(d.1821) of the ruins of Wembury House, built by Sir John Hele The
parish of Wembury was once divided into four
manors: Wembury,
Down Thomas,
Langdon and Alfelmeston. According to Lyson's
Devonshire, published in 1822, the manor of Wembury originally belonged to
Plympton Priory. After the
dissolution of the monasteries in 1539 it went into private ownership. Today the parish of Wembury is divided into three principal villages; Wembury,
Down Thomas, and
Heybrook Bay. There are also a number of smaller hamlets; Hollacombe, Knighton, Thorn, Langdon, Andurn and Bovisand. The population of the parish was 2740 during the 2011 census. Wembury House survives as an elegant late
Georgian mansion, originally an exceptionally grand
Elizabethan house built by the lawyer Sir
John Hele (c.1541–1608) a
Member of Parliament for
Exeter and
Recorder of Exeter (1592–1605). It was already a ruin by about 1700, and was finally demolished in 1803. The surviving house on the site was built in the early 19th century and rebuilt by
Major Edmund Lockyer. Fort Bovisand, an ancient monument lies in the North West corner of the parish. The first fort on this site was built in 1845. Plans have been approved for the conversion of Bovisand Fort and associated buildings, removal of one building, and construction of new towers, an apartment building, 11 new dwellings, new quayside commercial accommodation and conservation of historic fabric, together with associated landscaping, parking and re-establishment of the link to the coastal footpath, creating a total of 81 residential units, office, teaching/studio space, event space, visitor centre and facilities, café and relocation of MOD space and additional commercial space. == The Mewstone ==