Monmouthshire is a county of Wales. It borders Torfaen and Newport to the west; Herefordshire and Gloucestershire (in England) to the east; and Powys to the north. The largest town is Abergavenny, with other large settlements being Chepstow, Monmouth, and Usk. [1] The present county was formed under the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994, which came into effect in 1996. [2] [3] It has an area of 850 km2 (330 sq mi), [4] with a population of 93,200 as of 2021 [update] . [5] Monmouthshire comprises some sixty per cent of the historic county, and was known as Gwent between 1974 and 1996. [6] [7] [note 1]
The Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales was established in 2002 and given statutory status in 2022. [9] Its heightened status reflected an increased recognition of the importance of historic landscapes. Elisabeth Whittle, president of the Welsh Historic Gardens Trust and Cadw's inspector of landscapes, wrote, "historic parks and gardens are an integral part of the Welsh archaeological and architectural heritage." [10] The register is administered by Cadw, the historic environment agency of the Welsh Government. It includes just under 400 sites, covering the gardens and parkland of private houses, historic deer parks, cemeteries, common land and public parks, which are recorded by principal area. Sites are listed at one of three grades, matching the grading system used for listed buildings. Grade I is the highest grade, for landscapes of exceptional interest; Grade II*, the next highest, denotes parks and gardens of more than special interest; while Grade II denotes nationally important sites of special interest. [11] In addition to the Cadw register, a separate record of historic sites, called Coflein, is maintained by the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales (RCAHMW). [12] [note 2]
There are 48 registered parks and gardens in Monmouthshire. Five are listed at Grade I, nine at Grade II*, and thirty-four at Grade II. They include two deer parks, three urban parks, a cemetery and, the most common categories, the gardens of private houses and the parklands of country estates. The earliest sites are the mediaeval deer parks, [23] [24] while the 16th and 17th centuries saw the construction of the "outstandingly important" gardens at Raglan Castle. [25] The 18th century brought the county's finest Picturesque landscape at Piercefield House, [26] and the 19th its best Gothic Revival work at Clytha Park. [27] In the 20th century Henry Avray Tipping created four gardens, all of which are Grade II*. [28]
Grade | Criteria [29] |
---|---|
I | Parks and gardens of exceptional interest |
II* | Particularly important parks and gardens of more than special interest |
II | Parks and gardens of national importance and special interest |
Name | Location Grid Ref. [note 3] Geo-coordinates | Date Listed | Site type | Description / Notes | Grade | Reference Number | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abergavenny Castle | Abergavenny SO 29856 14011 51°49′13″N3°01′09″W / 51.820302°N 3.019071°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | The grounds of the mediaeval castle ruins were landscaped c. 1800 with walks created within the curtain walls. In the later nineteenth century further landscaping took place, a formal garden was laid out, and the castle grounds became a public park. [30] | II | PGW(Gt)9(MON) | |
Abergavenny Priory Deer Park | Abergavenny SO 28443 17784 51°51′15″N3°02′25″W / 51.854040°N 3.040349°W | 1 February 2022 | Deer park | The deer park of Abergavenny Priory, dating from the later Middle Ages. Originally some 500 acres in extent, substantial sections of the park boundaries, comprising ditches, earthen banks and walls, survive. [23] | II | PGW(Gt)55(MON) | |
The Argoed | Penallt SO 52301 08442 51°46′21″N2°41′34″W / 51.772606°N 2.692697°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | In the 17th century the estate was owned by the Proberts, prominent local landowners. In the 19th, it was bought by Richard Potter, father of Beatrice Webb, whose friend, George Bernard Shaw was a frequent visitor. The gardens, laid out in typical Victorian style, have views over the River Wye. Elements remain of the earlier garden from the 16th and 17th centuries, including the terraces. [31] | II | PGW(Gt)49(MON) | |
Bailey Park | Abergavenny SO 30089 14638 51°49′33″N3°00′57″W / 51.825967°N 3.0158180°W | 1 February 2022 | Urban park | Laid out in 1884 on land donated by Crawshay Bailey, Junior, Bailey Park is a good example of a late-Victorian urban park. It contains the site of a lido, built in 1939 and demolished in the early 21st century. [32] [33] | II | PGW(Gt)60(MON) | |
