History in Structure

Llynon Hall

A Grade II Listed Building in Tref Alaw, Isle of Anglesey

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.334 / 53°20'2"N

Longitude: -4.5036 / 4°30'13"W

OS Eastings: 233386

OS Northings: 384820

OS Grid: SH333848

Mapcode National: GBR HM7W.RSG

Mapcode Global: WH42B.SGLF

Plus Code: 9C5Q8FMW+HG

Entry Name: Llynon Hall

Listing Date: 5 April 1971

Last Amended: 14 March 2001

Grade: II

Source: Cadw

Source ID: 5288

Building Class: Domestic

ID on this website: 300005288

Location: Set back, within private grounds, from the W side of the country road between Bodedern and Llanrhyddlad; the hall is located c1.25km SW of the Church of St Marcellus and St Marcellinus in the village

County: Isle of Anglesey

Town: Holyhead

Community: Tref Alaw

Community: Tref Alaw

Locality: Llanddeusant

Traditional County: Anglesey

Tagged with: House

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Llanfaethlu

History

C18 gentry house with early C19 remodelling including addition of wings to south. The hall is recorded as having been bought by John Owen in 1727, but after a disastrous election in 1741 he was forced to sell some of his estate and Llynon Hall was bought by Herbert Jones. The hall formed the estate centre for the Jones family, related by marriage to those of Bodewryd, Presaddfed, Gwredog and Myfyrian. Herbert Jones (1720-1767) was a naval surgeon and his nephew, another Herbert (1756-1803) was sympathetic to the Methodist cause and provided land for the first chapel in Amlwch in 1777. By the time of the 1841 Census and Tithe apportionment the hall was owned by Humphrey Stanley Jones and was an extensive farmstead of over 228 acres (92.34 hectares); it was probably under his ownership that the estate prospered, new houses were built (Ty'r-felin by Melin Llynon) and the hall was remodelled. By 1851, however, the hall was no longer within the Jones family and was owned by Stephen Roose; later it became home to Evan Thomas, renowned 'bonesetter' of Cilmaenan, Llanfaethlu, who lived there until 1872. In 1898 the hall was sold to Thomas George Kendall of Holyhead, General Manager of the Dublin Steam Packet (which carried the Royal Mail to Ireland); he died in 1906 and in 1945 the hall was sold to Major Harold Owen and his wife.

Exterior

C18 gentry house with C19 remodelling, including the additon of the canted bays and wings to S; 2-storeys, built to a double pile plan, aligned N-S, with 2 parallel service wings in line to S end, that to E with single storey block at S gable. The main house has rendered elevations throughout, exposed gables at S end of the service wings (and single storey block) of rubble masonry construction. Slate roofs. The house has tall gable chimneys to S and a further axial chimney along the N ridge; grouped rendered stone chimneys with octagonal shafts and moulding capping. The service wings have tall rectangular rendered axial chimneys; grouped stacks with corbelled capping.
The entrance elevation faces E, remodelled in early C19, smooth rendered with ashlar scoring. Central entrance between full height canted bays. Bays have 12-pane hornless sash windows, those to front with side panes; slate sills and string course. Entrance has pilasters with quasi-gothic panels and side lights with lozenge panes. Added glazed porch. Two tall first floor lights and brick nogged eaves course. The N return elevation is a 2-window range of 12-pane hornless sash windows with slate sills; ground floor Venetian windows with recessed hoodmoulds, first floor with cambered heads set directly under the eaves. Rear (E) elevation is a 6-window range; 12-pane hornless sash windows with cambered heads and slate sills on each floor and doorway in a gabled timber porch.
The added service wing to S continues on the same alignment though with a slightly lower roof line: A 4-window range, the left hand bay (L of an axial stack) has taller 12-pane sashes; 3 windows to right are PVCu windows replacing 12-pane sashes, modern conservatory to ground floor.
The return (S) gables each have single first floor windows, a 16-pane hornless sash set directly under the eaves between. The front (E) elevation of the E service wing is a 3-window range with large 16-pane sash windows to L (S) and 2 smaller 4-pane sash windows offset to the R (N); doorway below, the entrance beyond a rubblestone wall set at an angle to the main house, the entrance to the yard in a round headed arch, fanlight with radial glazing bars. The E service wing has a single storey block at the S gable, built of rubble masonry, slate roof with stone coping and brick gable stack with capping. Single doorway offset to L (N) end, a VR letterbox inserted to its L.

Interior

Interior not inspected at the time of the survey.

Reasons for Listing

Listed as a good, well-preserved, Georgian style gentry house which retains all the character and fine detailing of the early C19 remodelling.

External Links

External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.

Recommended Books

Other nearby listed buildings

  • II Lodge at Llynon Hall
    Set at the W side of the country road between Bodedern and Llanrhyddlad, the lodge/gatehouse is on the S side of the N approach to Llynon Hall; located c200m NE of the hall and c1km WSW of the church
  • II Bodwigan and attached agricultural range
    In an isolated rural location, reached by private trackway W of the country road between Bodedern and Llanrhyddlad. Bodwigan is located c350m NW of Llynon Hall and c1.5km WSW of the church in the vil
  • II* Gronant
    Located at the end of a long trackway leading off the NE side of the A5025, N of Llanfachraeth. Gronant is reached via a driveway to the R of the access track, immediately before the farm entrance.
  • II* Melin Llynon
    Set back from the N side of a country road leading W from the village of Llanddeusant, the mill is located c500m W of the Church of St Marcellus and St Marcellinus.
  • II Ty'r Felin
    Reached by private trackway and set back from the N side of a country road leading W from the village of Llanddeusant. The house is located c50m NNW of Llynon mill and c500m W of the Church of St Mar
  • II Hammels and hammel yard walls, Gronant
    The farmyard at Gronant is reached via a long surfaced drive leading E off the A5025 N of Llanfachraeth. The hammels and yard are at the upper, E side of the central U-shaped farm group.
  • II Cornbarn range, Gronant
    The farmyard at Gronant is reached via a long surfaced drive leading E off the A5025 N of Llanfachraeth. The corn barn range is on the far left (N side) of the farmyard.
  • II Cartshed, Gronant
    The farmyard at Gronant is reached via a long surfaced drive leading E off the A5025 N of Llanfachraeth. The cartshed is on the left (W) immediately on entering the farmyard.

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