, Devon, demolished He was admitted a fellow commoner at
Clare Hall, Cambridge on 22 May 1711 and became a lawyer, having entered the
Middle Temple on 10 February 1711/2 and having been
called to the bar in 1718. From about the age of 21 he visited several country houses belonging to the Prideaux family and friends, and made many "topographical drawings", many of which survive as valuable records of houses since demolished or altered, for example
Stowe, Kilkhampton in Cornwall and
Heanton Satchville, Petrockstowe in Devon. Following the death of his wife at a young age, he "immersed himself in the study of all scholarly matters, particularly architecture and garden design". Unusually late in life, in about 1739 at the age of 46, he made a
Grand Tour of Italy and brought back to England a collection of pictures and Roman antiquities. He was well-travelled, as is apparent from the contents of his surviving cash-book. ==Inheritance==