Devon and Somerset Staghounds


The red deer of Exmoor have been hunted since Norman times, when Exmoor was declared a Royal Forest. Collyns stated the earliest record of a pack of Staghounds on Exmoor was 1598. In 1803, the "North Devon Staghounds" became a subscription pack. In 1824/5, 30 couples of hounds, the last of the true staghounds, were sold to a baron in Germany. Today, the Devon and Somerset is one of three staghounds packs in the UK, the others being the Quantock Staghounds and the Tiverton Staghounds. All packs hunt within Devon and Somerset. The Chairman as of 2016 is Tom Yandle, who was previously High Sheriff of Somerset in 1999.

Seasons before hunting with hounds became illegal in 2004

The approximate dates of the hunting season are:
  • Hind hunting: 1 November-28 February
  • Stag hunting:
  • *Autumn: August to third week in October; formerly 12 August to 8 October, according to Collyns
  • *Spring: last week of March; continues about three weeks

List of masters

  • "Hugh Pollard", master in 1598.
  • Edward Dyke, of Pixton, in Somerset, of Tetton and of John Dyke, was the warden and lessee of the royal forest of Exmoor and Master of Staghounds, which office usually was held by the warder. He married Margaret Trevelyan, a daughter of Sir John Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet, of Nettlecombe in Somerset, and widow of Alexander Luttrell of Dunster Castle. Edward inherited Holnicote and estates in Bampton from his brother John Dyke, who died without progeny. He too died without progeny and bequeathed Pixton and Holnicote to his niece Elizabeth Dyke, whom he appointed his sole executor, daughter and sole heiress of his brother Thomas Dyke of Tetton, Kingston St Mary, Somerset. The bequest stipulated that Elizabeth and her husband Sir Thomas Acland, 7th Baronet of Killerton in Devon and Petherton Park in Somerset, should adopt the additional surname of Dyke.
  • 1746-1775 Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 7th Baronet, of Killerton in Devon and of Petherton Park, Tetton, Holnicote and Pixton, all in Somerset, kept his own pack of staghounds. He became forester or ranger of Exmoor under grant from the Crown and "hunted the country in almost princely style. Respected and beloved by all the countryside, he was solicited at the same time to allow himself to be returned as member of Parliament for the counties of Devon and Somerset. He preferred, however, the duties and pleasures of life in the country, where he bore without abuse the grand old name of gentleman". Although he had three of his own kennels on his huge estates, at Holnicote in the north and at Jury and Highercombe near Pixton in the south, he had a further method of keeping hounds, which was to make the keeping of one hound a term in many of the tenancy contracts he granted. In his manor of Bossington alone an estate survey of 1746–7 lists twelve tenements let, either by Acland or Dyke, with the requirement to keep a hound. In 1775 he handed over the mastership to the then Major Basset, and in 1779 his beloved collection of stag heads and antlers at Holnicote was lost in a fire which also destroyed the house. He declared that "he minded the destruction of his valuables less bitterly than the loss of his fine collection of stags' heads". He was known on his estates as "Sir Thomas his Honour" and was renowned for his generous hospitality at Holnicote or at Pixton, whichever was closest, to all riders "in at the death", and it is said that "open house was kept at Pixton and Holnicote throughout the hunting season". Pixton was the larger establishment, richly equipped with silver-plate and linen, including 73 tablecloths, but both houses had silver dinner services of five dozen plates and any number of tankards, cups, bowls, dishes and salvers. A letter dated 1759 written on behalf of Courtenay Walrond of Bradfield, Uffculme describes the Acland hospitality:

"This noble chase being ended, my master, his brother and Mr Brutton with about 20 gentlemen more waited on Sir Thomas Acland at Pixton where each of them drank the health of the stag in a full quart glass of claret placed in the stag's mouth & after drinking several proper healths they went in good order to their respective beds about 2 o'clock and dined with Sir Thomas the next day on a haunch of the noble creature and about 50 dishes of the greatest rarities among which were several black grouse".

He returned briefly as joint-master in August 1784, but died in February 1785, aged 63

North Devon Staghounds

Chichester's Hounds

Devon and Somerset Staghounds

  • 1837–1841 – Charles Palk Collyns formed a new pack, named the "Devon and Somerset Subscription Staghounds". His hunting diaries and subscription lists are held by Somerset Archives. He wrote the standard work on West Country stag-hunting Chase of the Wild Red Deer, 1862.
  • 1842–1847 – Newton Fellowes, of Eggesford, brother-in-law of Hugh Fortescue, 2nd Earl Fortescue.
  • 1855–1881 – Mordaunt Fenwick-Bisset. "Restored the sport and put it on the footing from whence the present flourishing state of things has come",. He reintroduced red deer to the Quantock Hills and built kennels at Bagborough House, a few miles northwest of Taunton.
  • 1880/81–1887 – Hugh Fortescue, Viscount Ebrington.
  • 1887–1893 – Charles Henry Basset, Esq., of Watermouth Castle, near Lynmouth, JP, DL and MP for Barnstaple. He married on 7 January 1878, Harriet Mary Basset.
  • 1893-1895 Colonel F. Hornby, who had previously been Field Master of the Queen's Staghounds. Entered office July 1893, resigned in Spring 1895 and went on in 1895 to be Master of the Essex Union Foxhounds.
  • 1895-1907 Robert Arthur Sanders . He married Miss Lucy Halliday, of Glenthorne, near Lynton, at Oare Church in July 1893. He married Lucy Sophia in 1893. E.J. Stanley offered Mr Sanders to maintain a separate pack to hunt the Quantocks deer. The Committee and Master agreed and made over the country on permanent loan. His son, Edmund Stanley, then aged 22 performed the duty of huntsman. On his acceptance of the mastership of the D&S the Quantocks pack was discontinued.
  • c. 1909 – c. 1911 – Captain Adkins
  • 1911/12–1914 – Major Morland John Greig, of Edgcott House, Exford. Killed in action at Gallipoli in October 1915 fighting with the 1st Royal North Devon Yeomanry. Dick Lloyd, President of the D&SSH, spoke in 2001 as follows about Morland Greig:
  • 1915-c.1917 - Committee
  • c.1917-1919/20 - William Badco of Cardiff,
  • c. 1917-23 April 1936 – Lieutenant-Colonel Walter William Wiggin. He was a son of Sir Henry Samuel Wiggin, 1st Baronet.
  • 1935/6-end of World War II – Hancock of Rhyll Manor, East Anstey. Abbott
  • 1981–present – Maurice Scott
  • 1987–present – Diana Scott
  • 2000/1–present – George Witheridge
  • -present – Fran Bell

Kennels