Bertholey House | Llantrisant Fawr ST 39682 94561 51°38′48″N2°52′23″W / 51.646594°N 2.873155°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | An early 19th century landscape park which formed the grounds to Bertholey House. The house was almost completely destroyed in a fire in 1905 but was rebuilt in the early 21st century. The gardens include pleasure grounds close to the house and a wild garden in the woods beyond. [34] [35] | II | PGW(Gt)11(MON) | |
Brynderwen | Llanarth SO 35504 06952 51°45′27″N2°56′09″W / 51.757524°N 2.935826°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | The landscape park to Brynderwen Court was laid out in the 1820s when the house was built. The gardens are later, dating from the Edwardian era when the house was extended, and include the remains of a rose garden, tennis courts and a tennis pavilion, and a kitchen garden. [36] | II | PGW(Gt)12(MON) | |
Cefn Ila | Llanbadoc SO 36195 00429 51°41′56″N2°55′29″W / 51.698962°N 2.924618°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | The landscape park to Cefn Ila House, which burnt down in 1973. The park is particularly notable for its specimen trees and shrubs, including a Cedar of Lebanon. The estate is now owned by the Woodland Trust. [37] | II | PGW(Gt)63(MON) | |
Cefntilla Court | Llandenny SO 40480 02967 51°43′20″N2°51′47″W / 51.722251°N 2.863059°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden and park | The gardens and grounds were created, and the present house built, in the 1850s for Richard Somerset, 2nd Baron Raglan, as a memorial to his father, Lord Raglan, British commander in the Crimean War. [38] The park includes two drives leading to the house, with ornamental gardens surrounding it. They date from the time of the house's construction and display planting typical of the Victorian era, including the remains of a substantial collection of rhododendrons . [39] | II | PGW(Gt)31(MON) | |
Chapel House | Monmouth SO 50828 13264 51°48′57″N2°42′53″W / 51.815829°N 2.714728°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | An early 18th century town house garden, with terraces running down to the River Monnow supported by brick revetments. The brick foundations of an orangery remain, although the building is gone. The lowest level terrace, bordering the river, was the site of an orchard. The RCAHMW considers the garden a "rare survival". [40] | II | PGW(Gt)43(MON) | |
Chepstow Park | Devauden ST 48209 99050 51°41′16″N2°45′02″W / 51.687804°N 2.750596°W | 1 February 2022 | Deer park | The deer park of Chepstow Castle, the original park, dating from the Middle Ages was enclosed by a fence. In the 17th century, this was replaced with a stone wall. Striguil, the original name for Chepstow Castle, was an important Marcher lordship and the park was created by Roger Bigod, great-grandson of William Marshal, in the late 13th century. Payments to two rangers were recorded in 1283, and it is likely Bigod developed the park in the previous decade. [41] [24] [42] | II | PGW(Gt)61(MON) | |
Chippenham Mead | Monmouth SO 50689 12523 51°48′33″N2°43′00″W / 51.809155°N 2.716639°W | 1 February 2022 | Urban park / common land | Originally common land in the centre of the town, Chippenham was later developed as an urban park. The paths, lined with limes and sycamores, were laid out in 1909. In the 19th century, the mead was notable for its horse racing events and in the 21st it accommodates sports grounds and a children's playground. It lies next to the River Wye and is protected by flood defences at its northern end. [43] | II | PGW(Gt)6(MON) | |
Clytha Park | Clytha SO 36439 09013 51°46′34″N2°55′22″W / 51.776159°N 2.922659°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | John Newman, in his Gwent/Monmouthshire volume of the Pevsner Buildings of Wales, published in 2000, considers Clytha Park is "the finest early nineteenth century Greek Revival house in the county", [44] and that its parkland contains Monmouthshire's "two outstanding examples of late eighteenth century Gothic", the gates to the park and Clytha Castle. [44] The park was laid out in the very late 18th century for William Jones. [27] | I | PGW(Gt)15(MON) | |
Coldbrook Park | Llanover SO 31333 12678 51°48′31″N2°59′51″W / 51.808502°N 2.997381°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | The house at Coldbrook was demolished in 1954 but many of the features of its 18th century landscape park remain. Originally a deer park, it was landscaped in the 18th century by Charles Hanbury Williams who developed four tree-lined avenues radiating from his new house. Further development of the estate took place in the 19th century when the estate was owned by Lady Llanover. [45] | II | PGW(Gt)30(MON) | |
