Overbeck's: Difference between revisions

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'''Overbeck's''' is an Edwardian country house with a seven acre garden at Sharpitor, above [[Salcombe]] ni the south of [[Devon]]. It is named after its last private owner Otto Christop Joseph Gerhardt Ludwig Overbeck (1860–1937).
'''Overbeck's''' is an Edwardian country house with a seven-acre garden at Sharpitor, above [[Salcombe]] in the south of [[Devon]]. It is named after its last private owner Otto Christop Joseph Gerhardt Ludwig Overbeck (1860–1937).


The house is now in the hands of the [[National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty|National Trust]], which opens the house and garden to visitors under the name 'Overbeck's Museum and Garden'.
The house is now in the hands of the [[National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty|National Trust]], which opens the house and garden to visitors under the name 'Overbeck's Museum and Garden'.

Latest revision as of 07:31, 25 February 2020

Overbeck's

Salcombe
Devon

National Trust


Overbeck's
Grid reference: SX72843740
Location: 50°13’23"N, 3°47’2"W
Information

Overbeck's is an Edwardian country house with a seven-acre garden at Sharpitor, above Salcombe in the south of Devon. It is named after its last private owner Otto Christop Joseph Gerhardt Ludwig Overbeck (1860–1937).

The house is now in the hands of the National Trust, which opens the house and garden to visitors under the name 'Overbeck's Museum and Garden'.

Until 2014 the house was divided between a museum and a youth hostel. YHA Salcombe closed in 2014 when the agreement between the National Trust and The Youth Hostel Association broke down. The part of the house formerly used as the hostel was left unused and closed to the public.

The museum

Sign above main entrance

The museum houses displays of some of Overbeck's inventions and collections of stuffed animals, and exhibitions of model sailing ships and various nautical and shipbuilding tools and effects. There are display photographs of boats and shipwrecks (such as the Herzogin Cecilie). A room in the middle of the house, one of whose entrances is a secret door concealed in the wooden panelling of the room outside, contains a display of dolls' houses, amongst which is placed by staff "Fred the friendly ghost" for child visitors to discover.

The museum contains a Polyphon — a large musical box which plays music encoded as holes punched in large sheet-metal discs and has a collection of discs of popular melodies of the day. There is also a collection of photographs by Edward Chapman who worked in and photographed Salcombe — including the building of the first house on the site — during the early 20th-century. The photographs have been reprinted from the original plates by Chapman's son and his grandson, Chris Chapman, who continues the family photography business in Plymouth.[1]

A tea room offers a variety of snacks, including Devonshire cream teas.[2]

History

The original building on the site was a small villa "Sharpitor" erected by Salcombe builder Albert Stumbles. This was bought in 1901 by Edric Hopkins, who also bought two more acres of land, creating terraces and planting exotic specimens on the sheltered site. In 1913 the property was bought by Mr and Mrs Vereker who demolished the original house and had the present one built. Otto Overbeck acquired the house in 1928 and lived there until his death in 1937.

Wishing the house to be used after his death as "a public park and museum and a Hostel for Youth", Overbeck bequeathed it to the National Trust on condition it be used as such and not for the salacious and illegal purposes to which other villas in Salcombe had been turned at that time.[3][4]

Outside links

References

  1. Photo Laboratories Ltd.
  2. Overbeck's: National Trust
  3. "Around and About Salcombe", Chips Barber, ISBN 978-1-903585-32-0
  4. Born, Anne: 'The History of Kingsbridge And Salcombe' ISBN 978-1-898964-49-0 (p162)