Plas Bodewryd on Anglesey - Historic Manor House.

Plas Bodewryd Manor House on Anglesey
Plas Bodewryd was home to the important Wynn(e) family of Anglesey.
By marriage and by deed they became important in several aspects
of Anglesey life. The earliest known of the Wynn(e) family was
Margaret Wynn(e) who died in 1723. (I believe that in the 12th
century, Gweirydd ap Rhys Goch of Henllys on Anglesey is the
chief of the third of the Fifteen Tribes of Wales. He may
be
the earliest
known
ancestor of the Wynn(e) Family of Bodewryd, Anglesey.)
Margaret`s heir - John Wynn - had died without issue in 1709,
and the estate was inherited by her other son - Edward. In 1707
Edward Wynn(e) was appointed as Chancellor of the Hereford diocese,
but he never neglected his duties on his Anglesey estate. He
is said
to have travelled back and fore to Hereford at regular intervals
on horseback, and thus doing for 45 years.
Edward Wynn(e) (1681-1755) was a polymath, a pioneering agriculturalist,
antiquarian, ecclesiastical scholar and legal authority, doctor
of civil law, and a fellow of Jesus College Oxford.
Edward was also - evidently - a philanthropist, giving freely
to help others, in particular the children of Anglesey. Thomas
Ellis
- the scholar - of Holyhead, turned to Edward several times for
funding for various school projects, and was always kindly received.
In 1743, when Eglwys y Bedd chapel in Holyhead was converted
into a school, it was Edward who provided the funding. Thomas
Ellis had befriended the squire of Holyhead and his wife - the
Owen's of Penrhos estate, later to become the Stanley's. The
connection was that Ann Wynn(e) - Edward's sister - had married
Robert Owen, the heir to the Penrhos estate. That Thomas Ellis
had her ear meant he also had the ear of Edward Wynn(e).
By 1851 the estate was owned by the Jones family. Without further
research I do not know if they are descendants through the female
line of the previous Wynn(e) family. The master of the house
was Thomas Jones (b1803), who lives there with his wife Elizabeth
(b1816). They have 4 daughters and one son. The children are
aged between 1 and 12 years. They have an Irish governess and
2 house servants, a farm servant, an errand boy, and six agricultural
labourers, al who lived in.
Thirty years later we find the same Jones family still in occupation,
but Thomas has died; thus leaving the widow Elizabeth to run
the estate. Three of their daughters - now in their thirties
- are
still
living at home. There is a 19 year old governess from Liverpool,
presumably to tutor the two children living there, described
as visitors. The census also records seven servants.
The estate is now (2005) owned by the Tudor family, who are
aware of the historical importance of the house, and this webmaster
was
given an excellent welcome.

Plas Bodewryd - the back view
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Plas Bodewryd - the front view
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Plas Bodewryd on Anglesey
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The Dovecote at Plas Bodewryd
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Plas Bodewryd Standing Stone
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