Newton Ferrers House Explained

Newton Ferrers House
Type:Country House
Map Relief:yes
Coordinates:50.4695°N -4.331°W
Location:Newton Ferrers, St Mellion, Cornwall
Builder:Sir William Coryton, 3rd Baronet
Built:1685-95
Architecture:Restoration style
Governing Body:Privately owned
Designation1:Grade I listed building
Designation1 Offname:Newton Ferrers House
Designation1 Date:21 July 1951
Designation1 Number:1140810
Designation2:Grade I listed building
Designation2 Offname:Gatepiers and garden wall to the south-west of Newton Ferrers House
Designation2 Date:26 November 1985
Designation2 Number:1277594
Designation3:Grade I listed building
Designation3 Offname:Gatepiers and garden wall to the south-east of Newton Ferrers House
Designation3 Date:26 November 1985
Designation3 Number:1140812
Designation4:Grade I listed building
Designation4 Offname:Gatepiers to the south of Newton Ferrers House
Designation4 Date:26 November 1985
Designation4 Number:1140813
Designation5:Grade I listed building
Designation5 Offname:Terrace to the south of Newton Ferrers House
Designation5 Date:21 July 1951
Designation5 Number:1312304
Designation6:Grade II* listed building
Designation6 Offname:Two statues on the terrace to the south of Newton Ferrers House
Designation6 Date:21 July 1951
Designation6 Number:1137482

Newton Ferrers House, Newton Ferrers, St Mellion, Cornwall was built by Sir William Coryton, a lawyer and politician. The house was built between 1685-95 and was one of the earliest in Cornwall to move from a Tudor to a Classical style. A private house, it is a Grade I listed building.

History

William Cortyon was a lawyer who entered politics after the death of his elder brother John in 1690. As well as inheriting his brother's parliamentary seat, the rotten borough of Callington, he succeeded to the family estate of Newton Ferrers. At around this time, he undertook the building of a new house on the estate, rejecting the traditional inspiration of the county's many Medieval and Tudor manor houses in favour of the Restoration style. The mansion replaced an earlier such house which had stood on an adjacent site prior to its demolition.

The direct Coryton line died out in the 18th century and in the 1880s the house was restored by Sir Digby Collins, who served as High Sheriff of Cornwall in 1887. In 1940 a disastrous fire gutted over half of the house, including the whole of the west wing. This was left unrestored in a partial reconstruction in the 1950s. In the late 1990s, a complete rebuilding of the entire house was undertaken.[1] Newton Ferrers remains a private residence and is not open to the public.

Architecture and description

The house is of two storeys with a basement. The building material is local granite, with a slate roof. This was originally all to a hipped design but that covering the central block was subsequently replaced with a flat roof and parapet. One of the earliest in Cornwall to be built to a Classical design, Coryton's unknown architect adopted a Restoration style H-plan, with small adjoining wings. The main interior rooms are laid out on a piano nobile, with the saloon occupying the three central bays of the south front. The gardens to the south of the house descend in a series of contemporary terraces into the valley of the River Lynher.

Historic listing designations

Newton Ferrers House is listed at Grade I on Historic England's National Heritage Record. Three sets of gatepiers and walls are also listed at Grade I. The terrace to the south of the house has its own Grade I listing, and a pair of statues set on it are listed at Grade II*. The wider estate contains a further nine designated structures, all listed at Grade II. These include a range of ancillary buildings; the stables, a barn, a bakehouse, a garage and a well-house; a further set of garden walls to the north-east; and three further statues on the terraces.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Newton Ferrers Estate. Mark Robinson & Sons, stonemasons. 27 October 2024.