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Treborough, Somerset

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Treborough is now a small hamlet but previously was far more busy in the time when the Treborough Slate Quarry was being actively worked. The name Treborough is probably derived from the Celtic ‘treberg’ — hamlet by the waterfall. Half-a-mile away below Sminhayes, a waterfall slides 40 feet down a moss encrusted rock.

Utterly peaceful and remote the tiny parish of Treborough only 2 miles long and 2 miles wide is in the Brendon Hills. Since most of the green pasture fields are steeply up and down, the views are wonderfully varied for the walker on its high trackways or the roads leading to the isolated farms.

Treborough

Treborough

On the south of the parish is the prehistoric ridgeway, running along the highest ground of the Brendon Hills from east to west and linking all the ancient earth monuments and standing stones, such as the Naked Boy’s Stone in the south-east corner of the parish. The pond in which the River Tone rises is just over the boundary.

Treborough had a busy industrial past, which lasted for more than 500 years. From the early 15th century the blue slates from the Treborough quarries were famous throughout the West Country and only the start of the last war brought the trade to an end. Many of the older houses were hung with slate and slate slabs were used for floors, hearth-stones or dairy benches, to order.

The quarry and, indeed, most of the parish was the property of the Trevelyan Family of Nettlecombe Court for many centuries and they carried out an immense reorganisation of the thirteen farms in the early 19th century. Their estates in Treborough were finally sold in 1944.

St Peters Church Treborough, with its graveyard, is the centre of a small and lonely hamlet, the only collection of dwellings in the parish. Treborough no longer has a school, a shop, a post office or a public house. And yet it is a place with an atmosphere all its own, which gives pleasure to the memory of all those who visit it.

Treborough School Children the days of Mrs Barbara Peck's wedding

Treborough School Children the days of Mrs Barbara Peck's wedding
The school was closed in about 1953

Treborough School Children - Front Row Beatrice Dyer(5th) and and Evelyn Dyer (6th) of Treborough Farm.

Treborough School Children - Front Row Beatrice Dyer(5th) and and Evelyn Dyer (6th) of Treborough Farm.
Evelyn married Roy Tom Bishop (9th in the FRONTROW) who lived at Lower Court Farm Treborough until he and Evelyn retired to Minehead in 1969.

Outside Treborough School Room May 31st 1920

Outside Treborough School Room May 31st 1920

Sminhays Farm buildings Treborough

Sminhays Farm buildings Treborough

Treborough Lodge

Treborough Lodge

Treborough looking North West

Treborough looking North West

Treborough - The Old Post Office

Treborough - The Old Post Office

According to the Domesday Survey the parish of Treborough contained two manors, Treborough and Brown, but the precise limits are unknown.

Awaiting photo

Brendon Hill Picnic July 1907

Brown seems to have comprised the western part of the parish and it appears certain that Higher Court Farm, previously Court Farm, was the demesne farm of the manor. Both manors came eventually into the possession of Cleeve Abbey and after its dissolution Brown and Treborough were purchased by John Wyndham in 1542, the estate passing ultimately by marriage to the Trevelyan Family who owned it until 1944.

The farms were small, and, as is normal in the hilly parts of West Somerset, the farm-houses tended to be isolated. It seems highly likely that there were never any open fields but that land was enclosed as it was cleared. A map of Trevelyan Family property in 1780 shows some thirteen separate holdings averaging 64 acres in size and, especially in Brown, their enclosed fields are intermingled to a considerable extent. These holdings in a number of cases bear the names of persons and earlier documents mention inhabitants bearing these names. The Land Tax returns show that between about 1805 and 1825 John Trevelyan himself took over the majority of the farms and during this period made a considerable reorganisation, reducing the number of farms to five and altering the fields by amalgamating smaller ones to make larger. There was also some new enclosure. The result of these changes appears on the Tithe Map of 1842.

Three areas of the parish had by 1780 ceased to be Trevelyan Family property and could well have been sold off considerably earlier. These are:

    • Hazery, a compact farm of some 170 acres in the south­west part of the parish which became part of the Lethbridge Luxborough estate;
    • West Fields, on the western boundary, a farm of 74 acres without a farm-house, which seems to have gone along with New Street Farm in Luxborough;
    • Blackwell, a farm of 50 acres lying along the centre of the northern boundary of the parish between Sideway Wood and Langridge Wood. This farm was part of the glebe of Dunster parish.

    Apart from agricultural resources, income and employment in the parish werehistorically supplemented by limeburning and quarrying. Treborough Slate Quarries formed the largest of these undertakings and was the most extensive of the three major Somerset slate quarries operating in the 19th century, the others being located at Oakhampton near Wiveliscombe, and Tracebridge west of Wellington. The raw material derives from the Ilfracombe Beds being a blue slate for roofing and slabs for cisterns, dairy benches, floors, hearthstones and headstones. With processing the slate resembled marble and was suitable for mantlepieces.

    The Old Quarry, covering three acres prior to recent infilling with refuse, is situated south of the Roadwater - Treborough road. It was probably from this quarry that in 1246 Sir Hugh Luttrell purchased 2,000 slates for 20d. plus 3s. 4d. carriage, for Dunster Castle.  Through the ownership of the Trevelyan Family family working continued into post-medieval times and by 1858, under Welsh management, a 100 yard tunnel had been excavated under the road to provide a connection with
    spoil heaps and newly erected buildings on the north side . In 1863 New Quarry was opened and a narrow gauge tramway laid down to link the various parts of the site. A brief closure in the early 1890s was followed by a productive phase until the First World War, when the quarry began a period of steady decline eventually closing shortly before 1939. Fortunately, the industry attracted the attention of Somerset photographers Robert Gillo and H.H. Hole, and some prints
    from original glass negatives have been published.

