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Pen y Lan Hall

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Country
  
Wales

Inaugurated
  
1690

Architectural style
  
Regency architecture

Pen-y-Lan Hall imghuffingtonpostcomassetscalefit630noupscal

Location
  
Ruabon, Wrexham County Borough

Similar
  
Plas Teg, Hill Place, Kentchurch Court, Monreith House, Wyresdale Park

Pen-y-Lan Hall is a Grade II-listed Tudor-Gothic Revival country house located near the village of Ruabon in Wrexham County Borough, Wales. The building may have been built in the late seventeenth century, but was remodelled in the mid-nineteenth.

Contents

Map of Pen-Y-Lan Hall, Ruabon, Wrexham, UK

History

The house is said to date from around 1690, but it was remodelled in 1830. It was purchased in 1854 by Thomas Hardcastle of the cotton manufacturing firm of Ormrod and Hardcastle. It was enlarged and altered later in the century, although most of these additions were demolished during the 1950s. The Ormrod family have owned Pen-y-Lan Hall since the nineteenth century, and to this day sits in a 1,000-acre (400 ha) estate.

The building was made Grade II listed on 22 February 1995. In 2011, Pen-y-Lan Hall was the subject of a Channel 4 television documentary presented by hotelier Ruth Watson as part of her Country House Rescue series. It is routinely visited by ghost hunting groups; on one visit in 2012 a recording over six hours of a visit included children's voices, music being played, and footsteps. Howard Hughes of the Spirit Quest UK group in Wrexham, described the property as being one of the most haunted places in Britain.

Description

Pen-y-Lan Hall is a two-storey, stuccoed and castellated Tudor-Gothic Revival-style building. The front of the house has an attic behind a parapet with symmetrical castellated chimney stacks at the ends of the building. The crenellated two-storey front porch projects from the facade and is two bays wide. The rear side of the hall is much the same as the front, albeit four bays wide with three castellated chimney stacks.

References

Pen-y-Lan Hall Wikipedia