Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: Sir Thomas Spenser1336 Sir John Abraham1338 Sir Thomas Bolapythe1360 John Fraike1369 John Pruet1407 Hugo William1438 Robert Wylle1440 John Floxe1443 John Tregithrow Richard Haydon1527 Richard Widthorpe1531 (1622 Master Radford Maverick appears as curate at the visitation 1630 William Shears M.A.) Robert Spark1635 instituted on the presentation of King Charles ist William Shears1636 In 1668 we get the record " Wm Humphreys reads prayers there " John Lome1680 Edward Bradford1683 There is then no institution of a Rector until 1821, when Matthew Vicars was instituted Dec. 5th, 1821 Theodore Coldridge1843 Charles Worthy1851 Sackville Usher Bolton Lee1861 William Heathman Parkhouse1867 John Gerard Davis1875 William John Wesley Webb1876 Revd. William Hope1882 HH fallows on tbe Malls. A study of any old map of the city of Exeter will shew that the original position of this church was almost at the foot of the present Fore Street; a site it occupied when the entrance to the city from the west was over the ancient bridge, and then by a sharp turn, after the West Gate was passed, before the Fore Street and High Street were reached. Here on the city wall, or close against it, the Saxons built their church of All Hallows, Exeterpreserving this old English term in the dedication rather than the newer name of All Saints. After the Commonwealth, the church stood on the wall, roofless, and almost a ruin. The three bells were sold in the 17th century, and the dilapidated building remained a reminder of a mournful past, until 1770, when it was removed at the time of the building the new Exe Bridge, when by an alteration in the streets, the new Bridge Street and Fore Street met and came down in a straight line to the rive...