Member of the Leader's Local Bygones Facebook group, Richard Jones, from Gwersyllt, looks back at Brymbo Hall, Wrexham...

Brymbo Hall, one of Britain's lost houses, was a manor house near Brymbo, outside of Wrexham.

The house, reputed to have been partly built to the designs of architect Inigo Jones, was noted as the residence of 18th century industrialist and ironmaster John 'Iron-Mad' Wilkinson.

 

John Wilkinson, who lived at Brymbo Hall.

John Wilkinson, who lived at Brymbo Hall.

 

The estate was located on the upland moors about three miles (4.8km) north-west of Wrexham. Its early history was relatively obscure, the deeds having been destroyed in a fire in 1794, though it was thought a house on the site had been constructed in the late 15th century for Edward ap Morgan ap Madoc.

Edward's son, Gruffydd, founded the locally-prominent Griffith family in the early 16th century, and a more modern house was built in 1624 for Edward's descendant, John Griffith.

A persistent local tradition claimed that not only had Inigo Jones designed the 1624 building but that he had been born at the old Brymbo Hall (little is recorded of Jones' early life but he is generally thought to have been born in London, though he was of Welsh descent).

 

Brymbo Hall.

Brymbo Hall.

 

However, a portico at the house dated 1624 was more firmly attributed to the architect, though it was later noted that the aedicular doorway was in fact a copy of Plate 158 in Sebastiano Serlio's Fourth Book, the Regole generali di architettura (1537).

Jones was also considered to have designed the chapel set in the grounds of the house. The main 1624 building was later extended by an eastern wing featuring a giant order of Doric pilasters.

In 1649 Brymbo Hall was acquired by Sir Richard Saltonstall, an early settler in New England, on his return to Britain.

 

Brymbo Hall gardens.

Brymbo Hall gardens.

 

By the close of the 17th century it was again occupied by the Griffith family, being owned by Robert Griffith Esq, who served as High Sheriff of Denbighshire in 1684-5.

Robert's only son John matriculated from Christ Church, Oxford in 1695, aged 18 but appears to have died, without issue, before his parents, as the property was inherited by Robert's daughter Mary.

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As a highly marriageable heiress, Mary married Robert Jeffreys of Acton Hall and after his death married again, to Richard Clayton of Lea Hall in Shropshire. She then married a third time, to Arthur Owen, a member of the Owen family of Brogyntyn.

Her daughter Jane Clayton married Watkin Wynne of Voelas; their daughter, Elizabeth Wynne, married Thomas Assheton Smith I. During the mid-18th century the estate was the subject of several lawsuits between relatives of Arthur Owen and Richard Clayton.

 

Brymbo Hall long after its heyday.

Brymbo Hall long after its heyday.

 

John Wilkinson bought the 500-acre Brymbo Hall estate in 1792 for the sum of £14,000. The land was rich in coal and ironstone deposits, and Wilkinson constructed an ironworks (later to become the Brymbo Steelworks) near the hall.

His son occasionally lived at the property after his father's death, and the estate was later to be managed by William Legh Esq, the father of William Legh, 1st Baron Newton.

However, the estate was sold off to pay the costs of a complex and long-running lawsuit between Wilkinson's heirs; by 1841 it had been purchased by the barrister Robert Roy, one of the original trustees appointed on Wilkinson's death.

 

Brymbo Hall.

Brymbo Hall.

 

Roy, along with Henry Robertson and others, formed the Brymbo Mineral & Railway Company and restarted iron production on the estate.

The house itself was later to be occupied by the Darby family, the descendants of Abraham Darby III, who were appointed as the ironworks managers. During the late 19th century Brymbo Hall was the country home of the Liberal MP for Denbighshire, George Osborne Morgan. Another Liberal MP, Christmas Price Williams, grew up there.

The Hall was largely unoccupied after 1930 and gradually fell into disrepair. It became partly derelict after the Second World War, when it was used by the military, and its lower floors were used for keeping livestock by a local farmer.

It was eventually demolished in 1973 when open cast mining was carried out on the site, and is still considered to be one of the most unfortunate architectural losses in Wales.