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.

Summary Description


Reference Number
85484
Building Number
 
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
20/10/2005  
Date of Amendment
20/10/2005  
Name of Property
Shippon at Bryn Owen Cottage  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Wrexham  
Community
Bronington  
Town
 
Locality
Iscoyd  
Easting
350336  
Northing
342416  
Street Side
 
Location
On the N side of the cottage.  

Description


Broad Class
 
Period
 

History
Iscoyd Park was purchased in 1843 by Philip Lake Godsal, a Cheltenham coach builder, an estate of 202 acres (82 hectares) comprising mansion house with park, and cottages and smallholdings. Over subsequent decades farms were acquired from neighbouring landowners, mainly during the ownership of Philip William Godsal, who inherited in 1858 and died in 1896. In 1895 it was reported to the Royal Commission on Land in Wales and Monmouthshire that the Iscoyd Park estate, now expanded to 887 acres (359 hectares), had 9 farms. Of these 'six new farmhouses, bricked and slated, and homesteads to them, have been built new entirely' and 'sixteen cottages and buildings for pigs and cows have been erected'. The latter smallholdings include many that were built on the site of earlier smallholdings. Bryn Owen is a smallholding dated 1900.  

Exterior
A small brick shippon with dentil verge to a tile roof. It has a boarded door and a split boarded door, each with a steel-framed window to its R. A later lean-to is set back to the L, under a corrugated asbestos-cement roof, with its own boarded door.  

Interior
 

Reason for designation
Listed for its special architectural interest as part of a well-preserved late C19 smallholding characteristic of the Iscoyd Park estate style, and for its contribution to the distinctive historic character of the district provided by surviving estate buildings, which together provide a good example of estate-sponsored improvement.  

Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]





Export