Dewstow House | Caldicot ST 48209 99050 51°35′46″N2°45′02″W / 51.596152°N 2.750596°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | The gardens at Dewstow House were laid out in the first two decades of the 20th century by Henry Oakley. They are most notable for their underground works, a remarkable series of caverns and pools constructed of Pulhamite, an artificial stone. John Newman, in his Gwent/Monmouthshire volume of the Pevsner Buildings of Wales published in 2000, describes the "underground passages and top-light chambers with artificial rock-work and stalactites." [46] Much of the subterranean work was covered over in the later 20th century before being rediscovered and restored in the 21st. [47] | I | PGW(Gt)44(MON) | |
Dingestow Court | Dingestow SO 45064 09715 51°47′00″N2°47′52″W / 51.783385°N 2.797773°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | An important Victorian park and garden designed by Edward Milner. The park was developed in the 18th century and some features from this period survive, such as the ha-ha. In the 19th century the estate was bought by Samuel Bosanquet and the house and estate were further improved and extended by him and by his descendants. [48] In 1883 Milner was engaged to redesign the grounds, which included moving the public road, re-siting the private drives and enlarging the lake. [49] | II* | PGW(Gt)1(MON) | |
Glen Usk | Llanhennock ST 36249 92734 51°37′47″N2°55′21″W / 51.629790°N 2.922431°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | The first gardens at Glen Usk were contemporaneous with the 1830s house, built by Sir Digby Mackworth, Bt. [50] The park was further developed in the 1840s. In the 1920s, areas around the tennis court were redeveloped and terraced in an Arts and Crafts style. [51] The house sits on a plateau above the north bank of the River Usk and has wide views over the Usk Valley and the golf course of the Celtic Manor Resort. [52] | II | PGW(Gt)36(MON) | |
The Hendre | Llangattock-Vibon-Avel SO 45868 14128 51°49′23″N2°47′13″W / 51.823137°N 2.786810°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | John Rolls, 1st Baron Llangattock employed Henry Ernest Milner from the 1870s to lay out what Elisabeth Whittle, a garden historian and formerly Cadw's Inspector of Historic Landscapes, described as "the grandest and most important Victorian park and garden in Monmouthshire." [53] The centre of a major estate, the gardens and park boasted drives, rockeries, a lake, cascades, and multiple lodges, including one in the guise of a Swiss Cottage, designed by Sir Aston Webb. [54] The Hendre is now the site of the Rolls of Monmouth Golf Club. [55] [note 4] | II* | PGW(Gt)17(MON) | |
High Glanau | Mitchel Troy SO 49726 07453 51°45′49″N2°43′48″W / 51.763489°N 2.729869°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | The last of three important gardens in Monmouthshire designed and developed by Henry Avray Tipping for himself. All are listed at Grade II*. High Glanau, laid out between 1922 and 1929, contained terraces, pools and a pergola. [57] Much of Tipping's planting was destroyed in the 1960s, and a swimming pool was dug out on the top terrace. Restoration has been carried out in the 21st century by Tipping's biographer. [58] [59] [note 5] | II* | PGW(Gt)45(MON) | |
The Hill | Abergavenny SO 29551 15433 51°49′59″N3°01′26″W / 51.833046°N 3.023785°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | The gardens and grounds of The Hill were developed in the 19th century as a "mini country estate" to the north of the town. In the 1830s, the property was owned by John Wedgwood, son of Josiah Wedgwood, the potter. John Wedgwood was an enthusiastic plantsman and a founder member of the Royal Horticultural Society. His gardening diaries, held at the Lindley Library, cover his time at The Hill. Much of the garden has been lost to residential development in the 21st century. [61] | II | PGW(Gt)62(MON) | |
Hilston Park | Newcastle SO 44575 18784 51°51′54″N2°48′23″W / 51.864868°N 2.806316°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | A 19th century landscape park with a lake and a folly, the estate was developed by the Cave family, who bought it after the original house was damaged by fire in the 1830s. The Caves rebuilt the house, laid out a new park and created pleasure gardens. The folly, know as Hilston Tower, may date from this time, or from the late 18th century. [62] | II | PGW(Gt)22(MON) | |
Itton Court | Itton ST 49252 95517 51°39′22″N2°44′06″W / 51.656136°N 2.734995°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | A landscape park with evidence of developments from the 17th to the 20th centuries, Itton Court is the longtime home of the Curre family. The estate includes features from the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, remains a private home and is considered a "good example of an historic park and garden, which survives in its entirety". [63] | II | PGW(Gt)21(MON) | |
