Conwy (Conway)
Wales

History /
Gardens & Park / Movies
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| House & Family History | ||||
| Henry David Pochin, the son of a yeoman farmer from Leicestershire, invented a clarified rosin (the basis of soap) that enabled soap to be white – for the first time – rather than the traditional brown. He then went on to invent alum cake, which was widely used in the papermaking industry. In 1874 Pochin used the profits from his inventions to purchase Bodnant and its estate of 25 surrounding farms. The House at Bodnant was built in 1792 and originally had sash windows and white stucco covering. Pochin enlarged and altered the house, facing it with yellow sandstone mullions and blue granite. He also created the framework of the Dell, laid out the Laburnum Walk, and, in 1882, added a Conservatory adjacent to the House. Pochin also built the family mausoleum, enigmatically called “The Poem.” Pochin’s daughter, Laura, inherited the Estate upon the death of her father in 1895. Laura was married to Charles McLaren, a barrister and M.P. who was elevated to the peerage in 1911 as Baron Aberconway, which means the “mouth of the Conway.” | ||||
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| The gardens at Bodnant are considered one of the most spectacular in the world. | ||||
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| Gardens
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| Garden, Park, Follies and Outbuildings | ||||
| Bodnant sits above the River Conwy and looks across the valley to the Snowdon range. The garden contains large native trees, many dating to 1792, and is in two parts: the upper part around the house consists of the Terrace Gardens and lawns; the lower part, or Dell, is formed by the valley of the River Hiraethlyn and contains the Wild Garden and the Pinetum. The gardens were begun in 1875 and are the product of four generations of Aberconways. There are currently 80 acres of garden open to the public at Bodnant, including the Upper Rose Terrace, the Croquet Terrace, the North Garden, the Lily Terrace, the Pergola and Lower Rose Terrace, the Canal Terrace (including the Pin Mill), the Big Rockery, the Dell, the Waterfall, the Round Garden, and the famous 55-yard-long tunnel of laburnum, which blooms from mid-May to early June. The Italian-style terraces near the House were laid out between 1904 and 1914. In 1938 Henry Duncan, 2nd Lord Aberconway, purchased and removed the Pin Mill folly from its original site in Gloucestershire and re-erected it on the Canal Terrace at Bodnant. The Pin Mill is similar in style and date to the Gothic Summer House at Frampton Court in Gloucestershire and may have been associated with that house, considering that the folly once stood near Frampton. In the early 20th century the Pin Mill was used as a factory for making pins and was later was used by a tanner for storing his hides. In 1949 the 2nd Lord Aberconway persuaded The National Trust to accept the gardens at Bodnant (together with an endowment provided by the family) into its care on their own merit, rather than simply as an adornment attached to a country house. Bodnant was the second garden accepted by the Trust on this basis (the first was Hidcote in Gloucestershire). The House was not included in the gift to the Trust, and the family continues to live there today. | ||||
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| Movies
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| Location for Movies / TV | ||||
| Treasure Hunt" (1986 - TV game show series, episode 4.2, "Clwyd"). "Antiques Roadshow" (2008 - TV BBC series, episode 31.12). | ||||









