Country Life

Any fort in a storm

Interestin­g coastal houses for sale include a formerly piratical home on the Helford, a hidden, creekside recording studio and three Napoleonic-era forts

- Penny Churchill

TODAY sees the launch onto the market, for the first time in 41 years, of historic, Grade Ii-listed Trerose Manor at Mawnan on Rosemullio­n Head, which overlooks Falmouth Bay and the Helford River estuary in Cornwall. For sale through Falmouth-based Jonathan Cunliffe (01326 617447) at a guide price of £1.95 million, the story of Trerose Manor is the story of the families—some distinguis­hed, others less so—who have owned it over the years.

The ancient manor of Trerose—‘the house on the headland’—once included much of Mawnan parish and extended upriver. Here, following the departure of the Romans from Britain, Helford’s heavily wooded creeks and inlets provided a safe haven for the native Cornish, who dodged the advance of Anglosaxon invaders by stealthily escaping, under sail or oar, via the Helford to Brittany. Centuries later, some returned with William the Conqueror to reclaim their stolen lands.

Smuggling and piracy were a way of life for many of Cornwall’s great seafaring families,

Smuggling and piracy were a way of life for many of Cornwall’s great seafaring families

among them the Killigrews of Arwenack in Falmouth, who acquired Trerose in the late 1500s. Despite their notoriety, the Crown was usually prepared to turn a blind eye to such activities in return for Cornish support when invasion threatened.

Between 1540 and 1545, Henry VIII built Pendennis Castle and St Mawes Castle to protect the River Fal and the Carrick Roads against invasion by France and Spain and appointed Sir John Killigrew as the first governor of Pendennis Castle. The Helford estuary, however, was never fortified, which no doubt facilitate­d the Killigrew family’s nefarious activities. In the case of the second Sir John, who succeeded his father as governor, these included cattle theft, ‘evil usage in keeping of a castle’ and using his office of piracy commission­er to trade with the pirates and smugglers who frequented the coast he controlled from the castle.

In 1635, Sir William Killigrew sold Trerose to Sir Nicholas Slanning, who also succeeded him as governor of Pendennis Castle. A Royalist commander during the Civil War, he was killed at the battle of Bristol in 1643. In 1675, Trerose was sold to Brian Rogers, a merchant of Falmouth, and, for the next 300 years, was owned by a number of prominent local families before the current owners acquired the house in 1979.

The present house is a smaller 18th-century reconstruc­tion of a much larger manor house of 13th-century origin, the architectu­ral elements of which can apparently still be seen. Extended in two or three phases in the 19th century, the manor is now L-shaped in format, with the reception rooms and all five bedrooms overlookin­g the dreamy, part-walled gardens.

Trerose Manor is set on a particular­ly beautiful stretch of the South West Coast Path, with footpaths leading down to the beach or up towards Durgan, where Trebah and Glendurgan are among the country’s most celebrated exotic gardens open to the public.

Moving east up the coast to Fowey, it’s only a short boat-ride from there to what is surely Cornwall’s most unusual waterside property, The Old Sawmills. This stands in its own private inlet on the western bank of the River Fowey, between the quaint village of Golant and the town.

Set amid 32 acres of private woodland with no road access, The Old Sawmills is for sale for the first time in 48 years, through the Exeter office of Strutt & Parker (01392 215631) at a guide price of £2.25m.

In medieval times, the hidden creek, known as Bodmin Pill, was used by merchants as a landing point to avoid paying landing dues upriver at Lostwithie­l, the ancient county capital. The Old Sawmills is also thought to have provided author Kenneth Grahame, a regular visitor to Fowey, with inspiratio­n for The Wind in the Willows on a picnic to the creek in May 1907. In 1943, the site was requisitio­ned by the US Army in the run-up to the D-day landings.

 ??  ?? Set on a beautiful stretch of the South West Coast Path, Grade Ii-listed Trerose Manor overlooks Falmouth Bay and the Helford estuary on Rosemullio­n Head, Cornwall. £1.95m
Set on a beautiful stretch of the South West Coast Path, Grade Ii-listed Trerose Manor overlooks Falmouth Bay and the Helford estuary on Rosemullio­n Head, Cornwall. £1.95m
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 ??  ?? Above: The Old Sawmills stands in a private inlet on the River Fowey, Cornwall. £2.25m Below: The immaculate Georgian-style Lea House near Lymington, Hampshire. £8.5m
Above: The Old Sawmills stands in a private inlet on the River Fowey, Cornwall. £2.25m Below: The immaculate Georgian-style Lea House near Lymington, Hampshire. £8.5m

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