The Kymin | Monmouth SO 52765 12498 51°48′33″N2°41′11″W / 51.809110°N 2.686526°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | The Kymin was developed in the late 18th century as a picnic spot and bowling green by members of the Monmouth Picnic Club, a group of the "first gentlemen" of the town. The Round Tower was constructed as a banqueting house and the Monmouth antiquarian Charles Heath recorded in his 1807 history, Descriptive Account of the Kymin Pavilion and Beaulieu Grove with their various views; also a description of the Naval Temple, that ten counties could be seen from its upper storey (Gloucestershire, Monmouthshire, Glamorganshire, Breconshire, Montgomeryshire, Worcestershire, Herefordshire, Radnorshire, Shropshire and Somerset). [64] After 1800 the Naval Temple was built to celebrate Britain's maritime victories. [65] Sir Richard Colt Hoare, who visited in 1803, was unimpressed, describing it as "in very bad taste". [66] | II | PGW(Gt)5(MON) | |
Linda Vista Gardens | Abergavenny SO 29534 14096 51°49′16″N3°01′26″W / 51.821025°N 3.023759°W | 1 February 2022 | Urban park | A small urban park developed in the mid 20th century from a private garden laid out in the 1870s. In the 1950s, the gardens passed to the local authority, which redeveloped them as a public park, and extended them through inclusion of adjacent pockets of land including Castle Meadow. [67] | II | PGW(Gt)59(MON) | |
Llanarth Court | Llanarth SO 37972 10519 51°47′24″N2°54′03″W / 51.789871°N 2.900712°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | An early 19th century park, with landscaping which Cadw suggests may originally have been undertaken by Samuel Lapidge, who trained under Capability Brown, and subsequently by John Claudius Loudon. Much has been lost, the lake is silted up, and the formal gardens have largely returned to pasture. [68] | II | PGW(Gt)13(MON) | |
Llanvihangel Court | Llanvihangel Crucorney SO 32781 20411 51°52′42″N2°58′40″W / 51.878195°N 2.977887°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | The court was owned in the 17th century by John Arnold, a noted persecutor of Catholics. [69] Remnants of his important park survive, including avenues of Scots pine and sweet chestnut to the north and south. [70] The estate includes a "great rarity", stables dating from Arnold's time, which have their own Grade I listing designation. [71] | I | PGW(Gt)14(MON) | |
Llangibby House | Llangybi ST 36927 97303 51°40′15″N2°54′48″W / 51.670942°N 2.913462°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | The house was demolished in the 1950s and its gardens are largely ruined. In the 18th century the bailey of Tregrug Castle in the grounds was used as a bowling green. An avenue of Scots pine runs from the site of the house down to the River Usk. [72] [note 6] | II | PGW(Gt)27(MON) | |
Llanover Park | Llanover SO 32150 08061 51°46′02″N2°59′05″W / 51.767097°N 2.984628°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | In the 19th century Llanover was the home of Augusta Hall, Baroness Llanover and of her husband, Benjamin. A noted champion of Welsh culture, Lady Llanover was known as "Gwenynen Gwent", ('the bee of Gwent'). The Halls' house was demolished in the 20th century, but the gardens, parkland and estate village survive. [74] [75] | II* | PGW(Gt)41(MON) | |
Llantilio Court | Llantilio Crossenny SO 40166 15045 51°49′51″N2°52′11″W / 51.830799°N 2.869690°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | The parkland to the, now demolished, Llantilio Court. The gardens, including a lakeside Japanese garden, are mostly lost, but the outlines of the park survive, including a number of Wellingtonia which once lined the main drive. [76] | II | PGW(Gt)7(MON) | |
Lower Duffryn House | Grosmont SO 43518 22730 51°54′01″N2°49′20″W / 51.900236°N 2.822312°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | The garden contains rare remnants of a Tudor layout including walling, terraces and fishponds. Now an "extraordinarily remote (and) melancholy" [77] farmhouse, the house was built in the mid 17th century by the Cecil family. [77] The garden comprises a long terrace, bordered by stone walls, and is thought to date from the time of the house's construction. The fishponds may also date from this time or may be earlier, mediaeval features. A gazebo is set into one of the terrace walls. [77] Aerial photography suggests that the gardens were once more extensive. [78] | II | PGW(Gt)24(MON) | |
