Builds harbour at Bucks Few records of his life survive. His near contemporary the
Devonshire historian
Tristram Risdon (died 1640) (whose grandfather lived nearby at
Bableigh, Parkham, miles to the south-east of Bucks) stated of him:
"Richard Cole, the last of that family that dwelt at Bokish, erected a harbour in his land, there to shelter ships and boats". This is now known as the
Old Quay at
Bucks Mills, and was built after he had blasted out the rock with gunpowder to leave a sandy inlet known as "The Gut" or "Gutway". Remains of the quay are visible at low-tide. It was built at about the same time as his near neighbour George Cary (1543–1601),
lord of the
manor of Clovelly,
Sheriff of Devon in 1587, built a harbour wall at Clovelly surviving today, 3 miles further west along the coast from Bucks, described by Risdon as ''"a pile to resist the inrushing of the sea's violent breach, that ships and boats may with the more safety harbour there"''. Clovelly's main export product was herring fish, which formerly appeared at certain times of the year in huge shoals, close off-shore in the shallow waters of the Bristol Channel, and such a harbour wall was a great benefit to the village fishermen, tenants of the Cary lords of the manor.
Supplies weaponry Richard Cole supplied weaponry to the parish armoury of nearby
Hartland. From the reign of King Edward I (1272-1307) every parish in England was obliged by law to keep ready for use a certain amount of armour, usually referred to as "Church Armour", and kept in the parish church or town hall. The parish records of Hartland for 1598-9 contain the following two entries relating to Cole: • Paid to Richard Cole, Esquior, for a
Corslett for the church...xxv shillings • Paid to the said Richard Cole, Esqr, for one hundred poundes of
gunpowder for the parish£...v.
Sells Slade in Surrey of George Cole (d.1624) of the
Middle Temple, father of Gregory Cole (d.1660), 2nd cousin and heir of Richard Cole (d.1614) of Bucks According to the Devonshire historian
Risdon (died 1640), Richard Cole sold the estate of Slade, which had been the seat of his Cole ancestors from the reign of King Edward II (1307–1327), which soon afterwards became a seat of the Savery family. According to the Devonshire historian
Pole (d.1635), Richard Cole
"conveyed this land" (i.e. Bucks and Wallen)
"unto .... Cole of London, as I have bine enformed". Gregory Cole (d.1660), a lawyer of the
Middle Temple, and of
Petersham in Surrey, who founded a second line of the Cole family at Bucks and at Enstone in Oxfordshire. The large and elaborate monument of George Cole (d.1624) of the Middle Temple, Gregory's father, survives in Petersham Church. The estate of Bucks remained in the Cole family until 1802, on the death at the age of 96 of Rev. Potter Cole (1705-1802), a grandson of Gregory Cole and the last in the male line, Rector of Hawksbury in Gloucestershire for over seventy years. Potter Cole bequeathed Bucks to his nephew Rev. William Loggin of
Long Marston in Gloucestershire, who in accordance with the bequest assumed the name and arms of Cole by Act of Parliament on 26 June 1802, ==Marriage==