Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Oak House, Monmouth

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Address
  
6 Monk Street

Current tenants
  
British Telecom

Opened
  
1846

Current tenant
  
BT Group

Country
  
Wales

Completed
  
1846 (1846)

Town or city
  
Monmouth

Architect
  
George Vaughan Maddox

Oak House, Monmouth httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Designations
  
Type II Listed Building, since 15 August 1974

Similar
  
Royal George Hotel - Mo, North Parade House - M, Priory House - Monmouth, Glendower House - Monmouth, Little Castle House - M

Oak House is a Grade II Listed building in Monk Street Monmouth, Wales.

Contents

Map of Oak House, Monmouth, UK

History

The house was designed by George Vaughan Maddox and built in 1846.

On the 1881 census the head of Oak House was a George Willis, Magistrate Of Borough & County of Monmouth and a General Practitioner L.R.C.S. M.D. Glasgow. He was born in Ireland in about 1829 and was still occupying the house in the 1891 census listed as a Doctor Of Medicine and Magistrate. He died 15 September 1898. His obituary in The Morning Post newspaper said he had been Mayor of Monmouth three times and was a founder of Monmouth Hospital. Lloyd Grant Smith another medical practitioner was listed in the 1901 and 1911 Census as head of the household. He was born about 1860 in Birkenhead, Cheshire. Alice Smith was his Wife and was born about 1868. The 1911 census information included the house had thirteen rooms (1911 Census excluding rooms: Scullery, Landing, Lobby, Closet Bathroom, Warehouse, Office and Shop).

The garden and house became home to Monmouth's Telephone Exchange in 1902 when thanks to the intervention of J. A. Rolls the treasury granted money for Monmouth's new telephone exchange. Keith Kissack in his book Monmouth and its Buildings remarking about the telephone exchange said that 'some dreadful buildings replacing the garden'.

Bats

Around 100 Pipistrelle bats were found to be living in the building when engineers went to inspect the building in 2006.

Renovation

Plans were made in 2010 and work was due to start in 2011 to restore the building into a single-family dwelling house including the demolition of the attached redundant modern telephone exchange building by the end of 2012. This includes renovation repair, alterations of the existing listed building to form a four-bedroom house and new building extension of a single-storey service wing and orangey with a two-storey garage/studio. Also the re-instatement of the domestic garden

References

Oak House, Monmouth Wikipedia