| South Molton | |
|---|---|
Location withinDevon | |
| Population | 6,354 (Parish, 2021)[2] 6,225 (Built up area, 2021)[3] |
| Civil parish |
|
| District | |
| Shire county | |
| Region | |
| Country | England |
| Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
| Post town | South Molton |
| Postcode district | EX36 |
| Dialling code | 01769 |
| Police | Devon and Cornwall |
| Fire | Devon and Somerset |
| Ambulance | South Western |
| UK Parliament | |
| 51°01′N3°50′W / 51.02°N 3.83°W /51.02; -3.83 | |
South Molton is a town andcivil parish in theNorth Devon district, in the county ofDevon, England. The town is on theRiver Mole. In 2021 it had a population of 6225.
South Molton is amarket town trading mostly in sheep and cattle. There wasa railway station on theDevon and Somerset Railway until 1966, when the branch line was closed.[4] It is situated on the southern side ofExmoor just off theA361 North Devon link road, which in part follows the route of the railway line.
The Hundred of South Molton was a pre-Norman administrative centre overseeing the estates of: South Molton, Bishops Tawton, Bray, Bremeridge, Aller, Molland, Anstey, Swimbridge, Ringcombe, Newton, Whitstone, Knowstone, George Nympton, Honiton, North Aller, Hacche, Radworthy, Pulham, Satterleigh, Chittlehampton, Wadham and Swimbridge.
"In South Molton hundred there are 22 hides." (roughly 2640 acres)[5]
References to South Molton as an estate in the 1086 Domesday Book (Exon),
"The king has 1 estate which is called South Molton, which King Eadweard held on the day that he himself was alive and dead. In that estate is 1 virgate and a half of land. 40 ploughs can plough this. There the king has 1 plough and the villans have 20 ploughs. There the king [has] 12 villans and 4 bordars and 2 slaves and 12 swineherds and 9 beasts and woodland 1 league in length and 3 furlongs in width, and 10 acres of meadow and 30 acres of grazing-land; and it pays 10 pounds a year by weight."[5]
To this estate has been added half a virgate of land, calledRingedona; and it is worth 5 shillings a year."[5]
"In South Molton, the king’s estate, 4 clerks (priests) have 1 virgate of land, which they hold in alms from the king; and it is worth twenty shillings a year." Domesday Book[5]
"In the hundred of South Molton there is 1 ferding of land which 1 plough can plough and it is lying completely ruined. None of the men claims this." Domesday Book[5]
On 14 March 1655, SirJohn Penruddock was captured after a three-hour street fight in South Molton by soldiers of theNew Model Army under the command of CaptainUnton Croke. This ended thePenruddock uprising, a conspiracy to restoreCharles II to the throne of England.
In 1770 William Turner moved from South Molton to London to trade as a barber and wig maker. Around 1775 he had a son Joseph Mallord William Turner who lived in covent Garden until he was ten years old when he was sent to live with uncles in Brentford. J M W Turner later went on to become one of Englands most famous painters.[2]
The population at the time of the 1841 census was 3,597 inhabitants.[6]

There are three tiers of local government covering South Molton, atparish (town),district andcounty level: South Molton Town Council,North Devon Council (based inBarnstaple) andDevon County Council (based inExeter). South Molton Town Council is based at the Amory Centre at 125 East Street, which also serves as an area office for North Devon Council.[7][8]
South Molton was anancient borough, having been incorporated byElizabeth I in 1590.[9] It was reformed to become amunicipal borough in 1836, governed by a corporate body officially called the "mayor, aldermen and burgesses of the borough of South Molton", generally known as the corporation or town council.[10] The council met at theTown Hall (also known as the Guildhall) on Broad Street, first completed in 1743. In 1926 the council bought 1 East Street and converted it to become their main offices.[11][12]
Between 1901 and 1961 the population of South Molton was relatively static; in 1901 the population was 2,848 and in 1961 it was 2,993.[13] By the 1960s the town was unusually small for somewhere with borough status. The government introduced a new type of borough calledrural boroughs in 1958, allowing such small boroughs to be absorbed into a neighbouring district whilst retaining certain civic dignities. South Molton was converted to become a rural borough in 1967, becoming part of the surroundingSouth Molton Rural District. The town council thereafter had the powers of a parish council, but with some additional ceremonial powers, such as the ability to appoint a mayor.[14]
Local government was reformed again in 1974 under theLocal Government Act 1972, with South Molton Rural District Council being abolished and the area being transferred to the new district ofNorth Devon.[15] The rural borough of South Molton was converted into a civil parish at the same time, but parishes were given the right to declare themselves to be towns and appoint a mayor, which the parish council at South Molton duly did, allowing it to take the name South Molton Town Council.[16]
The town council continued to be based at 1 East Street until 2008 when it moved to new premises at the Amory Centre at 125 East Street.[17] Council meetings are held both at the Amory Centre and the Town Hall.[18]
There are good local educational facilities,South Molton Community College[19] which is a statesecondary school rated as aspecialisttechnology college.
South Molton Primary School was one of the schools studied in the 1950s by Iona and Peter Opie.[20]
Local TV coverage is provided byBBC South West andITV West Country. Television signals are received from the nearbyHuntshaw Cross TV transmitter,[21]Caradon Hill TV transmitter can also be received in the town.[22]
Local radio stations areBBC Radio Devon on 94.8 FM,Heart West on 96.2 FM,The Voice on 106.1 FM and Soundwave Radio, a community based station that broadcast online.[23]
The town is served by the local newspaper,North Devon Gazette.[24]

TheGuildhall, constructed between 1739 and 1743, contains many ornamental features and entire rooms fromStowe House in Cornwall, built by theEarl of Bath in 1675 and dismantled in 1739.[25] The building is aGrade I listed building on the Register ofHistoric England.[26] Behind it is the town'sPannier Market.
Hugh Squier (1625–1710), a wealthy local merchant, was a great benefactor of South Molton. Son of William Squier of Townhouse, now a farmhouse about 1 mile west of the town, he made his fortune in London and returned home at the age of 29. He purchased thelordship of the manor of South Molton, whichfeudal position entitled him to the fees and tolls levied at the town's markets and fairs.
His children all died young and having no heirs he thus decided to devote his wealth to philanthropical causes in his native town. In 1686 he built and endowed agrammar school in East Street, South Molton, known asHugh Squier's Free School. The original Deed of Endowment and Appointment of Trustees is held at North Devon Record Office in Barnstaple.[27] In 1877 it was amalgamated with theBlue Coat School, founded in 1711, and with the National Schools, founded in 1833. The combined school was known asSouth Molton United School.[28]
At his death, he left £2,314 to the Corporation of South Molton for cleansing and repairing the streets, along with bequests from his estate in the parish ofSwimbridge and the rectory ofNorth Molton which he had acquired.[29] A contemporary portrait of him exists in the Mayor's Parlour in the Town Hall, and a stone bust of him made in 1910, apparently copied from the painting, is displayed on the facade of the same building. A medallion portrait of him hangs from the chain of office of the mayor.[30]
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