The manor house comprises a complex group of buildings of widely varying dates consisting of a double-courtyard mansion with a third courtyard of farm buildings to the west. There is a separate Grade II* listed[5] chapel known to have been licensed by the Bishop of Exeter in 1422[6][7] or 1432.[8][9] There is a walled garden with a fish pond.[10]
It subsequently descended to the FitzJoell family. In 1242[14] it was the dwelling of Waren FitzJoell, the last in the male line, who left a daughter and heiress Ellen FitzJoell, who married William Newton, to whose descendants the manor passed.[15]
Newton
William Newton, having inherited Fardel on his marriage to the heiress Ellen FitzJoell, lived at Fardel during the reign of King Edward I (1272-1307), but died without male issue, leaving a daughter and sole heiress Jone Newton, who in 1303[7] married Sir John Raleigh of Smalerigge in the parish of Axminster, Devon,[15] whose descendants made Fardel their seat.
Raleigh
Sir John Raleigh, who married the heiress Jone Newton, was the son and heir of Sir Hugh Raleigh of Smalerigge.[15] This branch of the Raleigh family was more anciently seated at Nettlecombe Raleigh in Somerset, but was probably originally a junior branch of the de Raleigh family, lords of the manor of Raleigh in the parish of Pilton in North Devon.[16]
Later members of the family resident there included Members of Parliament Adam Ralegh (c.1480–1545 or later)[17] and Carew Raleigh (ca. 1550 – ca. 1625).[18]
Hele
Carew Raleigh (c.1550-c.1625) sold the manor of Fardel to Walter Hele,[7] father of Elize Hele (1560–1635) of
Parke[19] in the parish of Bovey Tracey, Devon, a lawyer and philanthropist (whose monument with recumbent effigy survives in Bovey Tracey Church), in whose family it remained until 1740.
Later owners
After 1740 there were several owners, one of whom was Sir Robert Palk (1717–1798)[20] of Haldon House in the parish of Kenn, in Devon. In 1850 it was in use as a farmhouse, occupied by Arthur Trowbridge Horton.[21]
Fardel Stone
In the mid-nineteenth century a large stone, which had been used as part of a footbridge over a stream at Fardel, was recognised as bearing an Ogham inscription. The inscription, in Goidelic (Primitive Irish), reads "SVAQQUCI MAQI QICI", meaning "[The stone] of Safaqqucus, son of Qicus". In 1861 the stone was presented to the British Museum, where it remains.[22] In Latin it reads "FANNONI MAQUT RINI".[2] "Fannon son of Utrin" - the letter count is the same suggesting that they could be equivalent.
^Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L., (Ed.) The Visitations of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, pp.638-9, pedigree of Raleigh of Fardell
^Copy lease, Elize Hele of Parke, Bovey Tracey, Esq, 12th August 1618, Plymouth and West Devon Record Office [1]. The mansion house of Parke is today the headquarters of Dartmoor National Park