    Limeburning, for agricultural and building purposes, was made possible by the presence of Roadwater Limestone in the parish. One particular narrow, lenticular-shaped outcrop, running east-west for three-quarters of a mile alongside the Roadwater-Treborough road, accounts for no less than four kilns. It seems probable that all the Treborough kilns were built and were functioning between ca 1780 and ca 1914.

    Treborough, as other villages in the area, was well away from the Brendon ridgeway, which posed a threat from marauding armies and other undesirables. Only a few minor roads, mostly never fit for wheeled traffic, penetrated the parish, and their present designation as bridleways, and ‘roads used as public paths’, probably merely perpetuates their original status. Felon’s Way in the south west corner, and the road serving the slate quarry and the edge of the hamlet in the east, are the only modern through roads extending inside the parish boundary for more than a few feet. The 19th century Luxborough - Roadwater road in the north, and the ancient ridgeway to the south, both closely follow the parish boundary.

    The population of Treborough declined slightly from 1801 to 1831 and then rose to a peak of 195 at the 1871 census, this being nearly double the population of 105 in 1831. The increase coincided with the expansion of Treborough Slate Quarries and also of the iron mimes just to the south of the Ridgeway. Thereafter industrial activity both at the quarries and at the mines declined and by 1891 the population was slightly below that of 1801. During the present century this downward trend in population continued, from 120 in 1901 to 44 in 1961 with only a trivial rise subsequently.

    Treborough Lodge

    Treborough Lodge

    Treborough Lodge

    Treborough Lodge

    Rufus Salaman, now living in Australia, wrote in with the following:

    I grew up near Colchester, but often stayed with my Aunt Barbara Peck (nee Salaman) or my uncle Oliver Salaman, both of whom were born and grew up in Treborough Lodge. I believe that Barbara was a magistrate in Roadwater or Watchet for many years. I also used to visit my great aunt in Minehead, where her husband, Dr Bain was MOH for years, and had a faithful following of patients who refused to let him retire until well into his 70's. My farther, Sebastian Salaman lived in Quarry House until his first marriage failed in the late 1930's, when I believe he sold it to my Aunt Barbara Peck who is mentioned in the caption

    'Treborough School Children the days of Mrs Barbara Peck's wedding The school was closed in about 1953'

    of a photo above.

    It is hard to believe that the old Treborough Slate quarry is completely filled in. There used to be a tunnel leading from the quarry under the road, which came out beside the stables half way down the driveway to Quarry House. I guess it is still there.

    Treborough Lime Kilns on the Roadwater to Treborough Road near the Slate Quarries

    Treborough lime Kilns on the Roadwater to Treborough Road near the Slate Quarries

    Treborough Lime Kilns on the Roadwater to Treborough Road near the Slate Quarries

    Treborough lime Kilns on the Roadwater to Treborough Road near the Slate Quarries

    The derelict house in the woods near Treborough Water Fall

    The derelict house in the woods near Treborough Water Fall

    Treborough Water Fall

    The remains of a limekiln are still visible near the old slate quarries of the area. Despite the overgrowing foliage the structure can be seen clearly. Lime was used in the production of fertiliser and mortar, although before the 19th century its production was generally undertaken on a small scale

    The remains of a limekiln are still visible near the old slate quarries of the area. Despite the overgrowing foliage the structure can be seen clearly. lime was used in the production of fertiliser and mortar, although before the 19th century its production was generally undertaken on a small scale.

    Tarr Water Cottage Treborough - picture taken in 1966 - photo supplied by Sheila Bishop

    Tarr Water Cottage Treborough - picture taken in 1966 - photo supplied by Sheila Bishop

    Tarr Water Cottage Treborough - picture taken in 1966 - photo supplied by Sheila Bishop

    Tarr Water Cottage Treborough - picture taken in 1966 - photo supplied by Sheila Bishop

    Tarr Water Cottage Treborough - picture taken in ? - photo supplied by Sheila Bishop

    Tarr Water Cottage Treborough - picture taken in ? - photo supplied by Sheila Bishop

    'Tumbledown cottage in the woods' seen from the Lighland Treborough Restricted Byway

    'Tumbledown cottage in Summer 2007, Clapper House, in the woods' seen from the Leighland Treborough Restricted Byway

    'Tumbledown cottage in December 2007, Clapper House, in the woods'
    seen from the Leighland Treborough Restricted Byway

    'Tumbledown cottage in December 2007, Clapper House, in the woods' seen from the Leighland Treborough Restricted Byway

    'Tumbledown cottage, Clapper House, in the woods' seen from the Leighland Treborough Restricted Byway

    See the newspaper report of the School House Fire in 2007

    See also:

    St Peters Church

    Brendon Hills Picnic

    Treborough Slate Quarry

    Langridge Wood Cist

    Treborough Aircraft Landing Strip

    Bishop Family Photos 1950s - 1960s

    Treborough Rounders and Picnic

    Treborough Church Information PDF

     

 

Contributed by: Fred Bingham, Fiona , Rufus Salaman

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