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Gunter Mansion

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Gunter Mansion is a house in Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales. It was built around 1600 and mentioned in 1678 in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom as a place of public Catholic worship. It the final place or prayer for Saint David Lewis before his execution on 27 August 1679. It is a Grade II* listed building.

History

After the Reformation and the Act of Supremacy 1558, in 1600, Thomas Gunter, a local Roman Catholic, built the house. A secret chapel was built in the attic of the house.

On 12 April 1678, John Arnold (the MP for Monmouthshire), told the House of Commons, ‘that he had seen a public chapel near the house of Mr Thomas Gunter, a papist convict, in Abergavenny, adorned with the mark of the Jesuits on the outside, and is informed that Mass is said there by Captain Evans, a reported Jesuit, and by the aforesaid David Lewis in that very great numbers resort to the said chapel and very often at Church time, and he hath credibly heard that hundreds have gone out of the said chapel when not forty have gone out of the said church, that the said chapel is situate in a public street of the said town, and doth front the street.'

That year, with the Titus Oates's plot, a Jesuit priest, David Lewis was arrested at St Michael's Church, Llantarnam. He prayed in the Gunter Mansion chapel before being executed in Usk.

In 1864, the central area of the house was divided from the rest and became the Parrot Inn. In 1898, it became the Cardiff Arms.

In 1907, two brothers, Thomas and Edwin Foster bought and repaired the building. They discovered evidence for the existence of the chapel in the house attic. A mural showing the Adoration of the Magil was found and given to the Abergavenny Castle Museum along with the original door from the front entrance. Other than repairs to the chimney in 1913, and an extension to the rear of the house, the building has not been altered since 1907. In January 2017 the building was bought by the Welsh Georgian Trust.

References

Gunter Mansion Wikipedia


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