Bovey Tracey was an established
Saxon community and takes its name from the
River Bovey. The name first appears in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as
Bovi and possibly earlier as
Buui. The town gained its second name from the de Tracey family, who were lords of the manor after the
Norman Conquest of 1066, and was first documented as
Bovitracy in 1309. One member of the family,
William de Tracy, was implicated in the murder of Archbishop
Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral in 1170. It is thought that he rebuilt the parish church of St Peter, St Paul and St Thomas of Canterbury as penance for the murder. In the early 13th century, Henry de Tracey created a
borough here and, in 1259, was granted the right to hold a weekly market and an annual three-day fair. During the
English Civil War, on 9 January 1646,
Oliver Cromwell and a contingent of his Roundhead army entered Bovey Tracey after dark and caught part of
Lord Wentworth's Regiment by surprise, catching a number of officers playing cards in an inn. Many of Wentworth's Royalist troops escaped, but Cromwell did capture about 400 horses. If local legend is to be believed, the Royalists escaped by throwing coins from the windows in order to distract the poorly paid Roundhead troops. The next day a battle was fought on nearby
Bovey Heath ending in victory for Cromwell's army. The name of Cromwell lives on in the town today in both the
public house,
The Cromwell Arms, and the remains of a nearby stone arch, known locally (and incorrectly) as ''Cromwell's Arch''. The arch is claimed to be what is left of a priory that stood previously on the site of the nearby Baptist Church. It has been shown through many historical documents that this is a local myth perpetuated by local historians, and that there is no evidence that a priory once stood in the centre of Bovey Tracey. The
Bovey Tracey Potteries operated from the 1750s for about 200 years. Bovey Tracey was
twinned with
Le Molay-Littry in
Normandy,
France; however, in February 2018, local councillors discovered surprisingly that the French town had unexpectedly twinned with another location,
Theydon Bois in Essex. ==Geography==