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As with other similar articles, moving uncited or incomplete citation information to the talk page to start clean-up:

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==Origins==

... so Baron Rolle selected the otherwise prospectless Mark as his heir. As required under the will,[nb 1] on his inheritance he changed his surname by royal licence dated 30/1/1852[citation needed] to Rolle and adopted the Rolle armorials.

COMMENT: SOME OF THIS MAY BE GOOD TO ADD TO Trefusis (surname), with citations: The Trefusis family is descended from Samuel Trefusis, of the manor of Trefusis near Falmouth in Cornwall, the second son and eventual heir of Francis Trefusis by his wife Bridget Rolle (1648–1721). Bridget Rolle was the daughter of Robert Rolle (d.1660), MP, (by Lady Arabella Clinton, younger daughter of Theophilus Clinton, 4th Earl of Lincoln & 12th Baron Clinton (d.1667)) of Heanton Satchville, Petrockstowe, Devon, the great-grandson of Henry Rolle, the 4th son of the patriarch George Rolle (d.1552), keeper of the records of the Court of Common Pleas, steward of Dunkeswell Abbey, who purchased the manor of Stevenstone and the "barony" of Buckland Brewer after the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Following the extinction of the progeny of Samuel Rolle (1646–1719), the son of Robert Rolle, the estate of Heanton Satchville descended via Bridget Rolle to the Trefusis family, which inherited in 1791 the title of Baron Clinton through their ancestress Lady Arabella Clinton. Baron * added (John) * Rolle's second wife Louisa Trefusis was thus his distant cousin.

==Marriage and progeny==
Mural monument in St Giles in the Wood parish church inscribed: "To the Glory of God and in loving memory of Gertrude Jane wife of the Hon.ble Mark G. K. Rolle of Stevenstone and Bicton Devon and daughter of the 19th (sic)[nb 2] Earl of Morton. Died 21st March 1924 aged 86. This tablet is erected by her two daughters"

Mark Rolle married on 6 October 1860[citation needed] Lady Gertrude Jane Douglas (1838–1924), daughter of George Sholto Douglas, 17th Earl of Morton (1789–1858). They had two daughters, both of whom were excluded from the Rolle inheritance, which was in tail-male:[citation needed]

  • Gertrude Emily Rolle (d.14/4/1954), who married on 15 May 1889 Brigadier-General Sir Hugh Henry John Drummond, 1st Baronet (1859–1924). They had issue one daughter Marion Edwina Drummond, born on 1 March 1902, who married in 1928 Julius Goodwyn.
  • Mary Frances Rolle (d.23/11/1945), who married on 7 June 1894 Major Arthur Scott Browne of Buckland Filleigh,[1] son of William James Browne. The marriage was without progeny.
==Manors held==
  • Stevenstone, in the parish of St Giles in the Wood, near Great Torrington, the most ancient seat of the Rolle family in Devon, acquired by the patriarch George Rolle (c.1486-1552)
  • Bicton, an ancient Rolle manor, in which Bicton House was his secondary residence after Stevenstone. Inherited by Denys Rolle (1614-1638) from his mother Anne Denys, it having been acquired by her grandfather Sir Robert Denys (d.1592), of Holcombe Burnell.
  • Beer, acquired by John Rolle, 1st Baron Rolle on his first marriage to Maria Walrond, the heiress of the Walrond family of Bovey House, Beer.
  • Budleigh Salterton, near Bicton,
  • Chittlehampton, in which parish Samuel I Rolle (1669–1735) had acquired Hudscott House by marriage to the heiress of the Lovering family, and later acquired the lordship of the manor of Chittlehampton. Samuel II Rolle (1704-1747), his only surviving son who died without progeny, bequeathed his estates including Hudscott to his much wealthier cousin, Denys Rolle (1725-1797), MP, of Stevenstone.
  • Pilton, near Barnstaple, of which he was lord of the manor. Acquired by the patriarch George Rolle (c.1486-1552) following the dissolution of Pilton Priory.
  • Beam House, near Great Torrington, formerly the seat of Henry Rolle (1605-1647), who later inherited Stevenstone from his cousin the infant John Rolle (1638-1642), son and heir of Denys Rolle (1614-1638).
  • Winscott Barton, in the parish of St Giles in the Wood, the historic home of the Devon. antiquarian Tristram Risdon. Purchased 19th. century
  • Pottington, in the parish of Pilton, purchased in 1609 from William Howard, Lord Howard of Effingham (1577–1615) by Sir Henry Rolle (1545-1625),[2] grandson of the patriarch. Rolle Quay, opposite Barnstaple Castle, was developed in this manor by the family in the 19th. century.
==Churches built==
  • Church of St Peter - at a cost of £2,000[3] He also donated the pulpit.
  • Church of St John the Evangelist -(2 miles south of his manor of Chittlehampton). Chancel rebuilt 1850, restored 1883, the chief contributor being Mark Rolle as is recorded on an inscribed slate.
==Estate cottages built==
  • St Giles in the Wood - with Rolle arms on the gable of a cottage in the centre of the terrace.
==Rebuilding of Stevenstone==

which resembled a French chateau. Hoskins commented in his 1954 work "Devon: A New Survey of England", "The richest man in Devon built himself the ugliest house".

