Disgrifiad | The Garthewin Additional papers are grouped as, estate papers, including deeds and documents and administration papers; family papers, which include deeds and documents, personalia, correspondence, and papers belonging to specific individuals, those being, Robert Oliver Francis Wynne, Frances Anna [Nanette] Wynne, Anita Kathleen Mary [Nina] Wynne, Menna Wynne, Gwyneth [Lowri] Wynne; and papers of the Crowe family. |
AdminHistory | The Wynnes of Garthewin are descendants of a younger branch of the house of Melai, which began to operate effectively in the middle decades of the seventeenth century; but the family are believed to be of a very ancient lineage, being of direct descent in the male line from, Marchudd ap Cynan, Lord of Bryn Ffanigl and founder of the eighth Noble Tribe of North Wales and Powys. This ninth-century chieftain was ancestor of Ednyfed Vychan, the famous seneschal of Llywelyn the Great and progenitor of the royal house of Tudor.
The Garthewin Estate came to the Wynne's through Col. Wynne's brother Robert (1636-1679), who became possessed of Garthewin through his marriage with Margaret Price. His son, Dr. Robert Wynne, canon of Bangor succeeded him, and it was he who is considered to be the real architect of the Garthewin fortunes. He became Chancellor of the diocese of St. Asaph in 1690 and received several other substantial promotions in the church. He gradually developed into being one of the most vigorous and influential personalities throughout North Wales. Before his death in 1743, he held not only the original Garthewin inheritance, considerably extended by his discreet purchases, but had also become the owner of the Llannerch estate in Lleyn by the will of his cousin Elizabeth in 1722. Three years before that, he had come to a large sum of money by the will of his brother Richard. He had made two prosperous marriages, allying himself first with the house of Segrwyd in Denbighshire, and secondly with the Owen family of Penrhos in Anglesey.
The estate was further consolidated and developed by Dr Robert Wynne's son Robert (the elder) and grandson Robert (the younger). Robert the elder was a legal man, who had inherited the law books and papers of his uncle Richard. Both Roberts in turn made prosperous marriages. The elder married the grand-daughter of a rich London merchant, whilst the younger married Elizabeth Dymock of Acton. Their son then held property not only in Hiraethog and Lleyn and the lowlands of Is-dulas, but also in Wem and Sweeney in Salop, in English Flint, and in the lands around Wrexham, with their great possibilities for development.
The Garthewin Estate had a troubled succession in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. When Robert William Wynne (Colonel Wynne), son of Robert Wynne the younger, died without children in 1842, the decent of the lands was governed by his will. The core of the estate around Garthewin in Denbighshire, and his lands near Wrexham passed to his first cousin twice removed, Brownlow Wynne Cumming, on the condition that he assume the name and arms of Wynne. The other half of the estate, lands in and around Llanddulas and the lands on the Lleyn Peninsula passed to a rather more distant relative, Robert Wynne of Bronywendon (1786-1858). The estate was reunited when Robert Wynne's grandson, Robert William Wynne (1857-1933) inherited Brownlow Wynne Wynne's moiety on his death in 1882. Robert William Wynne also died childless, after a long illness, during which the estate was put into receivership under his brother Richard (1858-1932) and then under his nephew Robert Oliver Francis (1907-1993), to whom the whole estate eventually passed.
Robert O. F. Wynne was an extraordinary mixture of influences. He converted to Catholicism in his early adulthood, became a leading thinker in the Welsh Nationalist movement, and was a poet and writer, publishing a volume of poetry in 1930, and a number of articles for journals and magazines. Welsh writer Saunders Lewis was a key collaborator with Robert O. F. Wynne in setting up a theatre in an old barn at Garthewin. Robert O. F. Wynne was also a leading member of 'Y Cylch Catholig', which was an organisation set up to promote Catholicism in Wales. |