Tregoddick House, Madron
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Tregoddick House, Madron

10th March 2009
Tregoddick House
Tregodek/Tregoddick House, Madron

The family was Tregodek, of Tregodek; it is stated to be in South Petherwin (near Launceston).
In The Calendar of French Rolls Henry VI/48;

Protection was given to Thomas Tregodek of Tregodek who was in the retinue of the Duke of York in 1441.
The Visitation gives Tregodeck; other variants exist.
John Tregodeck, was father of John Tregodeck - who married a daughter of a Roscagan;

they were then parents of Thomas Tregodeck who married Jane Beare;

they were parents of Nicholas Tregadeck of Tregadeck -

he was living in 1573, but died before 1603.

He had married Grace Militon of Pengersick, she was the

widow of Nicholas Trefusis. She died in 1603; there were no children and the other males of the family died before 1620.


Lysons states that the Tregodick family were of Tregavethan Manor originally

and they then sold it on retaining the Barton for themselves for a while and it passed to the Laughernes in around 1620.

The whole estate was later demolished and farms and houses were built in their stead.
The name exists Tregodeck in The Clerks and Clergy of Cornwall and Devon 1307-1326; as well as in the State Papers Domestic 1598-1601.
Why an old and well connected family name became used for a house in Madron,

over 200 years later, is a mystery, since family and seat were extinct.

However, the house name (though not this house) existed around 1510, thanks to information kindly supplied by Penzancemaid.

In 1880-1882, the building is mentioned in birth registers as being occupied by Harold Marshall, Curate of Madron.

Raymond Forward
COURTENAY, John b: ABT 1510 in Of Upcott Manor , Cheriton Fitzpaine near Crediton, Devonshire, England and Tregoddick House near Penzance, Parish of Madron, Co Cornwall, England

CandP d from a Rootsweb page after a Google search for Tregoddick House.
 
Thank you very much for that, may well be interesting to follow through a bit more on that, though I doubt it could be more rewarding than Captain Sir Christopher Cole. I have just written to the College of Heralds. Curious, the house itself is obviously much later - sash windows, stonework, roof pitch etc, much much later. But, the name was definitely here, must check out the Visitations.
 
A few notes and gleanings on the Tregodeck family added above; I have not found a connection to this house. The family and their Seat became extinct c1620, as well as any reference to the name or in property.
 
Right, looking at the Courtenays of Powderham, there are such sons born of Sir James of Upcott and Ann Bassett of Umberleigh. James and John were sons of that marriage. Very interesting - it would appear that they took the name down to Madron.... more perhaps ... ?
 
It now transpires that Ann Bassett was born in 1493 at Tregoddick House, Madron; she then married James Courtenay of Upcott; James died in 1572 at Tregoddick House in Madron. Therefore the name of Tregoddick House came from the Bassett family, and a house existed in Madron before 1490, which could well mean a tie in directly to the Tregodek family of S Petherwin. ... more searching in the Visitations.
 
Solution ... Penwith lands were acquired by Alan Bassett and Gilbert Bassett in 1236; it therefore has to be assumed that the Bassetts had acquired lands in Madron from the hands of the Tregodek family upon the incorporation of acquisition of Tehidy. Ann Bassett s parents had clearly moved to Tregoddick House, as they had two daughters there. This could not have been a simple cottage and must have been quite a country house. Her father was Sir John Bassett (Knight) of Umberleigh in Devon. Her mother was Ann Dennys of Orleigh in Devon. There would be no other reason for them to have taken residence so far from home.
 
The property was that of the Tregodek family long before 1236, the family held other property throughout Cornwall, eventually becoming extinct as a family name c1620. Either the Bassetts built the original house, and named it after the previous land owners, or it was older and retained the family name. Since family names did not exist until well after the Conquest, it means this is very old property, such names introduced around 1110. The sites near Launceston and Alverton are not mentioned in the Domesday Book, which is not surprising (Tregardock on the north coast is mentioned, held by Alfward, who also held Alverton); the first record of the family appears to be c1310 (Edward II); distances of that time were measured in days and the degree of ability to travel by sea, or on horseback over rough terrain, with its itinerant dangers. To own property by descent and marriage, involved having tenant masters of the house/land acquired. At that time, there was no pier at the settlement which was to become Pen Sans. I would suggest that the family originated in Tregardock, which still exists north of Port Isaac, since surnames were awarded according to locale and occupation. I would suggest that the Tregodek family had found favour with their master Alfward (or whatever subsequent land owner there was) and were rewarded by property from Alfward s land (which was passed on to other masters of The Crown).
The house that was Tregoddick House in 1493 may well have been in the Norman tradition; in any event there must have been a number of different houses on the site; the existing house gives the appearance of being 1830 or so.
 
Treguddick Manor still exists to the west of Launceston, it is a typical manor house of c1580-1590, with label mouldings over the windows. John Norden states that in c1593 it was owned by Nicholas Tregoddick and by later by Richard Tregoddick; at that time also there was a Thomas Smith in the Manor. Carew mantions a Mr Tregodecke as living there, in an enviable mediocritie of fortune.
 
@Treeve.

Taken from West Penwith Resources -Baptisms
4 Mar 1880 Harold Marshall c/o John Marshall and Elizabeth Morrell (Curate of Madron)
of Tregoddick, Madron Private Baptism.
Also:
2 Apr 1882 John Marshall c/o John Marshall and Elizabeth Morrell (Clerk in Holy Orders)
of Tregoddick, Madron Private Baptism.
 

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