New Chiefs Corbel stone installed
Picture: Exeter Rugby Club
By Mark Stevens
5/5/17
Future visitors to Exeter Cathedral will soon see a symbol of the city’s rugby club adorning part of its façade after a new stone carving was put into place this week.
In what is an extensive project on the Cathedral’s East Gable, work has been going on for a number of months to address parts of the stonework that need replacing or re-conditioning.
And part of the project has been to replace four corbel stones, all of which are to now have a new look moving forward.
As Clerk of Works, Chris Sampson, explains: “The project we are currently working on will see us replace something like 350 stones, four of which have been identified as corbel stones.
“With that in mind, we came up with ideas and a theme of how we would replace them and in the end we split it into four categories, representing the world, the UK, the City of Exeter and the Cathedral itself.
“So for the World, we have carved a poppy that relates to remembrance and those killed in the World Wars; for the UK we have carved a crown in celebration of the Queen’s 90th Birthday; for the Cathedral we have an Eagle Owl as last January one took up residence in the area we are working on for around three or four months, and for the City we have decided on the Exeter Chiefs club emblem because we feel they have done so much in recent years to really put Exeter on the map, not just in this country, but across Europe and further afield.”
The new Chiefs carving was hand produced out of Salcombe Stone by stonemason Anna Steinmetzer, who said it took a week to design out of clay and a further week to carve into stone.
And this week club chief executive and chairman Tony Rowe OBE, along with head coach Rob Baxter and first team star Jack Nowell, got the chance to see first-hand the new design being put into place.
Mr Rowe said: “It’s fantastic for the club that the Cathedral want to put a stone in place to recognise Exeter Rugby Club and its strong links with the City. It is going to be here for hundreds of years to come and who knows down the line, there maybe people asking the question of why there is a Chiefs head on the side of the building."