Full Report for Listed Buildings
The list description is not intended to be a complete inventory of what is listed: it is principally intended to aid identification. By law, the definition of a listed building includes the entire building (i) and any structure or object that is fixed to the said building and ancillary to it and (ii) any other structure or object that forms part of the land and has done so since before 1 July 1948, and was within the curtilage of the building, and ancillary to it, on the date on which said building was first included in the list, or on 1 January 1969, whichever was later.
Date of Designation
19/09/2002
Date of Amendment
19/09/2002
Name of Property
Dolobran Hall
Location
1 km west of Pontrobert village, reached by a lane to the north of the Pontrobert to Mathrafal road. Farmyard at north and west (including listed farm building), garden to south.
Broad Class
Agriculture and Subsistence
History
Dolobran Hall was the ancestral home of the Lloyd family from the C15. The family at Dolobran became Quakers in the C17 and were concerned in the Mathrafal and Dolobran forges as well as in setting up a coke furnace at Bersham (Wrexham), the latter leading to their bankruptcy in 1728. The Birmingham branch of the family took a pioneering role in the iron industry and in banking.
The house has a main entrance door on the east side in late C17 joinery, and panelling of similar date in the east room of the south wing. On the west side is a giant double chimney arching over another entrance, with Dutch parapets probably also of similar date.
Exterior
A large house in brick with slate roofs, the core of which is two ranges meeting in a T; the taller north/south range is of 2½ storeys and has two rear lateral chimneys. It is the main range and has been extended to the rear (west) as a two storey part with a catslide roof, and there is a central rear wing with a colossal chimney rising from two fireplaces. It straddles a two-storey recess incorporating an entrance. The east/west range which adjoins at the south side is a cross-wing of two storeys, and appears to be the only survivor of a pair of symmetrical wings. The brickwork, however, is of a lighter red colour than the main part of the house and it may not be contemporary.
The front (east) elevation of the main range is of three windows and symmetrical. The attic is blind. The brickwork is a version of Flemish bond and there is a slight eaves slope from north to south. Double-square 24-pane sash-windows, mostly renovated. Flat arches in brick rubbers, stone sills. At centre is an eight-panel door with large bolection mouldings to the panels and a prominently moulded architrave. The doorframe is pegged at the corners. Modern lightly constructed porch. To left the end of the cross-wing is blank but has mock-timber-framing on the gable.
The south elevation to the garden is of two windows, in similar brickwork with a plat band string course above the sill level of the upper windows. Similar sash windows in altered openings, that at bottom left blind. Cellar window to right with arched head. Modern windows in the rear flank of the main range to left.
The north elevation has a small attic casement window. Below the catslide extension the flank of which appears on this elevation there are small-pane windows above and below. Small modern lean-to porch.
The west elevation is dominated by the great chimney. There are also two brickwork chimneys (lateral to the original range) above the catslide. Within the arch of the great chimney is a modern door and an unequal-sash window of 12 panes above it. Small lean-tos at right and left. To the right is the end elevation of the cross-wing, with one modern window.
Interior
The notable interior is that of the front room of the south wing (the oak room), in wainscot of the late C17, complete including the fireplace surround and a panel door of the same period. The fireplace surround has a large roll moulding. The ceiling and beams are plain, and it is unclear whether or not carved or moulded work survives behind the modern finish.
Reason for designation
Listed at grade II* as a substantial remnant of a once fine house, retaining a remarkable rear chimney, with internal and external joinery of the William and Mary period, and for its association with the important Lloyd family.
Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]