Tredethy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationSt Mabyn, Cornwall, England
Coordinates50°30′49″N 4°44′07″W / 50.51371°N 4.73533°W / 50.51371; -4.73533
Tredethy
Tredethy House
LocationSt Mabyn, Cornwall, England
Coordinates50°30′49″N 4°44′07″W / 50.51371°N 4.73533°W / 50.51371; -4.73533
Listed Building – Grade II
Official nameTredethy Country House Hotel
Designated16 November 2010
Reference no.1327967
Tredethy is located in Cornwall
Tredethy
Location of Tredethy in Cornwall
Wood at Tredethy

Tredethy is a house and estate in the civil parish of St Mabyn, Cornwall, UK, at Grid reference SX 06 71. It occupies seven acres and is one of a number of small manor houses in the parish all built in the 16th and 17th centuries. The house was extensively restored in 1892 by the prominent Cornish architect Silvanus Trevail.[1]

This was the seat of the Rev. Charles Peters (1690–1774), a Hebrew scholar.[2]

Later it became the home of Prince Chula Chakrabongse of Thailand who married Elizabeth Hunter, an English woman in 1938. Their daughter, Mom Rajawongse Narisa Chakrabhongse, was born in 1956.[3] [4] They lived at Tredethy in the 1940s and 1950s.[5] At Bodmin there is an ornate granite drinking bowl which serves the needs of thirsty dogs at the entrance to Bodmin's Priory car park which was donated by Prince Chula.[6] There is a similar granite drinking bowl at Mitchem’s Corner in Cambridge, donated in 1934 in memory of Prince Chula’s dog called Tony.

In the 1960s Tredethy was converted to a hotel with 11 en-suite bedrooms.[7]

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