Saturday 16 November 2013

Ruthin Castle To The 20th Century



From: A Journey into North Wales in the Year 1774
Boswell and Johnston

August 4th
Ruthin Castle is still a very noble ruin; all the walls still remain, so that a compleat platform, and elevations, not very imperfect, may be taken. It encloses a square of about thirty yards. The middle space was always open.
The wall is, I believe, about thirty feet high, very thick, flanked with six round towers, each about eighteen feet, or less, in diameter. Only one tower had a chimney, so that there was commodity of living. It was only a place of strength. The garrison had, perhaps, tents in the area.

From: The History of Ruthin Castle by Reginald de Hereford:

' The last male heir of Chirk, Richard Myddelton of Llysfasi, died intestate in 1796 leaving three daughters: Charlotte, Maria and Harriet. The Court of Chancery awarded the Chirk Castle estate to Charlotte; the Ruthin Castle estate went to Maria; and Harriet received the Dyffryn Ceiriog estate.
'Maria decided to come and live at Ruthin in 1826. In 1798 she married Frederick West, 3rd son of the 8th Baron West and 2nd Earl de la Warr (his first marriage had been with Charlotte Mitchell of Culham Court, Berkshire. Died 1795). Maria died in 1843. There was an only son surviving - Frederick Richard (b. 1799 and d. 1862). He married twice:

1. Lady Georgina Stanhope, daughter of William Philip, 5th Earl of Chesterfield, in 1820. She died without issue in 1824.

2. Theresa, only daughter of Capt. John Whitby, R.N., on 11th September, 1837. She died 18th September, 1886.

Ruthin Castle was no more a stronghold after the wreck of the Civil War (1642 - 49). Its venerable stones were carted off and neglect remained until a Myddelton daughter took interest in her inheritance. The home which she built in 1826 was a castellated, two-storeyed, double- block of grey limestone on the south-east corner of the ancient site; the two portions were linked together with a slender covered bridge. . The interior was in keeping with the classicism of the 18th century. At the rear, amongst the domestic quarters, arose a four-dialled clock-tower.'




 Ruthin Castle, 1830.

Ruthin Castle was ordered to be demolished after its surrender to General Mytton in 1646, and it was not until the time of Maria Myddlelton that the new castle was built. She married Frederick West in 1798, and decided in 1826 to make Ruthin her residence. The 1826 building was castellated, two-storeyed double-block of grey limestone on the south-east corner of the site of the original castle. In the period 1849 - 52 the Wests demolished part of their house and erected the present red sandstone building - a rectangular block of three storeys with an octagonal tower on the south-west corner overlooking a broad terrace. The style is fifteenth-century perpendicular, and the architect was Henry Clutton. prominent in the gothic revival of the nineteenth century.


THE CORNWALLIS-WEST ERA

'The marriage of Frederick Richard West with Theresa Whitby brought in a name which they treated with the utmost respect. Her father, Capt. John Whitby, R.N., had died a few months after the child was born. His close friend for many years, Admiral Cornwallis, made himself the guardian of the widow and her young daughter. At his death he bequeathed all his possessions to Theresa Whitby. The bequest included Newlands Manor, the home of his retirement, on the Hampshire coast within site of the sea, (the Solent).

'In 1849 - 52 the Myddelton-Wests demolished part of their house, and, on the same site, put up the present handsome pile of local red sandstone. It is a large, well-proportioned, rectangular block of three storeys with an octagonal tower on the South-west corner overlooking a broad terrace. The style is 15th century Perpendicular and was conceived with restraint in the fullness of the 19th century gothic revival by Henry Clutton. The mellow fabric is lighted with a series of fine bay, mullion, and oriel windows. Guests pass inside through an entrance flanked with carved Welsh dragons into an oak-paneled hall.

'It was during the period 1849 - 52 that Henry Clutton enclosed the immediate precincts with curtain walls complete with gate and lodge, of grey limestone with comices and castellations of red sandstone, looking towards the town. The gate is formed of a great arch in similar 15th century style above which is a small terrace. Prior to all this the Corwen Road had pursued its way under the castle walls from the decade which followed the Civil War. It turned right, over a bridge in the meadow, and across the deer-park to descend to a lower level at the farther end of Pwll Glas. Privacy having been gained, the Wests provided fresh land for a diversion which made a new and better Corwen Road.

