WELCOME TO STROAT

WELCOME TO STROAT.
If YOU have ANY information on the village of Stroat
PLEASE contact the blog owner as soon as possible
for it to be added:
Greg_L-W@BTconnect.com

For A MAP CLICK HERE

Material on this blog has been gathered from material which is readily available in the public domain or has been generously provided by both named & un-named individuals.

The information has been aggregated on this blog to help residents, visitors and members of the public seeking information.

We hope you find the information of help and hope if you are aware of facts we have missed out that you will consider sending the details to the blog for inclusion.

We would really appreciate it if you have ANY relevant old photographs, anecdotes or history pertaining to Stroat which you would be prepared to share.

Thank you to all who have helped so far.

Thursday, 18 August 2011

STROAT HOUSE A Growing History!

 STROAT HOUSE A Growing History!

Stroat House

It is believed that Stroat House was built between 1680 and 1690 and it has a most interesting provenance, thought to have only changed ownership five times in its long history.
 
1700
 
1750
STROAT HOUSE and an estate were owned by Somerset Jones, Vicar of Tidenham (d. 1769); 
 
1776 after his death it was held by his widow who married his successor in the vicarage William Seys, who lived at Stroat House until his death in 1802. 
 
Margaret Griffiths abt 1800 Chepstow, Monmouth, Wales Sister in Law Stroat House, Tidenham, Gloucestershire, England
 
John Read abt 1811 Bourton, Dorset, England Head Stroat House, Tidenham, Gloucestershire, England 
 
The estate passed to Anne, daughter of Somerset Jones, and her husband Charles James of London who died in 1818. 

1830 - One of the owners was a Captain Fenton who purchased the property in 1830. He was considered something of a hero seeing action in the Peninsula Wars and waterloo with the 4th Dragoons and Scots Greys. It is believed that he used prize money from Waterloo to 'gentrify' the façade of Stroat House adding fashionable quoining, the classical pediment over the front door and archway in the stone wall to the front.

This series of letters by Thomas Fenton are held at the Somerset Record Office, references DD/COL 53 Fenton Family and DD/HY 15/6/23 correspondence from George Horton-Fawkes to the 4th Bart. The Somerset Record Office have graciously given permission for me to publish these letters.


Thomas Charles Fenton was the son of James Fenton of Loversall and Grinton who married Thomasina Ibbetson of Denton Park. He was one of ten children, his elder siblings were Thomasina, Jane, Mary Anne, Isabella (Bell) and William Carr Henry; his younger siblings being Harriet, Elizabeth, George and Edward.

Thomas Charles Fenton was born in 1790 and became a Cornet at the age of fourteen in the 4th (Queen�s Own) Dragoons by purchase on 13 November 1804 and rose to lieutenant in the same regiment on 22 July 1806 and captain by purchase on 2 January 1812. As such Fenton sailed to the Peninsula in 1809 and saw action throughout the war, at Talavera, Busaco, Usagre, Albuera, Villagarcia, Salamanca, Vitoria and Toulouse. Returning home in 1814, Fenton went on half pay, but transferred to the 2nd (Royal North British) Dragoons, or Scots Greys and commanded a troop at the Battle of Waterloo. Despite all these adventures Fenton miraculously came through these campaigns without wound or serious illness, a fortunate man indeed, or was it his hardy Yorkshire upbringing?

Fenton married Harriet Rooke in 1817 and retired from the army in 1819, living at Stroat House, Tidenham, near Chepstow. The couple had at least one son, Charles Hamilton Fenton who married Mary Isabella Salmon in 1846.

With all the Peninsula memoirs being uncovered; is there anything unique about Fenton's letters? The simple answer is yes, very much. Despite having served with Wellington throughout almost the whole of the Peninsular War, virtually nothing is known of their service, because no memoir of this regiment has ever been published previously. It therefore pains me to mention that I have in my possession transcripts of two sets of letters from this regiment, the second set being that of Fenton's friend and colleague Lieutenant Norcliffe Norcliffe, whom I have been able to use to verify facts and also to quote sparingly to flesh out incidents briefly mentioned by Fenton. Unfortunately however, the owners of Norcliffe's letters have declined all requests to publish the letters in full. It is hoped that they will reconsider this decision in due course.

Letters and memoirs of the heavy dragoons in Spain are particularly rare and these letters are therefore of immense value, describing not only their actions in battle, but much of the mundane marching, patrolling and screening that took up much of their time.

It is therefore a great privilege to be able to publish these letters to aid significantly our understanding of the role of the heavy dragoons in the Peninsular War.

In 1843 the estate, which then included 226 a., was owned by Mary Webb. 



Stroat House
1851
1861
1866 Elizabeth Etkins abt 1866 Woolastone, Gloucestershire, England Servant Stroat House, Tidenham, Gloucestershire, England
1870 Post Office Directory give Charles Higgins esq. at Stroat House
1871


Bessie J. Brown abt 1872 Bristol Adapted Child Stroat House, Tidenham, Gloucestershire, England

1881


Martha M. Read abt 1837 Chepstow, Monmouth, Wales Daughter Stroat House, Tidenham, Gloucestershire, England
Sarah M. Read abt 1805 Chepstow, Monmouth, Wales Wife Stroat House, Tidenham, Gloucestershire,
1891
Read, Martha M abt 1836 Chepstow, Monmouthshire, Wales Head Tidenham Gloucestershire
1901
Martha M Read abt 1836 Chepstow, Monmouthshire, Wales Head Tidenham Gloucestershire

Stroat House

by Slowhand-s @, Friday, June 17, 2005, 02:57 (2253 days ago) @ Slowhand-s
http://www.findaproperty.com/agent.aspx?agentid=3436&opt=prop&pid=215746 for Sale £975,000
 Stroat House, a three-storied house faced in rough-cast with stone dressings, dates from the earlier 18th century. It has an ornate road front, divided into three bays by rusticated pilasters, with a modillion cornice, and stone quoins to the angles and window openings. The central doorway is surmounted by a fan-light and a pedimented hood on shaped brackets; above it the windows to both floors are roundheaded, but elsewhere the windows are paired sashes, all retaining their wide glazing-bars. The staircase, the staircase window, and an archway in the hall are of the original date.

C1961 - The garden front of the house was remodelled c. 1961. The pedimented stone gateway to the forecourt, contemporary with the house, was moved when the road was widened.
From: 'Tidenham including Lancaut: Manors and other estates', A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume X: Westbury and Whitstone Hundreds (1972), pp. 62-8. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=15758. Date accessed: 14 June 2005.

Stroat House

by slowhands :-) @, Sunday, July 03, 2005, 06:19 (2237 days ago) @ Slowhand-s
For those in the UK - or with access to a UK edition of Saturday 2nd July 2005 Daily Mail, there is an article about Stroat House and the current owners...( the on-line Daily Mail does not appear to have the article - sorry)

Some of the above detail is with thanks to Archer & Co. of Chepstow
also:


The Forest of Dean Family History Research Forum CLICK HERE
Details on Thomas Fenton CLICK HERE


WELCOME TO STROAT. If YOU have ANY information on the villiage of Stroat PLEASE contact the blog owner as soon as possible for it to be added.
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2 comments:

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  2. Hello, I am the author Mary S Lovell who was married to Geoffrey Watts. If you have any questions you could ask - I did some research andmay be able to help. www.marylovell.com

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