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celtes — Gwrych Castle III

Published: 2008-10-25 23:12:24 +0000 UTC; Views: 2887; Favourites: 52; Downloads: 291
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Description Me, dewi, Alice and Catherine went on an excellent adventure today to find the ruined Gwrych Castle.
Gwrych Castle was built in 1819 at the bequest of Lloyd Hesketh Bamford-Hesketh, grandfather of Winifred. Upon the site was an ancient house named ‘Y Fron'. When Lloyd married Lady Emily Esther Ann Lygon in 1825, Gwrych was nearly complete.When Lloyd died the Castle passed onto Robert Bamford-Hesketh and his wife, Ellen. George Edmund Street designed the famous marble staircase during the 1870’s and also some fireplaces. Robert planted much of the present gardens with their enormous Monkey Puzzles and Yew trees.Winifred inherited Gwrych in 1894 and it became her official residence as Countess of Dundonald. She brought up her children there and sincerely loved it. In 1914 the building work of Elcock was complete and a new bedroom wing and alterations to the state apartments were added to Gwrych. Lady DunDonald’s will declared that Gwrych should be bequeathed to King George V and the Prince of Wales. This request was declined and it was given to St John of Jerusalem.In 1928 the Earl of Dundonald (Winifred’s husband) bought back the Castle for £78,000 and sold the contents of the building to cover the cost. During World War Two, Gwrych was requisitioned by the Government and housed two hundred Jewish refugees.A gradual decline began when Gwrych Castle finally left the family’s hands in 1946, the l3th Earl of Dundonald sold it to Mr Robert Rennie. Then in 1948 Leslie Salts bought the building and successfully opened Gwrych to the Public for twenty years. The Castle was named “The Showplace of Wales” and attracted nearly ten million visitors. Randolph Turpin and Bruce Woodcock trained there and many people came to see them.Between 1968 and 1989 the Castle had many owners and many different uses.The library was turned into a bar; Winifred’s music room and drawing room were converted into a large bar lounge and the gargantuan dining room into a restaurant.During the latter part of the 1970’s Gwrych became a medieval centre where markets were held and jousting took place upon the site of the old formal gardens and conservatory. Gwrych finally closed to the public during the winter of 1985, never to open again.An American businessman purchased Gwrych in December 1989, with the hope of restoring the Castle into a 5 star hotel and opera house. However because of legal problems this has never come off.In 1996 Prince Valiant was filmed at the Castle, starred Edward Fox and Joanna Lumley. Since then, the weather, heartless vandals and
New-age travellers have ravaged the building to the point of near dereliction.

Gwrych Castle is possibly one of the most haunted buildings in Wales.
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Comments: 10

1jelly [2013-08-10 02:23:26 +0000 UTC]

absolutely beautiful in the day....timeless beauty....it's history is breathtaking......oh to go home again.

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PirateLotus-Stock [2009-09-01 16:19:20 +0000 UTC]

Wow, lovely stock!

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celtes In reply to PirateLotus-Stock [2009-09-01 16:34:29 +0000 UTC]

THank you!

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violscraper [2009-09-01 14:37:22 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for all the effort you put into the photography, and the story. I took it to Cornwall (treason!) and turned it into Tintagel: [link]

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celtes In reply to violscraper [2009-09-01 16:34:22 +0000 UTC]

Lol. Thank you!

Ha ha ha... Nowt wrong with Cornwall. Still a Celtic nation! Nice picture.

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violscraper In reply to celtes [2009-09-01 18:05:26 +0000 UTC]

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ladyjazzkiller [2008-10-27 04:42:45 +0000 UTC]

Eew, eew, eew...I love it but I'm grossed out by the creepiness!! Eew! It's beautiful!!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

celtes In reply to ladyjazzkiller [2008-10-28 10:45:38 +0000 UTC]

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Forestina-Fotos [2008-10-26 11:07:47 +0000 UTC]

This looks an amazing castle to visit!

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celtes In reply to Forestina-Fotos [2008-10-26 22:12:18 +0000 UTC]

It really is. So beautiful.

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