The Port Royal & Boat House Restaurant...Some History

In 1823, the wife of the landlord of the Fountain Inn (Prospect Inn) was found in the Exe at Salmon Pool. She was taken to The Exeter Humane Society, near the Lime Kilns, but attempts to revive her failed - it is probable that this was one of the buildings that became the Port Royal.
It is not certain when the Port Royal first traded but the earliest date found appears in the 1844 copy of Pigot's Directory of Exeter, where Robert Ugler is listed as the landlord of the Port Royal Tavern. Ugler's rein as innkeeper was short lived, for in 1850 George Webber was running the Port Royal at St Leonard's Quay. Five years on and the 1855 Exeter Journal & Almanack, listed one John Western as the landlord of the Port Royal on the Quay.
Sixty-Four Years a landlord The 1859 Trewmans Pocket Journal lists Charles Edwards as the landlord of the Port Royal Public House, Lime Kiln. He was 28 years old. By 1861 he was married to Susan and had a daughter, Alice. The 1871 Pocket Journal also list Edwards as running a 'passage-boat' on the quay. The landlord in the 1893 and 1897 and the 1919 Kelly's was still Charles Edwards. The last listing I have found is the Post Office directory of 1923 which still shows Charles Edwards. Charles Edwards died at the end of 1923 at the age of 93 years old, making his tenure of the Port Royal, at least 64 years.

Exeter Rowing Club.

Before they moved to new premises,
the Exeter Amateur Rowing Club was
first established in 1864 at the Port
Royal. In 1927 the Port Royal Amateur
Rowing Club was formed, which was
merged with the Exeter Amateur
Rowing Club in 1946 to form the Exeter
Rowing Club. The boat house was
rebuilt in 1952 by the St Anne's Well
Brewery at a cost of £1,600 and opened by Mr G Pring on 6th June. The old boat-house is now the pub's restaurant.In 1870, the employees of the Trews Weir Mill dined at the Port Royal. In the same year a soup kitchen was opened for those who were not in regular employment. Also, as was common in the 19th-century, the Port Royal was used for an inquest in 1878.A deed of 1924 noted of the Port Royal that came "with the Brewhouse and cellar and Outbuildings,yard and Boathouse, Bagatelle room and premises thereto adjoining".In 1930, the pub was taken over by Norman Pring who was the landlord until 1962, when he sold it to Starkey, Knight and Ford. Exeter Rowing Club finally vacated their clubhouse at the pub in 1981 and in 1982 their old room was converted into a function room. Further improvement have been made and the owners claim that it is the longest pub in Exeter.

The Whirlwind

Strangely, the Port Royal was once hit by a
whirlwind. On 7 September 1850, a four-oared gig
moored next to the building was picked up by a
sudden swirling wind and lifted some 15 ft above
the river. The boat was then dropped back into
the water, as amazed customers looked on.
The Port Royal & Boat House Restaurant...Pirates and buccaneers!!

Port Royal, located along the
shipping lanes going to and
from Spain and Panama,
provided another safe harbour for pirates.


Originally claimed by the Spanish, England acquired it in 1655. The English built a fort on a sandy spit of land that formed a natural harbour. By 1659, two hundred houses, shops, and warehouses surrounded the fort. Since the English lacked sufficient troops to prevent either the Spanish or French from seizing it, the Jamaican governors turned to the pirates for defence of the city.
The buccaneers found Port Royal appealing for several reasons. Its proximity to trade routes allowed them easy access to prey. The harbour was large enough to accommodate their ships and provided them a place to careen and repair these vessels. It was also ideally situated for launching raids on Spanish settlements. From Port Royal, Henry Morgan attacked Panama, Portobello, and Maracaibo. Bartholomew Roberts, Roche Brasiliano, John Davis, and Edward Mansveldt (Mansfield) also came to Port Royal.

By the 1660’s, the city had gained a reputation as the Sodom
of the New World where most residents were pirates,
cutthroats, whores and some of the vilest persons in the
whole world. When Charles Leslie wrote his history of
Jamaica, he included a description of the pirates of Port
Royal. Wine and women drained their wealth to such a degree that…some of them became reduced to beggary. They have been known to spend 2 or 3,000 pieces of eight in one night; and one gave a strumpet 500 to see her naked. They used to buy a pipe of wine, place it in the street, and oblige everyone that passed to drink.
Port Royal grew to be one of the two largest towns and the most economically important port in the English colonies. At the height of its popularity, the city had one drinking house for every ten residents. In July 1661 alone, forty new licenses were granted to taverns. During a twenty-year period that ended in 1692, nearly 6,500 people lived in Port Royal. In addition to prostitutes and buccaneers, there were four goldsmiths, forty-four tavern keepers, and a variety of artisans and merchants who lived in two hundred buildings crammed into fifty-one acres of real estate. Two hundred thirteen ships visited the seaport in 1688. The city’s wealth was so great that coins were preferred for payment rather than the more common system of bartering goods for services.

Following Henry Morgan’s appointment as lieutenant
governor, Port Royal began to change. Pirates no longer
needed to defend the city. The selling of slaves took on
greater importance. Upstanding citizens disliked the
reputation the city had acquired. In 1687, Jamaica passed
anti-piracy laws. Instead of being a safe haven for pirates,
Port Royal became noted as their place of execution. Gallows
Point welcomed many to their death, including Charles Vane
and Calico Jack Ransom, who were hanged in 1720. Two years later, forty-one pirates met their death in one month.
On 7 June 1692 around 11:40 in the morning, three earthquakes and a tsunami struck Port Royal. Sixty- six percent of the city disappeared into the sea, while ships anchored in the harbour were swept inland. Two thousand people died instantly, and disease and injuries claimed an estimated two thousand more lives in the weeks that followed. As news of the devastation spread, so did the belief that this was God’s punishment for the wickedness and sinning that had made Port Royal infamous.
Reverend Heath, a survivor of the devastation, wrote: Some were swallowed up to the Neck, and then the Earth shut upon them; and squeezed them to death; and in that manner several are left buried with their Heads above ground. A merchant described the city as those houses which but just now appeared the fairest and loftiest in these parts were in a moment sunk down into the earth and nothing to be seen of them…. One year later a visitor noted that the principal parts of Port Royal now lie four, six or eight fathoms underwater. Indeed, ‘tis enough to raise melancholy thoughts in a man to see chimneys and the tops of some houses, and masts of ships and sloops, which partaked of the same fate, appear above the water, now habitations for fish. Today, about 1,800 people reside in Port Royal, now a poor fishing village. Most visitors are tourists. Others are archaeologists who conduct underwater excavations of old Port Royal. It is a unique site for when the earthquake struck, it froze Port Royal like a photograph captures an image. The catastrophe preserved life as it was lived at that precise moment in time rather than permitting erosion by the passage of years or alteration by succeeding generations. Since the 1980’s, the Institute of Nautical Archaeology at Texas A & M University has studied and archived what remains of Port Royal in 1692.
Weirfield Path, Exeter, EX2 4DR, Tel: 01392 272360 Fax: 01392 437298 email: carlos@theportroyal.co.uk