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Latitude: 53.3423 / 53°20'32"N
Longitude: -4.3387 / 4°20'19"W
OS Eastings: 244399
OS Northings: 385375
OS Grid: SH443853
Mapcode National: GBR HMNV.WYF
Mapcode Global: WH42F.B861
Plus Code: 9C5Q8MR6+WG
Entry Name: Ty Mawr
Listing Date: 12 May 1970
Last Amended: 21 February 2001
Grade: II
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 5362
Building Class: Domestic
Also known as: Ty Mawr
ID on this website: 300005362
Location: Set at right angles to the E side of Lon Leidr in the centre of the small hamlet of Llandyfrydog. Ty Mawr is directly NE of the Church of St Tyfrydog.
County: Isle of Anglesey
Community: Rhosybol
Community: Rhosybol
Locality: Llandyfrydog
Traditional County: Anglesey
Tagged with: Farmhouse
Late C18 or early C19 farmhouse range. Recorded as Ty Moel in the Tithe Schedule of the parish, 1840. The property stood on over 19 acres(7.7 hectares) of land and was owned by The Right Honorable Lord Stanley of Alderley. In 1840 the occupier was recorded as being Elizabeth Williams, but by 1841 she appears to have died, leaving her son and 2 daughters, the oldest being just 15 years of age, to farm the small holding.
Linear range comprising central 2-storey, 3-window farmhouse flanked by single storey wings (formerly outbuildings), with a single storey wing to the rear. Built of rubble masonry, limewashed; slate roof, house with rendered rectangular gable stacks with capping. The windows are small-paned casements, the ground floor under cambered heads. The principal elevation faces N, the house has a central doorway through a half-glazed timber porch/conservatory; flanking windows are 6-pane lights, 1st floor 4-pane windows are set directly under the eaves. Attached to the L gable is a single storey (former) cowhouse, now part of the house, with a doorway offset to the L and a window at the extreme R. The wing to R is a former cartshed; the original cambered-headed doorway has been partly blocked to form a wide 4-light window. The rear has scattered fenestration, mainly of small-paned casement windows.
Interior not inspected at the time of the survey.
Listed as a good early C19 vernacular farmhouse, embedded within a range of former agricultural buildings, the whole forming a characteristic 'in line' farmstead plan. Ty Mawr forms part of a strong rural group, centred on the adjacent church, and nearby former National School.
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