Heligan estate

For Helligan, in the civil parish of St Mabyn, North Cornwall, see St Mabyn.

The Heligan estate (/hɛˈlɪɡən/; Cornish: Helygen, meaning willow tree) was the ancestral home of the Tremayne family near Mevagissey in Cornwall, England. The family also held property in the form of another roughly 2000-acre estate and various estates in Sydenham near Marystow in Devon.

History

Heligan House

Heligan (meaning "willows" in Cornish) is first recorded in the 12th century.[1] The estate was bought by Sampson Tremayne in 1659.[2] Heligan House was built by William Tremayne in 1603 in Jacobean style,[2] but only the basement of that house remains. The house was substantially rebuilt in 1692 by Sir John Tremayne (1647–1694) in William and Mary style [2] and extended in 1810 and 1830. Unusually for Cornwall, the house is built of brick.[1]

Gardens

Rev. Henry Hawkins Tremayne; by Henry Bone

The members of the family who developed the garden were:

The estate was let out after the First World War. The house was divided into flats and sold in the 1970s.[2] The garden remained in the ownership of the Tremayne family, but was not maintained. It was rediscovered and rescued in a televised project in 1996.[4] The Lost Gardens of Heligan are now a major visitor attraction.

References

  1. 1 2 Lost Gardens of Heligan on Mevagissey website
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Our Timeline". Lost Gardens of Heligan. Retrieved 1 January 2011.
  3. A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain 1863, p.1535: Tremayne descent.
  4. "The Tremaynes and the Gardens at Heligan" in Philip McMillan Browse (Editor) Heligan survivors: an introduction to some of the historic plantstock discovered in the "Lost gardens of Heligan", Penzance, Alison Hodge (2007) ISBN 978-0-906720-53-0, pp.4-5

Coordinates: 50°17′N 4°48′W / 50.283°N 4.800°W / 50.283; -4.800

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