The Jewish Chronicle

Just £600k for a stately home with a Jewish past — but it needs a roof!

- BY BEN BLOCH

V IT’S A stately home on sale for £600,000 with no roof, mains water or connection to the grid — but what any brave buyer of this “ultimate doerupper” will get instead is a heart-warming slice of British-Jewish history.

Built in 1703, Trehane House, three miles east of Truro in Cornwall, was gutted by a fire in 1946 but a few years earlier had taken in Austrian Jewish refugees fleeing Hitler. Among them was a well-known concert pianist, according to Jack Dunn, a local living in Newquay at the time who visited with house with his Scout group.

The stately home burned down when a plumber accidental­ly set fire to the attic, and only the walls and two of the four chimney stacks were saved. The house was not insured and reconstruc­tion plans were hampered by the rationing of building materials after the war. After the fire, the then-owners moved into a converted stable block.

Now the ivy-strewn ruins of the historical pile are being touted as the ultimate restoratio­n challenge for someone with a penchant for period property — and a big stack of spare cash.

Lillicrap Chilcott, the estate agents selling the house, describes it as “one of Cornwall’s most beautiful minor county seats” with “south-facing views over formal gardens to miles of unspoilt countrysid­e beyond”.

The agents say that £600,000 was an attractive figure for the ruin and its 5.5 acres. “We’ve already had offers,” Andrew Chilcott told The Times. “Our client has owned it for about 20 years. They had a thought process to do something [about restoratio­n] but it never transpired.”

In an article for a local paper 40 years ago about the Trehane House’s Jewish refugees, Mr Dunn said he encountere­d “quite a number of those refugees”,

some of his own age, and some “considerab­ly older”.

He recounted his memories of some of the Jewish refugees: “One of the older men was a well-known concert pianist.

“Of the younger ones, I only recall one, Fritz, a tall young man with a quick and ready wit, and another called Kurt, who was shorter and goodlookin­g but rather more serious.”

They were believed to have been housed in huts on the grounds of the property, one of which has been restored by the current owner, which he described as a “prefab small army hut”.

Mr Dunn remembers playing games such as darts and dominoes with the men (there were no women among them), but his most vivid memory was of a typically British game of football in the grounds of Trehane: “Whilst my memories of the game are hazy, I do recall that we were well and truly beaten by something like nine goals to nil!”

The constructi­on of the property, which was built using red brick and locally sourced Pentewan stone, began in 1699 and it was completed in 1703.

One notable owner was Captain William Church Stackhouse Pinwill, who inherited the house in 1861. He was serving in the Army in Malaysia at the time but when he returned, he cultivated the gardens with 4,500 plants from around the world.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? In need of modernisat­ion: Trehane House and (below right) Cornishman Jack Dunn, who met the refugees it sheltered. Top right: one of the huts in the grounds where the refugees slept
In need of modernisat­ion: Trehane House and (below right) Cornishman Jack Dunn, who met the refugees it sheltered. Top right: one of the huts in the grounds where the refugees slept

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom