Painting An oil painting of the 11th Earl hangs at Powderham Castle, high on the south wall of the Dining Hall.
Statue , Northernhay Gardens, Exeter , where it stood from its unveiling in 1880 (having replaced Stephens'
The Deerstalker) to after 1942 when it escaped WW II bombing and was placed in storage. It stands in 2013 in Northernhay Gardens, Exeter A bronze statue was made of the Earl by the Exeter sculptor
Edward Bowring Stephens and in October 1880 was erected at the front of the central garden in Bedford Circus, Exeter, on the spot where Stephens' "The Deer Stalker" had formerly stood. (The latter statue now stands near the Earl's statue, both having been re-located in Northernhay Gardens). The unveiling ceremony was attended by Sir
Stafford Northcote (1818–1887), later Lord Lieutenant of Devon 1886–7, (whose own statue in Northernhay Gardens now stands nearby) with the Mayor and Corporation, other dignitaries and the Earl himself. The statue was paid for by public subscription to the Devon Statue Fund, which had attracted 1,300 signatories for this work. A banquet was held following the unveiling ceremony. The plinth is of Cornish granite from the
Cheesewring Quarries, on the rear of which a bronze plaque is affixed inscribed with verse from
Wordsworth's
Happy Warrior: "Who not content that former worth stand fast, Looks forward persevering to the last, From well to better daily self-surpast." Although the Circus was destroyed by German bombing in May 1942, the statue survived intact. It was thereafter hidden from view in storage at Tan Lane until the 1950s, when it was re-erected in Bedford Street. A bronze plaque on the front of the plinth is inscribed: "This statue stood in Bedford Circus prior to World War II. The statue was erected on this site
(i.e. Bedford Street) by
Exeter City Council and
Devon County Council as part of a joint landscaping scheme". Following the re-development of
Princesshay in 2005 which involved the partial demolition of Bedford Street, the statue was again removed to storage in the Belle Isles council yard. It underwent restoration by Ian Clarke Restoration, including cleansing of graffiti, and was re-erected in
Northernhay Gardens. The unveiling ceremony occurred on 9 February 2010, attended this time by only a small handful of interested parties, including the then Earl of Devon and the Lord Mayor, John Winterbottom. Its last move is recorded by an inscription on a granite slab on the ground at the front of the plinth: "Lord Devon was moved in 2010 to Northernhay Gardens from Bedford St". ==Memorial chimneypiece at Powderham==