Walter Gervais


Walter Gervais of the City of Exeter in Devon, England, was a wealthy merchant who served several times as Mayor of Exeter and who founded the Old Exe Bridge on the west side of the City crossing the River Exe. He is one of Prince's Worthies of Devon.

Career

Walter served several times as Mayor of Exeter and was buried together with his wife in St Edmund's Church on the Exe Bridge.

Founds Exe Bridge

One of the earliest historians to comment on the Exe Bridge was Richard Izacke, who in his 1677 work Antiquities of the City of Exeter wrote as follows:
Surviving documentary evidence shows that the bridge was in fact built between 1190 and 1210, and that the date of 1250 given by Izacke is too late.

Builds St Loye's Chapel

According to the Devon historian Ethel Lega-Weekes, it was Walter Gervais, founder of the Exe Bridge, who in about 1238 built a chapel dedicated to St Loye in the manor of East Wonford, outside the eastern walls of the City of Exeter, probably as his domestic chapel. The ruined walls of the Chapel survive today. East Wonford was later held by the Speke family, when it became known as "Wonford Speke".

Marriage and children

He married and left children including:

Gervais family

The Gervais family included the following, of unknown relationship to Walter Gervais:
  • William Gervas of Ropley mentioned in Winchester College documents in 1256. The Gervais family were incredibly notable in Ropley, first mentioned in the 1200s, although their presence likely went back earlier, owned almost all of Ropley until they gifted some of these lands to William of Wykeham for the founding of Winchester College in the 1370s. The last mention is in 1450 speaking about rentals of the Land of Roger Gervays which is no surprise seeing they had given most of their lands to Winchester College earlier that century.
  • Thomas Gervais, a Citizen of Exeter, who in the late 13th. century purchased the manors of Houndtor and Little Maneton from Thomas Langdon and his grandmother Mabil. Both were subsequently sold by William Gervais, son of Thomas Gervais, to Walter Dymock of Lincolnshire, who was involved in tin mining in Devon.
  • Nicholas Gervais, who in 1301 held the manor of Milford from William Speke, son of William Speke. In 1325 Milford was held by Thomas Gervais. A certain Thomas Gervais was Mayor of Exeter in 1337.