History in Structure

Wynnstay Hotel

A Grade II Listed Building in Oswestry, Shropshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.8572 / 52°51'25"N

Longitude: -3.0569 / 3°3'24"W

OS Eastings: 328933

OS Northings: 329379

OS Grid: SJ289293

Mapcode National: GBR 73.S1XS

Mapcode Global: WH89X.0FMY

Plus Code: 9C4RVW4V+V6

Entry Name: Wynnstay Hotel

Listing Date: 10 September 1951

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1176134

English Heritage Legacy ID: 255502

Also known as: Wynnstay Hotel and Spa

ID on this website: 101176134

Location: Croesoswallt, Shropshire, SY11

County: Shropshire

Civil Parish: Oswestry

Built-Up Area: Croesowallt

Traditional County: Shropshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Shropshire

Church of England Parish: Oswestry St Oswald King and Martyr

Church of England Diocese: Lichfield

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Oswestry

Description


SJ 2829 SE; 15/32

OSWESTRY C.P.,
CHURCH STREET (east side),
No. 43 (Wynnstay Hotel)

10.9.51

GV

II

House, now hotel. Late C18 with later additions and alterations. For
Sir Watkin Williams Wynn. Red brick, hipped slate roof with two external
end stacks to right. Three storeys, moulded stone eaves cornice to front
and toothed eaves cornice to sides; 6-window front to main section,
glazing bar sashes (15-paned to first floor) with gauged heads, C20
shutters to ground floor; entrance in fourth bay from left, Roman Doric
portico with two pairs of coupled columns and re-modelled entablature,
half-glazed inner door with rectangular overlight; good ornamental
wrought-iron bracket for former inn sign above entrance. Mid-C19
2-storey, 2-bay range to left also with glazing bar sashes. Rear
elevation of main section has a 3-light angular bay to left and a
Venetian window on first floor beneath central pediment. Interior:
considerably altered late C20; former ballroom on first floor now
divided into three rooms and corridor but retains moulded plaster cornice to
ceiling and a medallion of crossed foxes and eagles, emblems from the
Arms of the Williams-Wynn family; wooden fireplace with Adam-style
surround to rear ground-floor room on right. Late C19 red brick addition
set back to rear on left is not of special architectural interest.

Formerly known as The Wynnstay Arms and previously to that as The
Cross Foxes, the building is referred to in the diary of the English and
Welsh trip undertaken by the Dublin architect, Francis Johnson, in 1796.
B.O.E, p. 224.


Listing NGR: SJ2893729380

External Links

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