Court Colman Manor


Court Colman Manor is a historic Tudor mansion in Pen-y-fai, Bridgend, South Wales. The property belonged to Margam Abbey until the Dissolution, after which it passed through several hands. It was built in 1766 by Hopkin Rees and enlarged and modified in 1907 by Robert William Llewellyn.

Early history

There are records that the building could date back to Tudor times because in 1914 the local historian T. M Price described an old Tudor Gate which was at the end of a walled garden near the house bearing the date 1638 which he said was “direct evidence that the house which H. Rees erected in 1766 was on or near the site of a previous older house of 1638.” Price also stated that he thought that a wall of the West wing of the present house was part of this original Tudor house.
The Thomas family of Llanmigangel is thought to have erected the original 1638 mansion as it is known that about this time they had connections with the Court Colman estate. Also the original Tudor Gate bore the initials F. T. which was probably Francis Thomas. During the Civil War the property was given to John Watkins as a reward for his loyalty to the Parliamentary Cause led by Oliver Cromwell. He gave the house to his younger brother and after this Benjamin Watkins inherited the property.
Sometime after this Hopkin Rees who was Sheriff of Glamorgan purchased the estate and after his death his son Hopkin Rees inherited the house. His son William Rees died childless in 1820 and as he left no will there were extended legal proceedings about the rightful heir to the property. Eventually the house was sold to William Llewellyn in 1837.

The Llewellyn family

William Llewellyn was born in 1773. His father was Hopkin Llewellyn of Brombil Margam. William became a surgeon in the Royal Navy and served with Vice Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood, at his personal request. In 1805 he was wounded and he left the Navy and established a medical practice in Taibach in Wales. In 1818 he married Catherine Place, daughter of Thomas Dumayne Place of Glyn Leiros, Neath. William purchased Court Colman in 1837, but did not live there as he died before the legal complications had been resolved. His son William inherited the property on his death 1840 and moved in the following year with his mother Catherine, until her death in 1848.
William Llewellyn was born in Brombil, Margam in 1820. He was educated at Oxford University and at the age of 20 inherited the Court Colman Estate which he administered throughout his life. He became High Sheriff of Glamorgan in 1854. In 1844 he married Eleanor Emma Knight who was the daughter of Reverend Robert Knight of Tythegston Court near Bridgend. The couple had two sons and five daughters. One daughter and one of his sons died at a young age. The surviving children are shown in the photograph with William and Eleanor.
In 1898 William died and his son Robert William Llewellyn inherited Court Colman. He was born in 1848. He was Justice of the Peace and Deputy Lieutenant of Glamorganshire. He was also Chairman of the Newcastle and Ogmore Petty Sessions. He built the Church of All Saints, Pen-y-fai in about 1900. In 1882 he married Harriet Annie Blandy daughter of William Blandy of Kingston Bagpuize House. She is shown in the photograph. The couple had four sons and two daughters.
In 1906 Robert made extensive alterations to Court Colman which were described by the historian T. M. Price in the following terms.
Robert died in 1910 and his son Colonel William Herbert Clydwyn Llewellyn inherited the property. He was born in 1883 and in 1909 married Dorothy Louisa Carwithen of Ashprington House in Devon. The couple had five children four sons and one daughter. He sold Court Colman in 1961. The house was bought by a retired headmaster of a Preparatory School in Bridgend but Mr G Morgan let the house become dilapidated.
In 1981 Court Colman Manor was turned into a hotel. The Lodges have now become private dwellings, and the school is now a nursery.