 Jones Mrs. Maria, chair mender
8 Hill William, shopkeeper
St. MarySteps Sunday Schl Harvey Arthur, boot ma(ker)
23 City Arms P.H. Mrs. Emily Jennings
24 Parsons John, coal dealer
26 Lindsey Henry, shopkeepr
27 Hill Mrs. Maria, wardrobe dealer

Source: Eighteenth Century Exeter by Robert Newton, Brice's Mobiad, the Flying Post, James Cossins and Kelly's Directory

Stepcote Hill
Looking up Stepcote Hill.
Looking down Stepcote Hill
Looking down Stepcote Hill circa 1950 Photo by Maurice Swansborough.Stepcote Hill circa 1900
Children on Stepcote Hill circa 1900.

Courts off Stepcote Hill
Eveleigh Court
George's Square
Morgan's Court
Parsonage/Parson's Court
Turner's Buildings
Williams' Court

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