Robert Trewhella


Robert Trewhella was a railway engineer from Cornwall, England.

Origins

Robert Trewhella II was born in Cornwall, in the parish of Ludgvan and was christened there on 30 May 1830. He was a son of Robert Trewheela I of Cockwells in the parish of Ludgvan, a miner and farmer, by his first wife Mary Repper, whom he married in 1815 at Ludgvan.
Little is recorded regarding the history of the Trewhella family. The historic estate of "Trewhella" is situated in the parish of St Hilary, 3 miles east of Ludgvan, in an area containing many former mines, most notably Wheal Fortune. A certain James Trewhella, in 1633 a churchwarden of Towednack, the parish on the east side of Ludgvan, is represented as one of two profile busts sculpted on surviving wooden bench ends in that church. It has been proposed that his son was Matthew Trewhella, a choirboy with a beautiful voice who in the legend of the Mermaid of Zennor, was abducted from the parish of Zennor into the sea by a mermaid, which legendary creature is sculpted on the surviving Mermaid Chair in St Senara's Church, Zennor, constructed from two 15th century bench ends.

Career

He studied civil engineering and worked with the famous engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel. Between 1850 and 1860, Trewhella was invited by the Italian government to participate in the construction of the infrastructure of the country. He moved to Italy, designing and building railways, roads and bridges, including the seventy-mile line between Florence and Bologna through the rugged Apennine Mountains. He built various railways in Sicily, including the Circumetnea line around Mount Etna, and the Palermo–Corleone line. He acquired land and sulphur mines, and built the first great hotel in Palermo, the Excelsior, where, in 1903 he received King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra as his guests. He is associated in some manner with the Palazzo Trewhella, 91-103 Via Garibaldi, on the south side of that street, west of the junction with Via Santa Chiara, Catania, a large 18th century apartment block surrounding a central courtyard.

Builds Villa Sant’Andrea

He built the Villa Sant’Andrea on the beach in the Bay of Mazzarò below Taormina, Sicily, as his summer house. In 1919 the villa was completed by his son Percy Trewhella, whose daughter Gwendoline Trewhella and her husband Major Ivor Manley transformed it in 1950 into the present well-known hotel. Ivor Manley was attached as an intelligence corps officer to the US 5th Army during the 1943 Allied invasion which recaptured Sicily and Italy from German occupation, and he personally recovered possession of Villa Sant’Andrea which had been used as an officer's mess for the staff of Field Marshal Albert Kesselring whose HQ was at the Hotel San Domenico in Taormina.

Marriage & issue

On 2 January 1862 at Leghorn in Italy, he married Kate Lucy Thrupp, an Englishwoman whom he met in Sicily. His brother John Trewhella "of Penzance", Cornwall, also a railway engineer, married her sister Anna Maria Thrupp and died at Sorrento, Italy. By his wife he had issue including:
He died at 19 Viale Margherita, his mansion in Catania, Sicily, on 6 February 1909 and was buried in the Protestant Cemetery, Rome.