Caernarfon Herald

Back from the brink – just look at us now

-

Bodysgalle­n, near Llandudno, is believed to have begun life as a watch- tower for Conwy Castle, probably in the C13th, to warn of surprise attack.

It was not until late in the Elizabetha­n era, when it was owned by Richard Mostyn, who served as High Sheriff of Caernarvon­shire, that it became a house, surrounded by one of the fin- ARWYN ROBERTS est arts and crafts gardens in Wales.

The mansion suffered from decline in the 20th Century before it was bought by Historic House Hotels, who first restored it in 1980 after years of neglect. They then gave it to the National Trust in 2008 to maintain its unique character.

It now attracts thousands of guests every year - giving a major boost to the local economy.

Gwydir Castle is an ancient Welsh house situated in the beautiful Conwy Valley.

It is regarded as one of the finest Tudor houses in Wales, the castle was formerly the ancestral home of the powerful Wynn family.

In 1895 a cousin, Charles Wynn Carrington, later Marquis of Lincolnshi­re, bought Gwydir which he used as his primary seat until he sold the castle and its contents in 1921.

After a fire in the Solar Tower the following year, the house fell into derelictio­n, and after passing through several ownerships it was purchased in 1944 by Arthur Clegg.

He commenced a restoratio­n of the house, which his son Richard continued after his father’s death in 1964. However, by the late 1980s the castle had once more fallen into a state of derelictio­n.

Peter Welford and Judy Corbett bought Gwydir Castle in 1994, and since then have undertaken the restoratio­n of both house and garden.

Its restoratio­n has taken over 20 years and is still a work-in-progress by its current owners. It is now open to visitors and welcomes B&B guests.

The earlier part of the present mansion at Plas Coch was built by Dafydd Llwyd, an Anglesey lawyer living in London, in 1569.

It was remodelled later in the last decade of the sixteenth century by his son Hugh Hughes, attorney general for North Wales from 1587, in a distinctiv­e earlier Renaissanc­e style with ornate crow-stepped gables.

The house close to the Menai Strait later fell into disrepair but was redevelope­d in 2008-9 by Donald Insall Associates and is the centrepiec­e of the exclusive Plas Coch Holiday Park.

In 1682, Joshua Edisbury was appointed High Sheriff of Denbighshi­re; it was to be the making of Erddig, and the unmaking of Edisbury.

Edisbury chose the dramatic site on an escarpment above the winding River Clywedog a mile south of Wrexham to build Erddig.

Work began in 1684 on a house, nine bays wide. But he overstretc­hed himself and by 1709 was bankrupt.

John Meller, a successful London lawyer, bought up the debts of Joshua Edisbury. He began extending it to the north and south by the addition of two-storey wings, his ‘rooms of parade’.

He then bequeathed the house to

 ??  ?? The Tudor Gwydyr Castle, Llanrwst
The Tudor Gwydyr Castle, Llanrwst
 ??  ?? The lake at Erddig
The lake at Erddig

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom