Over 900 Years of History
Kelly is probably a Celtic word, meaning a clearing in a wood – and around 1100, the name Martin de Kelly is connected with this site. By the reign of Henry II, some fifty years later, Nicholas de Kelly held a manor here, and was one of eleven Devonshire families responsible for raising fighting men for the king in return for their landholding. The family has lived here ever since, and the buildings you can now see reflect the way in which their lives have been part of this remote and lovely area of Devon.
Sir William de Kelly began to build the church right by the house in 1252. Many family members are buried there, and the family has remained closely connected with it.When the Reverend Maitland Kelly took over the estate in 1900, for some of the thirty seven years he and his family lived here he was Rector of Kelly as well as squire.
By 1742, Arthur Kelly of Kelly was prosperous enough to replace part of the old pre-Tudor house by the elegant early Georgian building with its graceful staircase which you can see today.Through the nineteenth century, the family continued to live the lives of prosperous country squires, devoted to their estate and with a close relationship to the people who lived in the hamlet and farms on it. Even the existing lockup demonstrates the traditional gentry role of maintaining local law and order as Justices of the Peace.
However the twentieth century brought the problems faced by so many smaller country houses: some of the estate had to be sold, and maintenance has become a constant drain on resources. The family is determined now, in the twenty first century, to find new and imaginative ways of facing this challenge and continuing to serve the local community.