Mathern Palace | Mathern ST 52290 90821 51°36′51″N2°41′26″W / 51.614183°N 2.690440°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | Originally an episcopal palace of the mediaeval Bishops of Llandaff, the building was restored from 1894 by Henry Avray Tipping as his home. Tipping laid out the gardens in an Arts and Crafts style. They consist of lawns, paths, terraces with limestone walls, pools and ponds, and a rose garden. [79] Tipping made use of some of the remaining walls from the palace, incorporating them into his overall design. [80] | II* | PGW(Gt)35(MON) | |
Mounton House | Mounton ST 51299 93054 51°38′03″N2°42′18″W / 51.634174°N 2.705063°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | The house and garden are by Henry Avray Tipping, assisted by Eric Francis, a local architect from Chepstow, Mounton was completed in the first decades of the 20th century, between the reconstruction of Mathern Palace and the building of High Glanau. The gardens were designed in Tipping's usual Arts & Crafts style, and include formal gardens to the south of the house and a wild garden to the west. [81] A number of the features within the gardens have their own listed status, including pergolas, urns, a tea house, the garden walls and three gardeners' cottages. [82] [83] [84] [85] [86] [87] [88] [89] [90] | II* | PGW(Gt)8(MON) | |
Moynes Court | Mathern ST 52010 90964 51°36′56″N2°41′40″W / 51.615445°N 2.694504°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | The bones of a mediaeval and Tudor garden, with extant walls and fish ponds, but the planting is entirely of the 20th and 21st centuries. The walling is largely intact and the Commission notes its historic importance. [91] | II | PGW(Gt)34(MON) | |
Nelson Garden | Monmouth SO 50779 12728 51°48′40″N2°42′55″W / 51.811006°N 2.715363°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | An 18th century town house garden, with a pavilion which commemorates a visit to the town by Lord Nelson in 1802. The original summerhouse was replaced in the 1840s, but elements, including Nelson's seat, were incorporated into the new structure. [92] The garden is now managed by a trust which seeks to restore the garden, ensure its future and enable public access. [93] | II | PGW(Gt)57(MON) | |
New Cemetery | Llanfoist, Abergavenny SO 29856 14011 51°49′05″N3°01′52″W / 51.818013°N 3.030988°W | 1 February 2022 | Cemetery | The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales (RCAHMW) describes New Cemetery as a "good example of a well-preserved Victorian landscaped garden cemetery." To the south-west of the town, the cemetery was laid out at the end of the 19th century with much evergreen planting with graves and tombs accessed via gravel paths. [94] | II | PGW(Gt)37(MON) | |
Pant-y-Goitre House | Llanfair Kilgeddin SO 34569 08678 51°46′23″N2°56′59″W / 51.772932°N 2.949696°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | The park to a much altered and extended house, laid out from 1770 with woods, a lake, lodges and a ha-ha. [95] The pleasure gardens, which stand closer to the house, include a restored orangery dating from the 1830s. The planting, including large numbers of rhododendrons, is typically Victorian. [96] | II | PGW(Gt)10(MON) | |
Penhein | Llanvair Discoed ST 44971 93144 51°38′04″N2°47′47″W / 51.634399°N 2.796499°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | An early 19th century park with some notable specimen trees including American redwoods and a monkey puzzle. [97] The small garden contains a Victorian nuttery (an orchard of nut-bearing trees) the condition of which, like other elements of the garden, has deteriorated. [98] | II | PGW(Gt)53(MON) | |
Piercefield House | St Arvans ST 52810 95680 51°39′28″N2°41′01″W / 51.657913°N 2.683588°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | The Commission considers Piercefield the "par excellence outstanding example of an early 'sublime' landscape." The park is listed jointly with The Wyndcliff. The latter offers panoramic views over the Lancaut cliffs to the River Wye, while the former contains many remnants of a walk that became an essential element of the Wye Tour in the 18th and early 19th centuries, including the Giant's Cave, a grotto and a number of viewing points. Piercefield House itself is a ruin that is not publicly accessible but access to the grounds can be made via public footpaths. [26] | I | PGW(Gt)40(MON) | |
