Robert Winard of Sharpham died without male progeny leaving a daughter and heiress Anne Winard, who married Robert French.
French
of Totnes, a Member of Parliament for Totnes in January 1377, November 1384, 1385 and 1386, married Anne Winard, daughter and heiress of Robert Winard of Sharpham. In the 15th century it was owned by Robert French of Horneford in Devon, whose daughter and heiress Amey French married Sir John Prideaux.
Prideaux
Sir John Prideaux of Adeston in the parish of Holbeton and of Orcheton in the parish of Modbury, Devon married Amey French, heiress of Sharpham. Her daughter and heiress was Joane Prideaux, who married firstly to William Drewe, secondly to Baldwin Acland of Acland, Landkey, Devon, ancestor of the Acland Baronets. Sharpham descended thenceforth in the Drewe family as follows:
Drewe
William Drewe, 3rd son, of Kenn in Devon, who married a certain Elinor
John Drewe, son, a lawyer of Gray's Inn, who married Joane Cruwys a daughter of a member of the Cruwys family of Cruwys Morchard, Devon.
John Drewe, of St Leonard's, Devon, son and heir and heir to his grandfather. He married twice, firstly to Anne Yorke, daughter of Watkyn Yorke of Devon, secondly to a lady of the Bridges family.
Thomas Drewe, son, of Sharpham and Killerton, Devon, who married Elinor Hackmore, daughter and co-heiress of William Hackmore.
Edward Drewe, son, of Sharpham, a Serjeant-at-Law to Queen Elizabeth I, MP for Lyme Regis 1584, twice for Exeter in 1586 and 1589 and for the prestigious seat of the City of London in 1593. He purchased the estate of The Grange in the parish of Broadhembury, the former grange of Dunkeswell Abbey, where he built himself a new mansion house. He moved his residence to The Grange and sold Sharpham to John Giles of Bowden, an adjacent estate. Edward Drewe married Bridget FitzWilliam of Mablethorpe, Lincolnshire, by whom he had a son and heir Sir Thomas Drewe of The Grange, Sheriff of Devon in 1612, who sold Killerton to Sir Arthur Acland of Acland, Landkey.
Giles
John Giles of Bowden, an adjacent estate in Ashprington, who purchased Sharpham from Edward Drewe. He was the eldest son of William Giles of Bowden by his wife Joane Blackall of Totnes. He married Agnes Stucley, a daughter of Sir Hugh Stucley of Affeton, Devon, Sheriff of Devon in 1545.
Sir Edward Giles, Knight, eldest son and heir, of Bowden, who at the time of the writing of the Survey of Devon by Tristram Risdon, was the owner of Sharpham. He married Mary Drew, daughter and heiress of Edmond Drew of Hayne, Newton St Cyres, Devon, widow of Walter Northcote. He died without children.
Yarde
The Giles family sold Sharpham to the Yarde family of Bradley in the parish of Kingsteignton.
Gilbert Yard, of Sharpham, was MP for Ashburton 1705-7. He was buried at Ashprington. He was the eldest son of Gilbert Yarde of Bradley by his wife Elizabeth Northleigh, daughter of Henry I Northleigh of Peamore, Exminster and sister of Henry II Northleigh of Peamore, three times MP for Okehampton. In 1694/5 he married Joane Blackaller, daughter of Henry Blackaller "of Sharpham".
Gilbert Yarde, son and heir, of Sharpham, living in 1725.
Cockey
In 1748 Sharpham was sold by Gilbert Yard to Philip Cockey, who was seemingly more interested in the resale value of the timber in the park than in the house. The sale particulars described the estate as having extensive woodlands, a mansion house and several walled gardens. These are visible on a survey of 1749. A marriage contract for the sum of £200 dated 1749 survives in Plymouth and West Devon Record Office listing as parties: 1: William Cockey of Totnes, brazier; 2: Elizabeth Hannaford of Totnes, spinster; 3: Philip Cockey of Sharpham, gentleman and Benjamin Blackaller of Totnes, mercer. Another document dated 1763 survives in Cornwall Record Office summarised as follows: Parties: William Shepherd and John Bayly both of Plymouth, merchants, to Philip Cockey of Sharpham, Devon, esquire, Richard Dunning of Plymouth, gentleman, Peter Baron of Stoke Damerel, gentleman and Robert Baron of Plymouth, brazier. Bond in £500 To indemnify against cost of lawsuits concerning Presbyterian church in Plymouth. In 1765 Philip Cockey sold Sharpham to Captain Philemon Pownoll, having previously in 1755 offered a lease on the estate.
Pownoll
Mr Cockey sold it in about 1763 to Captain Philemon Pownoll of the Royal Navy, born in Plymouth and the son of master shipwright Israel Pownoll, master shipwright of Plymouth Dockyard and of Chatham, who had built a large number of warships for the Royal Navy. In 1762 Philemon Pownoll had acquired a fortune of £64,963 having captured a Spanish Galleon, and in about 1770 commenced the building of the present house, completed after his death by his daughter and heiress Jane Pownall.
Bastard
Edmund Bastard, of Kitley, Yealmpton, MP for Dartmouth, who married Jane Pownall, the heiress of Sharpham.
Captain John Bastard, Royal Navy, second son, MP for Dartmouth. While Jane's eldest son Edmund Pollexfen Bastard, MP for Devon, inherited Kitley, her second son inherited Sharpham. He is said to have lost his fortune in gambling.
Durant
Richard Durant purchased Sharpham in 1841, and it remained in the ownership of his descendants until 1940, when the estate was split up and sold, with Avenue Cottage sold separately.
Ash
In 1962 Sharpham House was purchased by Maurice Ash, whose property developer grandfather, Gilbert Ash, had left him a large fortune. He was an environmentalist, writer, and planner. He was chairman of the Town and Country Planning Association and of the Dartington Trust. After World War II his friend Michael Young, later Lord Young of Dartington, introduced him to the Dartington Hall Trust, a design school with craft workshops, established by Leonard Elmhirst and his wealthy American heiress wife Dorothy Whitney, who in the 1920s had purchased the historic estate of Dartington Hall near Totnes and had restored at great expense the manor house and its mediaeval Great Hall. In 1947 Maurice Ash married Ruth Elmhirst, Leonard and Dorothy's daughter. Maurice and Ruth laid out formal gardens at Sharpham to the design of Percy Cane. In 1982 the Sharpham estate was transferred by Mr Ash to a charitable trust known as the Sharpham Trust, and he continued to reside at Sharpham until his death in 2003.
Sharpham Trust
In 1982 Sharpham House was acquired by the Sharpham Trust, still the owner in 2015, an educational charity "whose aims and objectives are to maintain, conserve and enhance the land, buildings, resources and biodiversity of the estate for public benefit; to provide opportunities for physical intellectual emotional and spiritual learning through activity, reflection, creativity and enquiry offering meditative and spiritual retreats in the house and grounds". Sharpham Vineyard is situated within the estate.