Wentworth escaped to
Tavistock, where he reported the attack to Prince Charles. The news led the Prince to abandon his plans to relieve Exeter, and Charles retreated further into the southwest, to
Launceston. Sir
Richard Grenville and other Royalist leaders petitioned the Prince for a new commander of the Royalist army, and Lord Hopton was duly appointed the role. Wentworth remained as general of the horse, reporting to Hopton. Fairfax subsequently led his army into south Devon, but found that the Royalists had abandoned their garrisons in
Ashburton,
Totnes and other villages in the area. Fairfax established his army outside
Dartmouth on 12 January and
captured the port on 19 January, effectively ending Royalist hopes of relieving Exeter. Hopton was defeated
at Torrington in February, and the following month the last remnants of the Royalist army in southwest England surrendered in
Truro. Exeter fell to the Parliamentarians in April, and when first
King Charles I and then the Royalist-held
Oxford surrendered, the
First Civil War was effectively concluded in June 1646. ==References==