Triley Court
Introduction
The photograph on this page of Triley Court by Andrew Abbott as part of the Geograph project.
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Image: © Andrew Abbott Taken: 14 Mar 2020
Grade II listed. Reference number 87662. From the end of the C14 the manor of Triley had probably been in the ownership of the Morgan family of Llanfihangel Court and their predecessors. It was bought in 1800 by Sir Mark Wood who sold it in c.1820 to Frederick Samuel Secretan, a London merchant of The Paragon, Blackheath. Secretan built the house of Triley Court and called it Arcadia, most probably as a response to the siting of the house in a prominent picturesque landscape setting and the Georgian ideas of classically inspired naturalistic landscapes. Within the service buildings at Triley there is an inscribed stone with the initials 'FSS' and the date 1804 but it is not known if this relates to Secretan and the construction of Arcadia. Secretan died in 1837 and in c1840 his descendants sold Triley to Mr John Neville Fielder and it is shown in a pencil sketch from c1872 as 'The residence of Mrs Fielder'. This sketch shows a square fronted 5-bay house with a central pedimented bay with porch and a further wing set back to the left. It was purchased c.1880 by Thomas Phillips Price, a local landowner, mine owner and Liberal politician. Phillips Price served as MP for North Monmouthshire from 1885 to 1895 and was High Sheriff of Monmouthshire in 1882. He stood down as an MP at the 1895 election and moved to Essex, having sold Triley to Major Eugene Ayshford Sanford. It was auctioned on June 19th 1894 at the Angel Hotel in Abergavenny and was described as having: 'on the first floor eight excellent bed-chambers, dressing-room, two servants' rooms, a secondary staircase, three servants rooms; on the ground floor, entrance hall, inner hall, 37ft by 17ft, with folding doors, drawing room, 27ft by 17ft 6in; dining-room, 27ft by 17ft, with window opening to a charming conservatory paved with Minton tiles; library, 17ft 6in by 17ft; lavatory and cloak-room, servants' hall, complete domestic offices, and ample cellarage, all supplied with excellent water by gravitation; good stabling for five horses, with coach-houses, harness-room, granary, and lofts; coachman's cottage, bailiff's cottage, and farm buildings; gardener's cottage, two labourers' cottages, delightful pleasure grounds and terraces, adorned with...'. It is probable that Philips Price had substantially extended the original house of Arcadia shortly after he purchased it in 1880, adding 3-bay wings to either side of the main double-pile and double-fronted house shown in the 1872 Fielder illustration, possibly re-fronting the earlier block with unifying brickwork. The rear elevation and roof structure shows this sequence of enlargement of the main house with a clear difference in the brickwork and construction of the central (early) and side (later) sections. The service wings and buildings also probably date to this period. Major Sanford is recorded as being resident in 1901 and the stone door surround probably dates to his period of ownership. It later became a nursing home, and was auctioned twice again in 1973 and 1978. By this point the late C19 single pane sash windows of the Philips Price remodelling had been replaced with the current small pane sash windows and other alterations had also taken place. It eventually closed as a nursing home in late 2010 and was redeveloped into residential accommodation.