Raglan Castle | Raglan SO 41343 08373 51°46′15″N2°51′05″W / 51.770942°N 2.851481°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | The gardens at Raglan are almost entirely concealed under pasture, but their Grade I listing indicates their significance. The RCAHMW suggests they are an "outstandingly important sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century garden layout which was one of the most advanced gardens of its date in the country." Developed from the 1550s by the Earls of Worcester to complement their "fortress-palace", [99] the gardens comprised a long bank of three terraces to the north, leading down to a large lake known as the 'great poole'; a bowling green and a moat walk around the Great Tower; and elaborate parterres and water gardens to the east. [25] [note 7] | I | PGW(Gt)42(MON) | |
Shirenewton Hall | Shirenewton ST 47998 93463 51°38′15″N2°45′10″W / 51.637555°N 2.752815°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | The gardens date mainly from the 19th and early 20th centuries, and include Chinese and Japanese-influenced gardens, created by the then owner Charles Liddell who had made his fortune through trading in the East. [101] An arbor, in a neoclassical style, and a summerhouse, in the Chinoiserie taste, decorate the grounds. [102] [103] | II* | PGW(Gt)46(MON) | |
St John's House | Monmouth SO 50737 12784 51°48′41″N2°42′58″W / 51.811506°N 2.715980°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | A town house garden dating from the dating from the 19th century. It contains a cast iron Coalbrookdale verandah which can be dated to between 1840 and 1872, the period in which its manufacturer advertised it for sale. A former tennis court, laid out just before the First World War, is now lawned. [104] | II | PGW(Gt)47(MON) | |
St Pierre Park | Mathern ST 51506 90573 51°36′43″N2°42′06″W / 51.611886°N 2.701728°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | The park, and the ancient mansion, are almost completely enveloped by the St Pierre Golf and Country Club, but traces of the 18th century park, and the earlier deer park, remain. Fallow deer grazed in the park until the early 20th century. The parkland includes a long enclosure wall and a large lake. Much of the gardens and the wider park is now utilised as a golf course. [105] | II | PGW(Gt)29(MON) | |
Tal-y-coed Court | Llanvihangel-Ystern-Llewern SO 42127 15210 51°49′57″N2°50′29″W / 51.832489°N 2.841264°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | The Tal-y-coed estate was owned by Joseph Bradney, an antiquarian and author of A History of Monmouthshire from the Coming of the Normans into Wales down to the Present Time , a multi-volume history of the county published between 1904 and 1932. Bradney had a new house built and laid out the gardens and park in the 1880s and 1890s. [106] The gardens are laid out as terraces which are revetted with stone walls and give views over a lake. [107] | II | PGW(Gt)52(MON) | |
Treowen | Mitchel Troy SO 46153 11109 51°47′46″N2°46′56″W / 51.796024°N 2.782205°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | There remain a few remnants of an early 17th century garden. These are now largely covered by lawns but elements of the garden, which was developed at the same time as the house, are traceable, including earthworks, walkways and walls. [108] There are mediaeval fishponds which pre-date the house and were restored in the late 20th century. At the same time stone carvings, which were also identified as being of earlier origin than the house, were discovered in the grounds and were re-used in the modern restoration. [109] | II | PGW(Gt)23(MON) | |
Trewyn House | Llanvihangel Crucorney SO 32872 22846 51°54′00″N2°58′37″W / 51.900096°N 2.977040°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | Elements of the gardens and a small landscape park were developed in the 18th century and re-worked in the 19th. Features include terraces and pools. [110] The grounds include a listed dovecote [111] and the gate piers and gates, which frame what John Newman describes as the "ceremonious" setting for the house, and which have their own Grade II* listing. [112] | II | PGW(Gt)28(MON) | |
Troy House | Monmouth SO 50935 11352 51°47′55″N2°42′46″W / 51.798649°N 2.712905°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | Troy was built c.1670 by Henry Somerset, 1st Duke of Beaufort as a wedding gift to his son Charles. [113] The gardens and park contain elements typical of a country estate, [114] including an important walled kitchen garden which has a separate Grade II* listing. [115] The estate remains privately owned and was sold at auction, with the house in a state of considerable dilapidation, in 2021. [116] | II* | PGW(Gt)16(MON) | |
Wonastow Court | Wonastow SO 48877 10983 51°47′43″N2°44′34″W / 51.795147°N 2.742691°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | The remains of an early garden and park, dating from the 16th or 17th centuries. [117] In the 16th century the manor of Wonastow was owned by the Herbert family who built a Tudor mansion on the site. This was later reduced and remodelled as a country house. [118] The gardens date from the earlier period and include an avenue of lime trees which largely survives. | II | PGW(Gt)56(MON) | |