‘Within the enclosed space gardens were laid out; trees were planted; and a most graceful vista created along the new carriage-way. In early spring the avenue appears to be wreathed in a mist of emerald green; in autumn the leaves of the majestic trees change to gold and russet and creating a scene of incomparable richness. It was at this time that Mrs. Theresa Whitby-West planted the fine elms along the new Corwen Road. At the same time a constant supply of pure water was laid from the spring at Y Galchog.'







Following extract from 'Handbook to Ruthin and Vicinity' by Lewis Jones - 1884

' The castle which remained in utter ruin for 180 years, was partly rebuilt in in 1826; and finally brought to its present state in the year 1852 by the late F.R.West, Esq., M.P. A great number of very interesting "relics of the past" and other "curiosities" are to be seen in the Armoury, and the grounds of this magnificent Castle are universally acknowledged to be "extremely beautiful." From whatever point it is viewed it commands a most picturesque appearance, - and from its tower is to be seen, on a clear day, the Vale of Clwyd at one glance, down to the sea, a distance of 20 miles - a landscape of such majesty and beauty is rarely to be seen and suggests:

"How sublime are her mountains, with verdure clad,
How lovely her valleys and dale;
Abounding in woodlands, in dingle, and dell,
Oh! what beauties combined in this vale !"

It is now the residence of its owner, Major W.C.West, lord Lieutenant of the county.


From The History of Ruthin Castle by Reginald de Hereford:

'Thrice-married George Cornwallis West shot himself in 1951, having been described as a rogue, an amourous fool, a victim of randy royalty and the Lilly Langtry set.

'Georges mother, Patsy, had the reputation of being the wickedest woman in Wales. His true father was widely believed to be Edward, Prince of Wales, who was also one of 200 identifiable lovers of George's first wife, Jennie - mother of Sir Winston Churchill, only a fortnight younger than his Ruthin step-father.

"At least no one could say we were dull or ordinary, " wrote George's sister Daisy. "Indeed the chief accusation against us was that we were too lively. King Edward V11, who loved us all, christened us the Wild West Show."

'Daisy left Ruthin for Silesia, where she became the Princess of Pless. her sister Shelagh settled down in Chester, as Duchess of Westminster, the first of the Duke's four wives.
'Having provided three generations of eminently respectable Members of Parliament for Denbigh, the Wests were shaked out of their Ruthin Ruritania by the arrival, in 1872, of the 16-year-old bride
Patsy, daughter of a Dublin clergyman.


           

                                                                         Patsy


'All three of her children were born before she was 21, and Colonel William Cornwallis West, 20 years her senior, soon lost control over his wife's beauty.'
"Patsy had been a ' professional beauty ' whose picture gazed out of shop windows along with Lilly Langtry, Ellen Terry and Jennie Jerome with other 'PBs;' she had an affair with the Prince of Wales", writes Margot Peters in the latest book to invade the bedrooms of the period.

"It was widely assumed that George was his child, and that by standing god-father, Albert Edward had acknowledged a closer relationship," adds Dr. Peters.


'Prince Edward turned up at Ruthin Castle in May 1899. So did Patsy's rival beauty, the former Jennie Jerome, widow of Lord Randolph Churchill who had died of syphilis.
'Three months later George and Jennie announced their engagement, and Jennie's son, Winston, denied it. George was 25 and Jennie, by then known as lady Randy, was 20 years older.
'They were married in 1900 at S. Paul's Church, Knightsbridge, the bride given away by the Duke of Marlborough. Winston was missing, as were George's parents - they had left Ruthin the day before, for a holiday in Ireland.

Eventually, in the early 20th century the Castle became a Private Hospital or Clinic. The following illustration is an advertisement for potential patients in 1941.








Three Kids Gripped By Evil By Polly Mullaney     
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