Online Encyclopedia

TEIGNMOUTH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 508 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TEIGNMOUTH  , a seaport and

market
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town in the Ashburton
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parliamentary division of Devonshire, England, at the mouth of the
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river Teign, on the
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English Channel, 15 M . S. by E. of Exeter, by the
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Great Western railway . Pop. of urban
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district (1901) 8636 . Two parishes, East and West Teignmouth, form the town . It lies partly on a peninsula between the river and the sea, partly on the wooded uplands which enclose the valley and rise gradually to the high moors beneath Heytor . The Den, or Dene, forms a
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promenade along the sea-front, with a small lighthouse and a pier . St Michael's church in East Teignmouth was rebuilt in 1824 in Decorated style, but retains a Norman doorway and other ancient portions; of St James', in West Teignmouth, the south porch and tower are Norman . There are a theological college for Redemptorists, and a
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Benedictine convent, dedicated to St Scholastica . The entrance to the harbour has been improved by dredging, and the two quays accommodate vessels
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drawing 13 ft. at
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neap tides . Pipeclay and
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china clay, from Kingsteignton, are shipped for the Stafford-
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shire potteries, while
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coal and general goods are imported . Pilchard, herrings, whiting and
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mackerel are taken, and salmon in the Teign . Malting,
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brewing and boatbuilding are also carried on .

East Teignmouth was formerly called Teignmouth Regis, and West Teignmouth, Teignmouth Episcopi . Teignmouth (Tennemue, Tengemue) possessed a church of St Michael as

early as 1044, when what is now East Teignmouth was granted by
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Edward the
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Confessor to Leofric, bishop of Exeter, and an allusion to salterers in the same grant proves the existence of the salt industry at that date . Teignmouth is not mentioned in the Domesday Survey, but in 1276 what is now West Teignmouth appears as a mesne borough held by the dean and chapter of Exeter; what is now East Teignmouth continuing with the bishop, who was accused in that
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year of holding in his
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manor a market which should be held in the borough . The bishop's manor was alienated in 155o to
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Sir Andrew Dudley, but West Teignmouth remained with the dean and chapter until early in the ,9th century . In the
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middle ages Teignmouth was a flourishing
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port, able to furnish 7
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ships and 120 mariners to the
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Calais expedition of 1347, and depending chiefly on the fishing and salt
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industries . In the early
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part of the 17th century the town had fallen into decay, but it speedily recovered, and in 1744 could contribute twenty vessels to the
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Newfoundland
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shipping trade . The borough was never represented in parliament, nor incorporated by charter . The Saturday market, which was held up to the 19th century, is mentioned in 1220, and was confirmed by royal charter in 1253, together with a
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fair at Michaelmas . Teignmouth was burned by French pirates in 1340, and was again devastated by the French on the 26th of
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June 169o . See Victoria County
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History, Devonshire; The Teignmouth Guide and
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Complete Handbook to the Town and Neighbourhood (Teignmouth, 1875) .

End of Article: TEIGNMOUTH
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