Place House
Coordinates: 50°20′10″N 4°38′13″W / 50.336°N 4.637°W
Place House | |
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Place House seen from the river - to the right of the church. | |
Place House Place House shown within Cornwall | |
OS grid reference | SX123518 |
Place House is a Grade I listed building located in Fowey, Cornwall, England.
Home of the Treffry family since the thirteenth century, the original structure was a fifteenth-century tower, which was defended against the French in 1475 by Dame Elizabeth Treffry. It was strengthened soon afterwards, largely rebuilt in the sixteenth century and remodelled in the nineteenth century, the east front dating mostly from 1817-45.[1][2]
After the death in 1808 of William Esco Treffry, it was inherited together with the family estates by his nephew Joseph Thomas Austen, who changed his name by deed poll to Joseph Treffry.
Not open to the public, the best view of the tower is from beside the River Fowey.
References
Bibliography
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Place House, Fowey. |
- Higham, Robert A., 1999, 'Castles, Fortified Houses and Fortified Towns in the Middle Ages' in Kain, R. and Ravenhill, W., Historical Atlas of South-West England (University of Exeter Press) p136-43
- Salter, Mike, 1999, The Castles of Devon and Cornwall (Malvern) p20
- King, D.J.C., 1983, Castellarium Anglicanum (London: Kraus) Vol1 p78
- Pevsner, N. revised by Enid Radcliffe, 1970, Buildings of England: Cornwall (Harmondsworth) p58-9
- Turner, T. H. and Parker, J. H., 1859, Some account of Domestic Architecture in England (Oxford) Vol3 pt2 p361
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