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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Lisa Letcher & Sam Elliott-Gibbs

Residents fear being evicted as stunning Cornish village goes on the market for £16m

The battle of Trevalga is raging as residents of a stunning Cornish village fear eviction after the entire 1,200-acre estate was put up for sale.

A fierce historical fight is going on for a second time at the tiny hamlet nestled between the towns of Boscatle and Tintagel in the south west.

At least twelve households fear eviction, but have vowed to put up a fight, CornwallLive reports.

Trevalga was placed in a will trust more than 60 years ago when Gerald Curgenven, owner of the estate until his death in 1959, left it in trust to Marlborough College.

The trust was created so the estate could be preserved and improved 'and as far as possible not sold or broken up'.

The residents made their point after discovering their homes are to be sold (CORNWALL LIVE/BPM MEDIA)

It consists of six let farms and 17 further houses and cottages, some of which are vacant, together with a range of miscellaneous property including barns with planning potential.

Previously, in 2010, the college tried to sell the estate after receiving legal advice that the trust was invalid because it did not have an end date or ultimate beneficiary.

The sale was halted after residents received their own legal advice suggesting the college's position was wrong.

The last Lord of Trevalga Manor, Gerald Curgenven, died in 1959 (CORNWALL LIVE/BPM MEDIA)

The trust was then formally registered with the Charity Commission as the Gerald Curgenven Will Trust. It has since been run by three trustees and tenants believed the estate was safe from any future sale until now.

Tenants had their worlds turned upside down on June 24, when they received a letter saying that it would be put on the market, with a guide price of £15,750,000.

The tenants kept quiet initially, believing their tenancies would stand with a new owner after being told the sale was "inevitable".

When the listing for the estate finally appeared, however, there was no mention of keeping the shorthold tenants in their homes, some of which are families who have lived there for generations.

They began to fear the possibility of a no fault eviction if the estate entered the wrong hands.

The listing describes the estate as "a remarkable, private ring-fenced estate on the north coast of Cornwall with varied income streams and a myriad of leisure, amenity and redevelopment opportunities."

Serena Partrick, Trevalga resident and chief campaigner, said: "There are so many questions that need answering, and we have so little time, money or power.

"They hold all the cards, and people in the village are terrified of what is to come. As am I. For my sister, my nephews, my community, me.

"Many people these days talk of the death of God leaving a vacuum in modern life, but what about the loss of community?

"Modern families are dispersed all over the world, where people used to share a street with them for their whole lives. People barely know their neighbours.

Residents are fighting to stop the sale of the estate - which was gifted in a will (CORNWALL LIVE/BPM MEDIA)

"I have known the majority of people in Trevalga from before I could talk. They are as familiar as the sky, and just as comforting. This is my home. This is our home. And I will do whatever I must to protect it."

A spokesman for Marlborough College has explained that the sale is being handled by the trustees, who are liaising with Savills, and says that it is nothing to do with the college.

A Savills spokesperson said: 'The sale is subject to all existing tenancies with the security of tenants remaining unchanged. The trustees have explored thoroughly the future of the estate within the trust structure that binds them and have concluded it is time for there to be a new owner not so constrained."

A petition has been launched by residents fighting to have the sale reflect the true intentions of the late Gerald Curgenven, who left the estate to the college as he had no children or heirs.

It reads: "There are no second homes in Trevalga, no holiday cottages, no properties emptied of tenants to establish Airbnbs. Few Cornish villages can say the same.

"However, in more recent years the trustees started to use short hold tenancies and now many people in Trevalga are vulnerable to eviction should the sale go ahead.

"We are a thriving, diverse, rural community, and this sale will devastate us. It is incredible that the trustees would do this during a national housing crisis, with over 21,000 people in Cornwall on our housing waiting list."

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