Images

Image of Challacombe (Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue) by GLADMAN

The stone rows can just be discerned striding up from Headland Warren from the right. The early morning viewpoint is the minor road across the western flank of Hookney Tor. So much going on here, with Grimspound just a few hundred yards down the road...

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Challacombe (Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue) by GLADMAN

Dawn sunburst from the western slopes of Shapley Tor... the row can be seen ascending the ridge below the prominent copse...

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Challacombe (Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue) by Lubin

The row with Birch Tor on the horizon.

Image credit: Peter Castle ©
Image of Challacombe (Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue) by Lubin

Two of the stones near the centre of the row with Grimspound behind.

Image credit: Peter Castle ©
Image of Challacombe (Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue) by Lubin

Two of the stones near the lower end of the row.

Image credit: Peter Castle ©
Image of Challacombe (Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue) by Lubin

The 14 stones added to the west side of the down hill end when the row was reconstructed in 1893 by Baring-Gould and Burnard. They are in a kind of open sided rectangle and according to Jeremy Butler in Dartmoor Atlas of Antiquities they were re-errected where they were found and are possibly the lower end of the row which had been moved by Tinners when cutting a gully.

Image credit: Peter Castle ©
Image of Challacombe (Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue) by Lubin

The lower end of the row with Birch Tor in the background.

Image credit: Peter Castle ©
Image of Challacombe (Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue) by Lubin

Looking down hill from where the row becomes triple.

Image credit: Peter Castle ©
Image of Challacombe (Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue) by Lubin

Looking down the row from standing/blocking stone on the side of the hill.

Image credit: Peter Castle ©
Image of Challacombe (Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue) by doug

Triple Stone Rows at Challacombe, Complete with ubiquitous Dartmoor Ponies.

Image credit: Doug
Image of Challacombe (Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue) by RedBrickDream

Looking West across the southern end of the row towards Grimspound.

Image credit: Craig Gurney July 2004

Articles

Challacombe

24/7/04

Sitting at the car park below Grimspound with the map across the dash board we reckoned we had a pretty good idea where this row was. Much better in fact than the walkers we could see doubling back on themselves in the rough ground above Headland Warren. Were they trying to find the rows too? We decided to walk up to Grimspound and from there skirt Hookey Tor, cross the road and then pick up the footpath around the farm. After climbing for a few hundred yards we decided we needed to be turning to the left just as some gateposts came into view.

Gateposts?

Far from gateposts these were in fact, the eastern end of a fine 160 metre triple row of stones. They looked quite different to the pictutre I’d held in my mind’s eye. The three black and white images in Burl’s From “Carnac to Callanish” suggest a much more exposed position. Instead these stones were fighting their way through the bracken, helped it must be said by a recent burn to the vegetation.

We took dozens of photographs of the male and female pairs and walked the row several times. My most striking and lasting impression was that the triangular terminal stone on the horizon at the “top” of the row was almost wafer thin.

Challacombe is on a direct line and about half way between Grimspound and the Warren Inn and despite being clearly visible from both of these honeypots it seems sadly ignored.

Miscellaneous

Challacombe
Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue

Crossing’s Guide to Dartmoor (1912 but frequently reprinted – ie 1990 Peninsula Press) is an invaluable aid for a trip to the area. I discovered this book in the library of an excellent bed and breakfast in Chagford and rushed out to buy a copy from a local bookshop the next day. Crossing has this to say about Challacombe:

Here we shall come across a triple stone row, the existence of which was recorded in 1830, but at that time the whole of the stones composing it were lying on the ground. A few years ago they were re-erected so that the visitor has now something to look at, but whether he will be able to find any interest in what is only a late 19th century erection, formed out of old material and on an ancient plan is another matter. No real antiquarian interest can attach to such an erection as this, [but] at the same time we are constrained to admit that rebuilding is preferable to allowing the stones to lie upon the turf, and this even at the risk of it being said (and it has been said) that on Dartmoor you can be supplied with stone monuments “while you wait”.

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