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Trerelffe a Late Victorian Red Brick Villa - Ballarat

Built of red brick, "Trerelffe is a grand late Victorian villa that may be found in the Victorian provincial city of Ballarat.

 

Built between 1893 and 1894 for Ballarat boot merchant, Francis Jago, "Trerelffe" is built in Victorian Free Classical style. "Trerelffe" has many ornamental features of the architectural movement including; a deliberately asymmetrical facade, excellent stone masonry detailing and classical motifs across the facade. The smart villa has a very prominent bay window with grandly proportioned windows, which suggests that the rooms inside "Trerelffe" have extremely high ceilings. The house also features intricate wrought iron lacework and paired columns along the verandah. The roof features its original slate tiles and has been carefully capped. The tall chimneys have been rendered and have ornamental capping.

 

Francis Jago was born in 1834 in Brighton, England. There is a house in Devon called "Trerelffe" which he may have chanced to pass in his travels before leaving England, and may have inspired him to name his new home after it. Mr. Jago migrated to Australia in 1860 and established a boot making shop in Skipton Street Ballarat around 1866. In later years, Mr. Jago's successful business (now a boot merchants) moved to the corner of Sturt and Bridge Streets, and continued to prosper into the Twentieth Century, even beyond Mr. Jago's passing. Mr. Jago died in 1903 and is buried in the nearby Ballarat Old Cemetery, where his remains lie alongside his wife Jane, who died, sadly, in 1884, ten years before "Trerelffe's" completion.

 

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Uploaded on March 10, 2014
Taken on January 14, 2013