==Other building development

Rolle rebuilt Court Barton farm, Abbots Bickington, as a model farm in 1878, as is evidenced by a date-stone over the entrance to a stone barn bearing the inscription "M.R. 1878".

==Death and burial==

He died without male issue, his heir to the Rolle estates, which were in tail-male, being his nephew Charles John Robert Hepburn-Stuart-Forbes-Trefusis, 21st Baron Clinton (1863–1957). Heavy death duties were payable by his heir, which resulted in the sale of Stevenstone, which was shortly thereafter demolished. Other parts of the North Devon Rolle estates were also sold, the family having decided to concentrate its holdings in East Devon around the historic core of Bicton. Monuments in his memory exist in Holy Trinity Church, Rolle Road, Exmouth and in the Church of St Giles, St Giles in the Wood. He is also commemorated by a large stone cross in the churchyard of Great Torrington.

===Monuments===
====Beer Church====
Monument to Mark Rolle in Beer Church

A memorial tablet exists in Beer Church, affixed to a north-west pier, inscribed thus: "To the glory of God and in memory of the Hon.ble Mark G.K. Rolle (son of the 19th Baron Clinton) lord of the manor of Beer and a generous benefactor to this church and village. The tower clock was erected by subscription of parishioners and friends. This church (built A.D. 1877) on an ancient foundation was one of his many gifts to the parish of Beer. He died on the 27th April 1907. Si requiris monumentum circumspice.[nb 3] In memory also of the Lady Gertrude Rolle his wife (daughter of the 19th Earl of Morton) who died on the 21st March 1924". The armorials show Rolle with an inescutcheon of pretence of Walter of Sarsden, indicating the marriage of John Rolle (1679-1730), MP, of Stevenstone, grandfather of Lord Rolle, to the heiress of that family, Isabella Walter. These arms are also visible impaled by Rolle on the Georgian "Library Room" still surviving at Stevenstone.

====Great Torrington====
Memorial Cross to Mark Rolle in Great Torrington churchyard

A Memorial Cross to Mark Rolle exists in the churchyard by the west door of St Michael's Church, Great Torrington, with the following inscription: "To the glory of God and in memory of the Honourable Mark George Kerr Rolle of Stevenstone, born 13th November 1835 died 27th April 1907 this cross was erected in grateful recognition of his life and character, his generosity and sterling worth, by the inhabitants of Great Torrington and neighbourhood in 1909 during the mayoralty of Milton Chapple"[citation needed] In 1870 he also gave to the town of Great Torrington the fountain and clock in the square.[4]

St Giles-in-the-Wood

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Memorial Cross to Mark Rolle, churchyard of St Giles-in-the-Wood

In addition to the mural monument within the church erected by his family, a memorial cross was erected at the east side of the churchyard of St Giles's Church, St Giles-in-the-Wood, directly in front of the lych-gate, with the following inscription: "Erected by the parishioners in loving memory of the Honourable Mark George Kerr Rolle the friend and benefactor of this parish. April 27th 1907"

As I've done with similar articles by the contributor, I'll start to search first on information that I can find on the subject - looking for notable content.--CaroleHenson (talk) 17:08, 25 June 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Updates:

  • Origins - 1) added strike-out for information now in the article
  • Origins - 2) Trefusis family info, some of the info would be a great addition to the Trefusis (surname) article if there are WP:Reliable sources.
  • Marriage and children - added strike-out for information now in the article. Notes about father and son both attributed as father of Rolle's wife. Need to square away discrepancies in wife's name. Corrected wife's name to Gertrude Jane. Moving image to the article page.
  • Church of St Peter - strike out info that had already been added to the article. Added a more complete, correctly titled source info to the article.

Any help finding sources for the information so that we can add notable, article specific information back to the article would be greatly appreciated!--CaroleHenson (talk) 22:06, 25 June 2013 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ Lauder, p.10
  2. ^ Reed, p.28
  3. ^ White's Devonshire Directory, 1890
  4. ^ Cite error: The named reference Alexander, p.64 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).


Cite error: There are <ref group=nb> tags on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=nb}} template (see the help page).