Devon and Somerset Staghounds

Collyns stated the earliest record of a pack of Staghounds on Exmoor was 1598.

In 1803, the "North Devon Staghounds" became a subscription pack.

In 1824/5 30 couples of hounds, the last of the true staghounds, were sold to a baron in Germany.

The Chairman as of 2016 is Tom Yandle, who was previously High Sheriff of Somerset in 1999.

"This noble chase being ended, my master, his brother and Mr Brutton with about 20 gentlemen more waited on Sir Thomas Acland at Pixton where each of them drank the health of the stag in a full quart glass of claret placed in the stag's mouth & after drinking several proper healths they went in good order to their respective beds about 2 o'clock and dined with Sir Thomas the next day on a haunch of the noble creature and about 50 dishes of the greatest rarities among which were several black grouse".He returned briefly as joint-master in August 1784, but died in February 1785, aged 63[11] [34][35][36]

Prosperity to Stag Hunting , the badge of the Devon and Somerset Staghounds
Edward II Dyke (d. 1746), portrait circa 1741 attributed to Thomas Hudson (1701–1779), National Trust , Collection of Dunster Castle
Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 7th Baronet (1723–1785) painted in 1767 by Sir Joshua Reynolds . The bloodline of the large staghound with its head on his knee was lost when the pack was sold to Germany in 1824, and later rebuilt from foxhounds. Two identical versions exist, both owned by the National Trust , one at Saltram House , the other at Killerton House , both in Devon
Stalls in stable block built by Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 9th Baronet (1752–1794) at Holnicote , now owned by the National Trust . The thirty stag heads on the walls date from about 1787 to 1793 and were killed under his mastership of the Devon and Somerset Staghounds. Some of the brow points of the antlers were notoriously sawn-off by a groom because they interfered with the loading of hay into the mangers. [ 20 ] A similar collection of stag heads amassed by his father the 7th Baronet, and much beloved by the latter, was destroyed during a fire at Holnicote in 1779 [ 21 ]
Loose boxes in stable block built by Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 9th Baronet (1752–1794) at Holnicote, with his stag head trophies
"The General". Mordaunt Fenwick-Bisset , MP , (1825–1884), Master 1855-1881, as caricatured by Spy in Vanity Fair , December 1881. He built the present kennels in Exford in 1876 and donated them to the Committee.
Portrait of Mordaunt Fenwick-Bisset, MSH, on his favourite hunter Chanticleer , with a stag at bay in Badgworthy Water, Exmoor, by Samuel John Carter , 1871
Viscount Ebrington, from 1905 Hugh Fortescue, 4th Earl Fortescue (1854–1932). Engraving by Joseph Brown from a photograph by John Mayall. He acquired the whole of the former Royal Forest of Exmoor after the death of Frederick Winn Knight in 1897
"The Devon and Somerset" , caricature of Viscount Ebrington by Ape , Vanity Fair 19 February 1887
Charles Henry Basset, MSH 1887-1893. Baily's Magazine of Sports & Pastimes , no. 380, October 1891, vol. 56
Robert Arthur Sanders MSH 1895-1907 ( Baron Bayford from 1929). Portrait from Baily's Magazine of Sports & Pastimes , no. 475, September 1899, vol. 72
Colonel Walter William Wiggin (1856–1936), Queen's Own Worcestershire Yeomanry, Master of the Devon and Somerset Staghounds c. 1917–1936, of Forhill House, King's Norton , photograph published in Baily's Magazine , no. 720, February 1920, vol. 113