Wyelands | Mathern ST 52358 91923 51°37′27″N2°41′23″W / 51.624097°N 2.689609°W | 1 February 2022 | Park | An early 19th century park which is largely unaltered, the estate was developed at the same time as the house. [119] The villa was designed by Robert Lugar for George Buckle, Sheriff of Monmouthshire in the early 19th century. Cadw notes the largely unaltered state of both the house and the park, except for some redevelopment of the former in the 20th century. [120] | II | PGW(Gt)51(MON) | |
Wyndcliffe Court | St Arvans ST 51798 97252 51°40′19″N2°41′54″W / 51.671960°N 2.698434°W | 1 February 2022 | Garden | A major Arts and Crafts garden by Henry Avray Tipping, laid out in 1922 for the owner of the court, Charles Clay. Tipping again worked with Eric Francis, who also designed the house, to create a terraced garden with wide views over the Bristol Channel. [121] Elements of the gardens, including the terraces, steps, pool, pergola and summerhouse have their own Grade II* listings. [122] | II* | PGW(Gt)4(MON) |
Monmouthshire is a county in the south east of Wales. It borders Powys to the north; the English counties of Herefordshire and Gloucestershire to the north and east; the Severn Estuary to the south, and Torfaen, Newport and Blaenau Gwent to the west. The largest town is Abergavenny, and the administrative centre is Usk.
Llanvair Discoed is a small village in Monmouthshire, south-east Wales, 6 miles west of Chepstow and 10 miles east of Newport.
Raglan (; is a village and community in Monmouthshire, south east Wales, United Kingdom. It is located some 9 miles south-west of Monmouth, midway between Monmouth and Abergavenny on the A40 road very near to the junction with the A449 road. The fame of the village derives from Raglan Castle, built for William ap Thomas and now maintained by Cadw. The community includes the villages of Llandenny and Pen-y-clawdd. Raglan itself has a population of 1,183.
Llanfair Kilgeddin is a small village in Monmouthshire, south east Wales, lying within the administrative community of Llanover. It is located four miles north west of Usk and six miles south east of Abergavenny on the B4598 road. The River Usk passes close by.
Usk Castle is a castle site in the town of Usk in central Monmouthshire, south east Wales, United Kingdom. It was listed Grade I on 16 February 1953. Within the castle, and incorporating parts of its gatehouse, stands Castle House, a Grade I listed building in its own right.
The Nelson Garden, on 13 Chippenhamgate Street, at the rear of No.18 Monnow Street, Monmouth, Monmouthshire is a 19th-century garden that was the scene of a tea party held to honour Lord Nelson in 1802. The garden is one of 24 sites on the Monmouth Heritage Trail. It is bounded on the south by the line of the medieval town wall through which it is entered via a short underground passageway. The garden has limited public access and is now managed by a trust. It is included on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.
Treowen is an early 17th-century house in Monmouthshire, Wales, regarded as "the most important gentry house in the county". It is located in open countryside within the parish of Wonastow, about ½ mile (1 km) north-east of the village of Dingestow, and 3 miles (4.8 km) south-west of Monmouth. After being used as a farmhouse for three centuries, Treowen now operates as a conference and functions venue and holds the annual Wye Valley Chamber Music Festival. It is a Grade I listed building, and its gardens are designated Grade II on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.
Clytha Park, Clytha, Monmouthshire, is a 19th-century Neoclassical country house, "the finest early nineteenth century Greek Revival house in the county." The wider estate encompasses Monmouthshire's "two outstanding examples of late eighteenth century Gothic", the gates to the park and Clytha Castle. The owners were the Jones family, later Herbert, of Treowen and Llanarth Court. It is a Grade I listed building.
Dingestow Court, at Dingestow, Monmouthshire, Wales, is a Victorian country house with earlier origins and later additions. The architectural historian John Newman describes it as "one of the county's major houses" and Cadw notes its "entertaining confection of styles". The court is a Grade II* listed building.
Castle House in Usk, Monmouthshire, Wales, originally formed the gatehouse to Usk Castle. Much altered in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, it is now a private home and a Grade I listed building.
