[1] The architectural historian Bridget Cherry, in her Devon volume of the Pevsner Buildings of England series, revised and reissued in 2004, gives a slightly earlier date of commencement of 1628 and notes that the row was built on reclaimed land on the bank of the River Dart.
[2] The development began as a partnership between two local burghers, William Gurney and Mark Hawkins, the latter of whom served as receiver of Dartmouth, and was part of a wider undertaking that saw the construction of the New Quay on the Dart.
[3] The museum contains a chamber, The King's Room, named in honour of Charles II, who was entertained to lunch in the Butterwalk in July 1671, after being forced to take shelter at Dartmouth during a storm when he was sailing from Plymouth to London.
The first storey has a large jetty which extends over the street frontage and is supported by eleven granite piers.
[8] Cherry describes the arcade as "Dartmouth's pride", and notes the "sumptuous standard" of the buildings' interiors.