BUCKFAST ABBEY

For a long time it was believed that St Clere Pomeroy was one of the Abbots of Buckfast Abbey

in the end it came down to punctuation or rather the  medieval lack thereof  

Parish of Ashburton. Extracts. 15th to 16th C  from Church Warden Accounts 1479 – 1580  Published on request- London Yate & Alexander. Chancery Lane 1870. The original written in Latin on parchment. These are Church Warden Accounts  where there is mention of St Clere Pomeroy  & it has  confused genealogists.

Article in question

1499 - 1500 Receipt from a gift of the lord Abbot of Buckfast (N0 Comma) St Clere Pomeroy, Galfrid Harepath, Thomas Wilke,

Thomas Waye, John Waye, Peter Maty, Thomas Geffray...

Illustration by S & M Buck 1734

However serious doubt is thrown on this belief because the list of Abbots at Buckfast does not include St Clere Pomeroy .

 
St Clere Pomeroy son of Henry died 1471 married Katherine Courtnay before he died  at the Battle of Tewkesbury in 1471 so it cannot be him
Sinclere Pomeroy son of Robert Pomeroy of Ingsdon  unknown DOB but his parents married  in about 1471. He died before his father who died in 1517

Monks did not marry and Abbots certainly did not. They did not have legitimate  wives or families, at least not ones they acknowledged publicly.
Sinclere as eldest son &  heir  had and an entail created for him in 1481  settling Ingsdon on Sinclere & his wife Joanna  Younge .This may have been when he was 21 or it may have been on his marriage . We know very little of him or his wife   
Sinclair died before his father who died in 1517 .He did marry & his son John died in 1533 around the time of beginning of Henry VIII "Great Matter" which brought changes in the Catholic church in England  & the resulted of the Anglo Catholic Church which in a around 1547 began to become the Protestant Church, which allowed priests to marry   

His son John  inherited Ingsdon Manors from his grandfather Robert in 1517.

Mention of St Clere/ Sinclere as a benefactor in 1499-1500 indicates he was still living at the turn of the 16th century

Abbots of Buckfast Abbey at that time

The only portion of the medieval monastery which survives is former abbot's tower, which dates from 14th or 15th century and is now "much restored".

300 years years later, in 1882  the site was purchased by French Benedictine monks who began to build a new church, the monks doing most of the work themselves. 

The abbey church was consecrated on 25 August 1932, but the building was not finished for several years: the last stone was laid in late 1937 and final works completed the following year.

In 1982 and 1994, when the abbey's precinct was rebuilt, the  ancient  Abbey Tower was incorporated into the abbey's guesthouse. The former well, located in the crypt of the former abbey and which may have dated from Saxon times, was destroyed when the new abbey was built.