High Glanau is a country house and Grade II* listed building within the community of Cwmcarvan, Monmouthshire, Wales. It is located about 5 miles (8.0 km) south-west of Monmouth, and 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of Trellech, adjoining the B4293 road and with views westwards over the Vale of Usk. Commissioned by Henry Avray Tipping and designed by Eric Francis, it is particularly noted for its gardens which are listed at Grade II* on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.
Eric Carwardine Francis was a British architect and painter who designed a number of notable buildings, particularly in Monmouthshire, Gloucestershire and Somerset, in the early and mid-twentieth century, many in the Arts and Crafts style.
Shirenewton Hall, originally Shirenewton Court, is a country house and estate adjoining the village of Shirenewton, Monmouthshire, Wales, about 3 miles (4.8 km) west of Chepstow. The 29.5-acre (11.9 ha) estate is located on a hillside, and commands views across the "Golden Valley" to the west and the Severn Estuary in the south. The main building was constructed around 1830, and partly rebuilt around 1900–1910, on the site of an earlier house which was the birthplace of William Blethyn, Bishop of Llandaff. The house is now a Grade II listed building, and the teahouse in the adjoining Japanese garden is listed as Grade II*. The gardens are included on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales. The estate is not open to the public.
Monmouthshire is a county and principal area of Wales. It borders Torfaen and Newport to the west; Herefordshire and Gloucestershire to the east; and Powys to the north. The largest town is Abergavenny, with the other major towns being Chepstow, Monmouth, and Usk. The county is 850 km2 in extent, with a population of 95,200 as of 2020. The present county was formed under the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994, which came into effect in 1996, and comprises some sixty percent of the historic county. Between 1974 and 1996, the county was known by the ancient title of Gwent, recalling the medieval Welsh kingdom. In his essay on local government in the fifth and final volume of the Gwent County History, Robert McCloy suggests that the governance of "no county in the United Kingdom in the twentieth century was so transformed as that of Monmouthshire".
Monmouthshire is a county of Wales. It borders Torfaen and Newport to the west; Herefordshire and Gloucestershire to the east; and Powys to the north. The largest town is Abergavenny, with the other major towns being Chepstow, Monmouth, and Usk. The county is 850 km2 in extent, with a population of 95,200 as of 2020. The present county was formed under the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994, which came into effect in 1996, and comprises some sixty percent of the historic county. Between 1974 and 1996, the county was known by the ancient title of Gwent, recalling the medieval Welsh kingdom. In his essay on local government in the fifth and final volume of the Gwent County History, Robert McCloy suggests that the governance of "no county in the United Kingdom in the twentieth century was so transformed as that of Monmouthshire".
Moynes Court is a Grade II* listed building in the village of Mathern, Monmouthshire, Wales, about 3 miles (4.8 km) south west of Chepstow. An earlier building was rebuilt as a private residence by Francis Godwin, Bishop of Llandaff, in about 1609/10, and much of the building remains from that period. Its grounds contain earthworks thought to be the foundations of an earlier moated manor house. The gatehouse to the court has a separate Grade II* listing. The garden at the court is on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.
Mounton House, Mounton, Monmouthshire, Wales, is the last major country house built in the county, constructed between 1910 and 1912 by the architect and writer Henry Avray Tipping for himself. Formerly a school, which has now relocated to the grounds, the house has been divided into apartments. It is a Grade II* listed building. The surrounding park is on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.
Perth-hir House, Rockfield, Monmouthshire, Wales, was a major residence of the Herbert family. It stood at a bend of the River Monnow, to the north-west of the village. At its height in the 16th century, the mansion, entered by two drawbridges over a moat, comprised a great hall and a number of secondary structures. Subsequently in the ownership of the Powells, and then the Lorimers, the house became a centre of Catholic recusancy following the English Reformation. By the 19th century, the house had declined to the status of a farmhouse and it was largely demolished in around 1830. Its ruins, and the site which contains considerable remnants of a Tudor garden, are a scheduled monument.
Abergavenny Priory Deer Park, to the north of the town of Abergavenny in Monmouthshire, Wales, was a mediaeval deer park. Today, the site is listed on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.
Bertholey House, is a country house near the village of Llantrisant, in Monmouthshire, Wales. A Tudor house originally stood on the site, the home of the Kemeys family. In the 1830s, a new mansion was built, in a Neoclassical style, for Colthurst Bateman. This house was almost completely destroyed in a fire in 1905. From 1999, the mansion was restored and is again a private home. The gardens and grounds are listed on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.