Manor of Tor Mohun
Tor Mohun is a historic manor and parish on the south coast of Devon, England, now superseded by the Victorian sea-side resort of Torquay and known as Tormohun, an area within that town. In 1876 the Local Board of Health obtained the sanction of Government to alter the name of the district from Tormoham to Torquay.
The ancient Church of St Saviour, the parish church of Tor Mohun, is on Tor Church Road, today serving as the Greek Orthodox Church of Saint Andrew. It contains several monuments, most notably to Thomas Ridgeway of Torwood House, lord of the manor of Tor Mohun, and of the Cary families of nearby Torre Abbey, and Cockington Court, both within the parish.
Descent
William the Usher
The manor of TORRE is listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 as held in-chief and in demesne by Willelmus Hostiarius, a servant of King William the Conqueror and one of the minor Devon Domesday Book tenants-in-chief of that king. He also held from the king in Devon the manors of Taw Green, Raddon, Bolham, Ilsham and Mariansleigh.Brewer
The manor subsequently became known as Tor Brewer when held by William Brewer. In 1196 he gave part of the manor's land for the founding of Torre Abbey, a monastery for Premonstratensian canons. The two estates of Tor Mohun and Torre Abbey remained apart until shortly after the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 16th century and were once again parted in the 17th century. Since Brewer's only surviving son died childless, his eventual heirs became his daughters, the fourth of whom, Alice married Reginald de Mohun feudal baron of Dunster, of Dunster Castle in Somerset. She brought him a great estate, and "is set down among the benefactors to the new Cathedral Church of Salisbury, having contributed thereto all the marble necessary for the building thereof for twelve years."Mohun
Reginald de Mohun acquired Tor on his marriage to Alice Brewer, and thenceforth it was known as Tor Mohun. She gave the manor to her younger son, who died childless, when it reverted to the Mohun family of Dunster..Ridgeway
Tor Mohun was purchased by John Ridgeway of Abbots Carswell in Devon, a Member of Parliament for Dartmouth and Exeter. His son Thomas Ridgeway, MP, later purchased the adjoining Torre Abbey from Sir Edward Seymour, 1st Baronet of Berry Pomeroy, Devon. A monument to Thomas Ridgeway, with his effigy, survives in the former St Saviour's Church, Tor Mohun. Thomas Ridgeway's son was Thomas Ridgeway, 1st Earl of Londonderry.In 1653 Torre Abbey was sold to Sir John Stawell of Parke in the parish of Bovey Tracey, Devon, a counsellor-at-law. In 1662 Stawell sold it to Sir George Cary, whose first cousin Sir Henry Cary, Sheriff of Devon in 1637, had sold nearby Cockington during the Civil War "in his zeal for royalty". The last male member of the family was Robert Ridgeway, 4th Earl of Londonderry, who died without male progeny and was buried at Tor Mohun. His two daughters and co-heiresses were:
- Lucy Ridgeway, wife of Arthur Chichester, 4th Earl of Donegall, without progeny. In 1768 Tor Mohun was sold "by the Earl of Donegal" to Sir Robert Palk, 1st Baronet, later of Haldon House in the parish of Kenn, Devon.
- Frances Ridgeway, wife of Thomas Pitt, 1st Earl of Londonderry, who in 1726 was created Earl of Londonderry.
Palk
Swete painted three watercolours of the house and its setting in 1792/3, which survive in the Devon Record Office. The only element he found which reminded him of the "savour of antient workmanship" was the staircase, the steps of which were made not of planks but of solid blocks of oak. Eventually Palk, together with his neighbour Cary of Torre Abbey, devised a plan to develop the two adjoining estates of Tor Mohun and Torre Abbey into a seaside resort town for visitors, now Torquay. On a previous visit in 1792 to the then small village of "Torquay", Swete remarked in his Travel Journal: "About six in the evening I Torquay which under the auspices of Sir Robert Palk will be one day raised into importance".
Cockington Chapel was anciently a chapel of ease of St Saviour's Church, Tor Mohun.
The Manor itself and manorial title are now separated. The current manorial lord is American Philanthropist Terry A. Perkins.